학술논문

Cell numbers, cell ratios, and developmental plasticity in the rod pathway of the mouse retina
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Anatomy. 243(2)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision
Neurosciences
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Underpinning research
Neurological
Mice
Animals
Dendrites
Retina
Amacrine Cells
Axons
amacrine cell
Bax
coverage factor
recombinant inbred strain
rod bipolar cell
rod photoreceptor
Biomedical Engineering
Medical Physiology
Anatomy & Morphology
Zoology
Language
Abstract
The precise specification of cellular fate is thought to ensure the production of the correct number of neurons within a population. Programmed cell death may be an additional mechanism controlling cell number, believed to refine the proper ratio of pre- to post-synaptic neurons for a given species. Here, we consider the size of three different neuronal populations in the rod pathway of the mouse retina: rod photoreceptors, rod bipolar cells, and AII amacrine cells. Across a collection of 28 different strains of mice, large variation in the numbers of all three cell types is present. The variation in their numbers is not correlated, so that the ratio of rods to rod bipolar cells, as well as rod bipolar cells to AII amacrine cells, varies as well. Establishing connectivity between such variable pre- and post-synaptic populations relies upon plasticity that modulates process outgrowth and morphological differentiation, which we explore experimentally for both rod bipolar and AII amacrine cells in a mouse retina with elevated numbers of each cell type. While both rod bipolar dendritic and axonal arbors, along with AII lobular arbors, modulate their areal size in relation to local homotypic cell densities, the dendritic appendages of the AII amacrine cells do not. Rather, these processes exhibit a different form of plasticity, regulating the branching density of their overlapping arbors. Each form of plasticity should ensure uniformity in retinal coverage in the presence of the independent specification of afferent and target cell number.