Abstract

Employing retinal explants and retrograde transport techniques, we studied the formation of the arcuate fascicles by examining the growth of the central retina, the emergence of the adult fiber layer pattern, and the projections of retinal ganglion cells in the central and peripheral retina. Sixty days prior to foveal pit formation, the distance from the incipient fovea to the optic disk was equal to the adult, even though the retinal area was only 8% of the adult. Arcuate fibers, at this age, were observed to avoid the incipient fovea, with no fascicles and few axons projecting over this region. A small population of 15.2% of the ganglion cells located within 2 mm of the incipient fovea possessed an axon with an aberrant trajectory that wound around and projected 50 to several hundred μm away from the optic disk, compared to only 3% at other retinal locations. The incidence of disorder decreased with increasing fetal age, establishing mature values in late fetal periods. These findings suggest that the area of the central retina does not increase after embryonic day 60 and that guidance factors are present that allow outgrowing ganglion cell axons to distinguish and avoid that portion of the retina that will become the fovea.

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