Abstract

Classical neurofibrillar staining methods and immunocytochemistry with antibodies to the light, medium and heavy chain subunits of the neurofilament triplet have been used for in situ and in vitro investigation of the organization of neurofilaments in A- and B-type horizontal cells of the adult rabbit retina. Surprisingly, their expression and organization within a cell is dependent on its location along the dorso-ventral axis of the retina. A-type horizontal cells in superior retina consistently stained with a wide variety of neurofibrillar methods to reveal neurofibrillar bundles, which immunocytochemistry showed to contain all three neurofilament subunits. A-type horizontal cells in inferior retina were uniformly refractory to neurofibrillar staining, although they expressed all three subunits. However, there was less of the light and medium subunits; the organization of the filaments into bundles (neurofibrils) is minimal. B-type horizontal cells could not be stained with any neurofibrillar method and were not recognizable by in situ immunocytochemistry. However, B-type cells could be seen to express all three subunits in vitro, but the expression of the light and medium subunits was weak. There was only a slight difference between B-type cells taken from superior and inferior retina. Combined with the results of recent transfection studies, these findings suggest that the amount of the light neurofilament subunit present in a horizontal cell determines its content of neurofibrillar bundles, and that rabbit horizontal cells may contain more neurofilament protein, particularly of the heavy subunit, than is used for neurofilament formation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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