Abstract

The distribution of N-acetyl-lactosamine (NALA), a cell-surface carbohydrate epitope of the lactoseries, has been studied in the retina of representative species of all vertebrate classes by light microscope immunohistochemistry. In only some species of different classes (fish, amphibia and mammals) was NALA expression detected, and in these animals the distribution showed profound interspecies variability. In fishes and amphibia in which NALA was present, patterns ranged from single immunopositive cells to homogeneous labelling of cell layers. In mammals, NALA was found only in retinas that are cone dominated (tree squirrel and primates). In the tree squirrel, there was a dense cellular staining of the photoreceptor cell layer; whereas in primates, the carbohydrate epitope occurred only on some photoreceptor cells. From these receptor cells, positive axons could be traced to the inner plexiform layer. In spite of the profound interspecies differences, NALA is not randomly expressed, as its exclusive expression in mammals with cone-dominated vision indicates. The suggestion of a functional relevance for NALA glycosylation of retinal cells is supported by the labelling pattern for HNK-1 in these species, which was different from the pattern found in rod-dominated mammalian retinas.

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