Abstract

The presence of immunocytochemically detectable membrane receptors for tetanus toxin, supposedly composed of higher gangliosides, is widely accepted as a marker of neuronal cells. We now demonstrate that Müller cells, a unique glial cell type of the vertebrate retina, possess specific tetanus toxin (TT)-binding sites. Single cell suspensions were prepared from adult rat retina by a gentle dissociation method, and the Müller cells, unequivocally identified by their morphology, could be immunocytochemically double-labeled by antisera to vimentin and to TT. The expression of complex gangliosides by identified Müller cells was also demonstrated by immunofluorescence labeling with the monoclonal antibody A2B5. Using the double-immunolabeling method for the identification of Müller cells we show that specific tetanus toxin binding is acquired by these cells during postnatal maturation both in vivo and in vitro. In vivo the percentage of tetanus toxin-positive Müller cells increases from 0% in 4-day-old animals to 10% on postnatal day 8, reaching the adult level of about 95-100% around day 30. In retinal monolayer cultures prepared from newborn rats, the majority (65%) of vimentin-positive non-neuronal cells became TT-positive during a 2-week culture period, indicating that this population of non-neuronal cells represents differentiating Müller cells. Again, comparable results were obtained with A2B5, supporting the conclusion that Müllerian glia expresses surface molecules, which are normally regarded as neuronal markers.

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