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      • Record: found
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      Development of the embryonic porcine neuroretina in vitro.

      Ophthalmic research
      Animals, Calcium-Binding Proteins, metabolism, Cell Survival, Eye Proteins, Fluorescent Dyes, Immunohistochemistry, Indoles, Lipoproteins, Organ Culture Techniques, Organic Chemicals, Photoreceptor Cells, Vertebrate, Recoverin, Retina, embryology, Swine, anatomy & histology, Transducin

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          Abstract

          The objective of this study was to investigate the survival and morphology of embryonic porcine full-thickness neuroretina in culture. Porcine fetuses were taken out by cesarian section, and the eyes were enucleated. Neuroretinas were explanted on culture plate inserts and were kept for 0-42 days in vitro under standard culture conditions. Green nucleic acid (Sytox) was used for measuring the extent of cell death, and 4,6-diaminidine-2-phenylindoldihydrochloride was used as a marker for the cellular layers. The explants were examined as whole-mount preparations and vertical sections. Sectioned tissue was stained with hematoxylin-eosin and labeled for immunohistochemistry with photoreceptor-specific antibodies raised against transducin and recoverin. In explants kept for 0-5 days in vitro, the developing retina consisted of multiple rows of neuroblastic cells and a more defined, but multilayered ganglion cell layer (GCL). Older explants revealed a more differentiated appearance with ultimately all normal retinal layers present, even after 42 days in vitro. Transducin- and recoverin-labeled photoreceptors were seen in these specimens, but no outer segments were found. The whole-mount preparation revealed extensively Sytox-labeled cells in the GCL at 2 days in vitro, but very few cells were labeled in older explants. This study shows that cultured fetal porcine full-thickness neuroretina can survive and develop according to its intrinsic timetable for at least 6 weeks in vitro. The in vitro system for culturing of the full-thickness retina may be useful in experiments involving retinal transplantation. Copyright (c) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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          Most cited references17

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          Rapid and protracted phases of retinal ganglion cell loss follow axotomy in the optic nerve of adult rats.

          To investigate the short- and long-term effects of axotomy on the survival of central nervous system (CNS) neurons in adult rats, retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) were labelled retrogradely with the persistent marker diI and their axons interrupted in the optic nerve (ON) by intracranial crush 8 or 10 mm from the eye or intraorbital cut 0.5 or 3 mm from the eye. Labelled RGCs were counted in flat-mounted retinas at intervals from 2 weeks to 20 months after axotomy. Two major patterns of RGC loss were observed: (1) an initial abrupt loss that was confined to the first 2 weeks after injury and was more severe when the ON was cut close to the eye; (2) a slower, persistent decline in RGC densities with one-half survival times that ranged from approximately 1 month after intraorbital ON cut to 6 months after intracranial ON crush. A small population of RGCs (approximately 5%) survived for as long as 20 months after intraorbital axotomy. The initial loss of axotomized RGCs presumably results from time-limited perturbations related to the position of the ON injury. A persistent lack of terminal connectivity between RGCs and their targets in the brain may contribute to the subsequent, more protracted RGC loss, but the differences between intraorbital cut and intracranial crush suggest that additional mechanisms are involved. It is unclear whether the various injury-related processes set in motion in both the ON and the retina exert random effects on all RGCs or act preferentially on subpopulations of these neurons.
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            Apoptosis in adult retinal ganglion cells after axotomy.

            Lesions to the mature mammalian central nervous system cause irreversible degeneration, in which neurons have been previously thought to be passive victims. In this study, axon-lesioned adult rat neurons are shown instead to actively degrade themselves through the process of apoptosis: a programmed type of cell death in which the cellular apparatus is actively involved in the degradation process. To investigate whether retinal ganglion cells of an adult mammal follow an apoptotic type of death when their axons are severed, DNA breaks in nuclei were labeled in situ, using a method that specifically incorporates biotinylated deoxynucleotides by exogenous terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase on the 3'-OH ends of DNA. The active nature of the death mechanism was demonstrated by the reduction in biotin-labeled nuclei after administering the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. Our results suggest that retinal ganglion cells of the adult rat die through apoptosis when axotomized. This raises new possibilities in the treatment of CNS injuries, by the potential interruptibility of a program for neuronal death.
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              Cotransport of H+, lactate, and H2O in porcine retinal pigment epithelial cells.

              The retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) of the eye transports water and lactate ions in the direction from retina to choroid. The water transport is important in maintenance of retinal adhesion and the transport of lactate ions serves to regulate the lactate levels and pH of the subretinal space. This study investigates by means of a non-invasive technique the mechanism of coupling between transport of H(+), lactate ion, and water in the monocarboxylate transporter (MCT1) located in the apical (retinal) membrane of a mammalian RPE. Primary cultures of porcine RPE cells were grown to confluence and placed in a perfusion chamber in which the solution facing the retinal membrane could be changed rapidly. Two types of experiments were performed: Changes in cell water volume were measured by self-quenching of the fluorescent dye Calcein, and changes in intracellular pH were measured ratiometrically using the fluorescent dye BCECF. In lactate-free solutions, mannitol addition to the retinal bath caused intracellular acidification and cell shrinkage, given by a single osmotic water permeability of 1.2+/-0.1 x 10(-4)cmsec(-1) (osmoll(-1))(-1). In solutions containing 50 mmoll(-1) lactate, however, the mannitol-induced cell shrinkage was faster and the cells alkalinized. These effects were not linear functions of the magnitude of the imposed osmotic gradients: Both volume effects and changes in intracellular pH showed apparent saturation with increasing gradients. Abrupt isosmotic replacement of Cl(-) with lactate in the concentration range from 3 to 50 mmoll(-1) caused an immediate cell swelling as well as an immediate intracellular acidification; both effects showed apparent saturation with increasing lactate concentration. The K(m) values were: 11+/-2 mmoll(-1) for the water fluxes and 13+/-4 mmoll(-1) for the H(+) and lactate fluxes. The data suggest that H(2)O is cotransported along with H(+) and lactate ions in MCT1 localized to the retinal membrane. The study emphasizes the importance of this cotransporter in the maintenance of water homeostasis and pH in the subretinal space of a mammalian tissue and supports our previous study performed by an invasive technique in an amphibian tissue.
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