Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4034772 Vision Research 2009 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

In adult Swiss albino and C57 pigmented mice, RGCs were identified with a retrogradely transported neuronal tracer applied to both optic nerves (ON) or superior colliculi (SCi). After histological processing, the retinas were prepared as whole-mounts, examined and photographed under a fluorescence microscope equipped with a motorized stage controlled by a commercial computer image analysis system: Image-Pro Plus® (IPP). Retinas were imaged as a stack of 24-bit color images (140 frames per retina) using IPP with the Scope-Pro plug-in 5.0 and the images montaged to create a high-resolution composite of the retinal whole-mount when required. Single images were also processed by specific macros written in IPP that apply a sequence of filters and transformations in order to separate individual cells for automatic counting. Cell counts were later transferred to a spreadsheet for statistical analysis and used to generate a RGC density map for each retina. Results: The mean total numbers of RGCs labeled from the ON, in Swiss (49,493 ± 3936; n = 18) or C57 mice (42,658 ± 1540; n = 10) were slightly higher than the mean numbers of RGCs labeled from the SCi, in Swiss (48,733 ± 3954; n = 43) or C57 mice (41,192 ± 2821; n = 42), respectively. RGCs were distributed throughout the retina and density maps revealed a horizontal region in the superior retina near the optic disk with highest RGC densities. In conclusion, the population of mice RGCs may be counted automatically with a level of confidence comparable to manual counts. The distribution of RGCs adopts a form of regional specialization that resembles a horizontal visual streak.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
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