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Publication : The retina of the PCD/PCD mouse as a model of photoreceptor degeneration. A structural and functional study.

First Author  Marchena M Year  2011
Journal  Exp Eye Res Volume  93
Issue  5 Pages  607-17
PubMed ID  21824473 Mgi Jnum  J:189268
Mgi Id  MGI:5444817 Doi  10.1016/j.exer.2011.07.010
Citation  Marchena M, et al. (2011) The retina of the PCD/PCD mouse as a model of photoreceptor degeneration. A structural and functional study. Exp Eye Res 93(5):607-17
abstractText  In this work, we used the pcd (Purkinje cell degeneration) mutant mouse with a slow temporal progression of photoreceptor degeneration in order to analyze the structural and functional modifications in the neuronal populations of the outer and inner retina. Retinal immunocytochemistry and functional electroretinography were performed on the pcd/pcd mutant mice and control wild type animals of the C57/DBA strain at 45, 90, 180 and 270 post-natal days. Immunohistochemical studies were performed for a series of protein markers: calbindin, calretinin, PKCalpha, bassoon, synapsin, syntaxin and islet1. Full field electroretinography recordings were performed on control and dystrophic mice. Rod and mixed responses, and oscillatory potentials, were recorded in dark adapted conditions; cone and flicker responses were recorded under light adaptation. Our results show significant structural modifications in the photoreceptor populations and neurons of the inner retina. Changes in cell morphology affect mainly to the bipolar cells, which gradually lose their dendritic tufts. The electroretinography records reveal that in the pcd retinas the rod and cone systems show a reduction in the amplitude of the electrical signals. This decrease progresses slowly with the passage of time, although for the most advanced stage of photoreceptor degeneration considered, 270 post-natal days, it is still possible to record light induced responses. We conclude that pcd mice experience a loss of retinal function in correlation with the loss of photoreceptors with age, and significant changes in retinal synaptic processes.
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