Retinal dystrophies, known in man, dog, mouse, and rat, involve progressive loss of photoreceptor cells with onset during or soon after the developmental period. Functional (electroretinogram), chemical (rhodopsin analyses) and morphological (light and electron microscopy) data obtained in the rat indicated two main processes: (a) overproduction of rhodopsin and an associated abnormal lamellar tissue component, (b) progressive loss of photoreceptor cells. The first abnormality recognized was the appearance of swirling sheets or bundles of extracellular lamellae between normally developing retinal rods and pigment epithelium; membrane thickness and spacing resembled that in normal outer segments. Rhodopsin content reached twice normal values, was present in both rods and extracellular lamellae, and was qualitatively normal, judged by absorption maximum and products of bleaching. Photoreceptors attained virtually adult form and ERG function. Then rod inner segments and nuclei began degenerating; the ERG lost sensitivity and showed selective depression of the a-wave at high luminances. Outer segments and lamellae gradually degenerated and rhodopsin content decreased. No phagocytosis was seen, though pigment cells partially dedifferentiated and many migrated through the outer segment-debris zone toward the retina. Eventually photoreceptor cells and the b-wave of the ERG entirely disappeared. Rats kept in darkness retained electrical activity, rhodopsin content, rod structure, and extracellular lamellae longer than litter mates in light.
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1 July 1962
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July 01 1962
INHERITED RETINAL DYSTROPHY IN THE RAT
John E. Dowling,
John E. Dowling
From the Biological Laboratories, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the Laboratory of Cellular Neuropathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston
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Richard L. Sidman
Richard L. Sidman
From the Biological Laboratories, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the Laboratory of Cellular Neuropathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston
Search for other works by this author on:
John E. Dowling
From the Biological Laboratories, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the Laboratory of Cellular Neuropathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston
Richard L. Sidman
From the Biological Laboratories, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the Laboratory of Cellular Neuropathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston
Received:
March 23 1962
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
Copyright, 1962, by The Rockefeller Institute Press
1962
J Cell Biol (1962) 14 (1): 73–109.
Article history
Received:
March 23 1962
Citation
John E. Dowling, Richard L. Sidman; INHERITED RETINAL DYSTROPHY IN THE RAT . J Cell Biol 1 July 1962; 14 (1): 73–109. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.14.1.73
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