Abstract

The structure of the human, but mainly of the rhesus monkey, retina as examined by Golgi-staining techniques is described and interpreted on evidence from both light and electron microscopy. One type of rod bipolar cell and two types of cone bipolar cell are recognized. The rod bipolar is exclusively connected to rods. The midget bipolar is postsynaptic to only one cone but each cone is also presynaptic to a diffuse cone (flat) bipolar. Such flat bipolar cells are in synaptic relationship with about seven cones. No other bipolar cell types have been found. The brush bipolar of Polyak is interpreted as probably a distorted rod bipolar, while Polyak’s centrifugal bipolar is a misinterpretation of the morphology of diffuse amacrine cells. When presumptive centrifugal bipolars were observed they appeared to be a developmental stage of amacrine cells. In the outer plexiform layer two types of horizontal cell have been defined. Each type of horizontal cell has a single axon and two kinds of horizontal cell axon terminals are recognized. In the inner plexiform layer there are two main classes of amacrine cells: the stratified amacrines and the diffuse amacrines. Each class of amacrine has a wide variety of shapes. Polyak’s midget ganglion cell is confirmed and his five other kinds of ganglion cell are classified into diffuse and stratified ganglion cells according to the level at which their dendrites branch within the inner plexiform layer. A fuller summary is given by the diagram and in the legend of figure 98, p. 174. A new type of midget bipolar is described in the Appendix (p. 177).

Keywords

Inner plexiform layerRetinaOuter plexiform layerAxonNeuroscienceGanglionAmacrine cellAxon terminalAnatomyBiology

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Publication Info

Year
1969
Type
article
Volume
255
Issue
799
Pages
109-184
Citations
533
Access
Closed

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Cite This

B. B. Boycott, John E. Dowling, Helga Kolb (1969). Organization of the primate retina: Light microscopy, with an appendix: A second type of midget bipolar cell in the primate retina. Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences , 255 (799) , 109-184. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1969.0004

Identifiers

DOI
10.1098/rstb.1969.0004

Data Quality

Data completeness: 77%