Hughes A, Wieniawa-Narkiewicz E
Nature. 1980 Apr 3;284(5755):468-70. doi: 10.1038/284468a0.
A large population of microneurones has recently been discovered in the rabbit retinal ganglion cell layer. These 'coronate' cells may represent a class of displaced amacrine cells. Like conventional amacrine cells they are swiftly and selectively destroyed by low concentrations of kainic acid, a neurotoxin. No similar cell has been described in the cat retina, which is reported to contain 217-260,000 neurones of classical appearance. These outnumber the 128-180,000 optic nerve fibres but it has been suggested that the excess comprise Nissl-staining glial cells. We report here that, using the neurotoxic effects of kainic acid to test and confirm the neuronal nature of the classic neurone excess, a large additional population of at least 730,000 presumptive microneurones was revealed. They resemble rabbit coronate cells, do not project into the optic nerve and have been previously identified as presumed glia. Various lines of evidence for the neuronal nature of these cells is presented below, but synapses have not been demonstrated; subsequent reference to microneurones must therefore be regarded as presumptive.