The human fetal retinal nerve fiber layer and optic nerve head: a DiI and DiA tracing study

T FitzGibbon - Visual neuroscience, 1997 - cambridge.org
T FitzGibbon
Visual neuroscience, 1997cambridge.org
The organization of the primate nerve fiber layer and optic nerve head with respect to the
positioning of central and peripheral axons remains controversial. Data were obtained from
32 human fetal retinae aged between 15 and 21 weeks of gestation. Crystals of the
carbocyanine dyes, DiI or DiA, and fluorescence microscopy were used to identify axonal
populations from peripheral retinal ganglion cells. Peripheral ganglion cell axons were
scattered throughout the vitreal-scleral depth of the nerve fiber layer. Such a scattered …
The organization of the primate nerve fiber layer and optic nerve head with respect to the positioning of central and peripheral axons remains controversial. Data were obtained from 32 human fetal retinae aged between 15 and 21 weeks of gestation. Crystals of the carbocyanine dyes, DiI or DiA, and fluorescence microscopy were used to identify axonal populations from peripheral retinal ganglion cells. Peripheral ganglion cell axons were scattered throughout the vitreal-scleral depth of the nerve fiber layer. Such a scattered distribution was maintained as the fibers passed through the optic nerve head and along the optic nerve. There was a rough topographic representation within the optic nerve head according to retinal quadrant such that both peripheral and central fibers were mixed within a wedge extending from the periphery to the center of the nerve. There was no indication that the fibers were reorganized in any way as they passed through the optic disc and into the nerve. The present results suggest that any degree of order present within the fiber layer and optic nerve is not an active process but a passive consequence of combining the fascicles of the retinal nerve fiber layer. Optic axons are not instructed to establish a retinotopic order and the effect of guidance cues in reordering fibers, particularly evident prechiasmatically and postchiasmatically, does not appear to be present within the nerve fiber layer or optic nerve head in humans.
Cambridge University Press