Publications by authors named "K C Wikler"

Purpose: To characterize a cell population in the monkey retinal margin that was labeled with a cone-specific antibody and to determine the presence of additional markers.

Methods: Retinal whole-mount preparations from infant and adult rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) were immunolabeled by incubation overnight with the primary antibodies 7G6, a cone-specific antibody; SV2, a synaptic-vesicle antibody; and opsin antibodies that recognize either the short or long/middle wavelength-sensitive opsins.

Results: The retinal margin cells labeled by 7G6 lay within 1 mm of the ora serrata and differed from 7G6-labeled cones in the central retina.

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Recent evidence implicates homeodomain-containing proteins in the specification of cell fates in the central nervous system. Here we report that in the embryonic mouse eye Otx2, a paired homeodomain transcription factor, was found in retinal pigment epithelial cells and a restricted subset of retinal neurons, including ganglion cells. In the postnatal and adult eye, however, both the cellular and subcellular distribution of the Otx2 protein were cell type-specific.

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Endogenous retinoids have been implicated in the axial patterning of the embryonic vertebrate retina; however, no studies have directly examined how asymmetric retinoid-dependent gene expression regulates early morphological events in the development of the retina. Here we used a line of indicator mice that possess a retinoid-dependent transgene to examine the relationship between retinoic acid (RA)-dependent gene expression and events occurring during early eye morphogenesis, such as the closure of the optic disc. We found that retinoid-regulated gene expression shifts along the dorsal/ventral axis of the embryonic retina; at embryonic day (E) E11.

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Sex differences in the rat brain are dependent, in part, on oestrogen exposure during specific developmental perinatal periods. The availability of oestrogen requires precursor androgen and the presence of intraneuronal aromatase. To examine sites of oestrogen formation and action in the brain, immunocytochemical and biochemical localization of aromatase in the rat brain were determined between embryonic day 14 and postnatal day 20.

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