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© The Rockefeller University Press,
0021-9525/2000//1169 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 151, Number 6,
, 2000 1169-1178
Original Article |
Map1b Is Required for Axon Guidance and Is Involved in the Development of the Central and Peripheral Nervous System
friedrich.propst{at}univie.ac.at
Microtubule-associated proteins such as MAP1B have long been suspected to play an important role in neuronal differentiation, but proof has been lacking. Previous MAP1B gene targeting studies yielded contradictory and inconclusive results and did not reveal MAP1B function. In contrast to two earlier efforts, we now describe generation of a complete MAP1B null allele. Mice heterozygous for this MAP1B deletion were not affected. Homozygous mutants were viable but displayed a striking developmental defect in the brain, the selective absence of the corpus callosum, and the concomitant formation of myelinated fiber bundles consisting of misguided cortical axons. In addition, peripheral nerves of MAP1B-deficient mice had a reduced number of large myelinated axons. The myelin sheaths of the remaining axons were of reduced thickness, resulting in a decrease of nerve conduction velocity in the adult sciatic nerve. On the other hand, the anticipated involvement of MAP1B in retinal development and
-aminobutyric acid C receptor clustering was not substantiated. Our results demonstrate an essential role of MAP1B in development and function of the nervous system and resolve a previous controversy over its importance.
Key Words: microtubule-associated protein 1B brain development gene targeting corpus callosum myelin
© 2000 The Rockefeller University Press
| Introduction |
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MAP1B purified from mammalian brain constitutes a multimeric protein complex that consists of one 300-kD heavy chain and at least one 32-kD light chain, termed LC1 (Hammarback et al. 1991). Both heavy chain and LC1 are proteolytic cleavage products of a common MAP1B polyprotein precursor that contains LC1 as a 250 amino acid–long carboxy-terminal segment (Hammarback et al. 1991; Tögel et al. 1998, Tögel et al. 1999). This MAP1B precursor protein is encoded by a single gene consisting of seven exons (Lien et al. 1994; Kutschera et al. 1998). However, there exist multiple ways of transcription of this gene to give rise to two types of transcripts (Lien et al. 1994; Kutschera et al. 1998). Type 1, the regular transcripts, represent the majority (
90%) of MAP1B mRNA and contain exons 1-7. Type 2 transcripts (
10%) contain noncoding exons upstream of exon 3 and potentially encode an amino-terminally truncated MAP1B precursor lacking the first 95 amino acids of the heavy chain.
In the past few years, several attempts have been made to determine the role of MAP1B in brain development through attenuation of MAP1B expression. However, the results were contradictory. Early studies were carried out in vitro and employed antisense oligonucleotide technology. It was shown that MAP1B is necessary for the growth of axons of PC12 cells and primary neurons in culture (Brugg et al. 1993; DiTella et al. 1996). More recently, two gene-targeting studies were published that yielded contradictory results. In the first, the MAP1B coding region was interrupted at codon 571 by insertion of a stop codon (Edelmann et al. 1996). Mice homozygous for this mutation died before day 10 of gestation. However, even mice heterozygous for this mutation displayed severe neurological phenotypes, raising the possibility that this dominant phenotype was caused or enhanced by expression of the 571 amino acid amino-terminal MAP1B fragment with potential dominant-negative activity (Tögel et al. 1998) encoded by the targeted allele. In contrast, in the second MAP1B knockout study, mice homozygous for the mutation were viable and showed only a slight retardation in postnatal development (Takei et al. 1997). However, the targeting strategy employed did not exclude the synthesis of amino-terminally truncated MAP1B from alternative transcripts (Kutschera et al. 1998). Indeed, a protein reactive with three anti–MAP1B antibodies and slightly smaller than authentic MAP1B was still detected in brain extracts of homozygous mutants (Takei et al. 1997). Thus, the lack of severe phenotypes in these mice might be due to residual MAP1B expression that might be sufficient for proper albeit retarded development.
Here we generated a true null allele of MAP1B by introducing a large deletion in the gene that led to complete ablation of MAP1B expression and prevented synthesis of amino-terminal MAP1B fragments. This allowed us for the first time to assess the effect of MAP1B deficiency in vivo. In contrast to the previous inconclusive and contradictory results, we found that MAP1B is essential for the development and function of the nervous system and is involved in axon guidance of a subset of neurons. We also ruled out an expected essential function of MAP1B in retina development.
| Materials and Methods |
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A rabbit polyclonal anti–heavy chain antiserum termed E2 was raised against the synthetic peptide CETVTEEHLRRAIGN (mouse MAP1B exon 2 encoded amino acids 45–58 linked to an amino-terminal cysteine; Gramsch Laboratories), affinity purified as described (Tögel et al. 1998), and used at a dilution of 1:1,000. Other antibodies: anti–MAP1B heavy chain mAb MAP5 clone AA-6 (1:1000; Boehringer), affinity purified polyclonal rabbit anti–MAP1B light chain antibody (1 µg/ml; Tögel et al. 1998), anti–MAP1A heavy chain mAb HM-1 (1:500; Biogenesis), polyclonal rabbit anti–MAP1A light chain serum raised against the synthetic peptide CKGPVDRTSRTVPRPR (rat MAP1A amino acids 2605–2619 linked to an amino-terminal cysteine; 1:1,000), anti–MAP2 mAb HM-2 (1:800; Sigma-Aldrich), anti–tau mAb TAU1 (1:1,000; Boehringer), anti–light chain 3 polyclonal rabbit antibody (1:2,500; provided by J. Hammarback, Wake Forest University, School of Medicine, Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Winston Salem, NC), and anti–
-tubulin mAb B-5-1-2 (1:800; Sigma-Aldrich). Alkaline phosphatase-conjugated goat anti–rabbit and anti–mouse antibodies (1:7,500; Promega) were used as secondary antibodies.
Histopathology, Immunocytochemistry, Electron Microscopy, and Histomorphometry
1-d-old mice were anesthetized with ether, the bodywall was opened, and the animals were fixed overnight in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS, pH 7.4. Older animals were perfused intracardially with 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS. Brains and spinal cords were dissected out, fixed overnight in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS, and routinely embedded in paraffin. 5-µm-thick paraffin sections were stained with hematoxylin/eosin, Luxol fast blue myelin stain, and Bielschowski Silver impregnation for axons. Immunocytochemistry was performed on paraffin sections with antibodies against glial fibrillary acidic protein (Boehringer) and the macrophage antibody Mac-3 (PharMingen). Binding of primary antibodies was visualized with a biotin-avidine-peroxidase technique. For electron microscopy, animals were perfused with 3% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer. Small tissue blocks of brain (corpus callosum, optic nerve, and cerebellum) or sciatic nerve were impregnated in 1% osmic acid and routinely embedded in epoxy resin. 0.5-µm-thick plastic sections were cut on a Reichert Ultracut and stained with toluidine blue. Ultrathin sections were viewed in a Jeol 1010 electron microscope.
For histomorphometric analysis of Toluidin blue–stained semithin sections of sciatic nerves of MAP1B deficient (n = 5, aged 8–11 mo) and wild-type mice (n = 3, aged 8–11 mo) the DIGI-2000 software (version 3.0) was used. The amount of endoneural connective tissue was assessed by subtraction of the sum total of neuronal structures from the entirely assessed cross-sectional area of the respective histological sample. Evaluation of myelin thickness was achieved by subtracting the maximal inner from the maximal outer diameters of the myelin sheaths. Every axon in the elected field was counted, regardless of its size. For the statistical evaluation, groups of sizes were deliberately chosen to achieve a histogram representing the fiber sizes. Statistical significance of the differences of (a) axon diameters/areas and (b) thickness of the myelin sheaths between wild-type animals and MAP1B –/– mice were tested using the Kolmogoroff-Smirnoff test and Student's t test. Additionally, the correlation coefficient was calculated for a possible association between axon diameters/areas versus the myelin sheaths thickness.
For analysis of retinae, wild-type mice and mice heterozygous or homozygous for the MAP1B deletion of different ages (P18, P47, and P108) were killed by cervical dislocation, the eyes were enucleated, the anterior segments removed, and the posterior eyecups immersion fixed for 15–25 min in 4% paraformaldehyde in phosphate buffer (PB, 0.1 M, pH 7.4). After fixation, the retinae were dissected from the eyecup, cryoprotected in graded sucrose solutions (10, 20, and 30%), and sectioned vertically at 12 µm on a cryostat. Retinal sections were blocked for 1 h in a solution containing 10% normal goat serum (NGS), 1% bovine serum albumin, and 0.5% Triton-X-100 in PB. MAP1B was detected using the monoclonal antibody MAP5 (Sigma-Aldrich) or the affinity purified polyclonal rabbit anti–MAP1B light chain antibody (Tögel et al. 1998).
-Aminobutyric acid C (GABAC) receptor subunits were detected using a rabbit anti–serum (Enz et al. 1996). All primary antibodies were diluted 1:100 in 3% NGS, 1% BSA, 0.05% Triton-X-100 in PB, and applied overnight at room temperature. After washing in PB, secondary antibodies were applied for 1 h. These included: goat anti–mouse or anti–rabbit IgG conjugated to Alexa TM 488 (Molecular Probes), diluted 1:500. Control experiments with omitting primary antisera resulted in unspecific background staining. All fluorescent specimens were viewed using an Axiophot microscope (Carl Zeiss, Inc.). Micrographs were taken with a cooled CCD camera (Spot2; Diagnostic Instruments) and processed using Adobe Photoshop 5.0.1.
Behavioral Tests and Electrophysiology
F1 male mice heterozygous or homozygous for the targeted MAP1B allele as well as wild-type controls were placed into a macrolite cage and observed for 10 min for their activity, exploring behavior, and ataxia. The different patterns were quantified by normal or abnormal activity, normal or abnormal exploring, and normal gait or ataxia, as described (Thalhammer et al. 1995).
Motor nerve conduction velocities were studied in the sciatic nerve in wild-type controls and in homozygous MAP1B mutant animals. For this procedure, animals were anaesthetized by i.p. injection of 60 mg/kg sodium pentobarbital and placed on a water-circulated heating pad throughout the procedure. The nerve was stimulated with percutaneous electrodes by supramaximal stimulation at the sciatic notch (Waikar et al. 1996) and summation motor potentials were recorded with a ring electrode at the metacarpus. The ground electrode was placed between stimulation and recording sites. After the procedure, the animals recovered spontaneously.
| Results |
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93 harboring a deletion of 20.5 kb of chromosomal DNA. The deletion included coding exons 3–5 and part of exon 6 (Fig. 1 A), comprising 93% of the MAP1B coding sequence (codons 96–2389 of a total of 2,464 codons) and was designed to preclude synthesis of MAP1B from regular as well as alternative transcripts (Kutschera et al. 1998). Thus, MAP1B
93 differed from the allele generated by Takei et al. 1997, which carried merely a truncation of exon 1 that did not prevent synthesis of MAP1B from alternative transcripts and from the allele generated by Edelmann et al. 1996 in that it could not encode a large amino-terminal fragment of the heavy chain.
Consistent with the extent of the deletion in the MAP1B gene, neither transcripts containing exon 5 sequences (not shown) nor MAP1B heavy or light chain polypeptides (Fig. 1C and Fig. D) were detectable in brains of newborn mice homozygous for MAP1B
93. This confirmed that MAP1B
93 represented a true null allele incapable of encoding MAP1B heavy or light chain from regular or alternative transcripts. Moreover, we failed to detect an amino-terminal MAP1B fragment potentially encoded by exons 1 and 2 of the targeted allele (Fig. 1 E). Analysis of the level of expression of MAP2A, MAP2B, MAP2C, tau, MAP1A (heavy and light chain), and light chain 3, a 30-kD polypeptide that forms complexes with MAP1B and MAP1A (Schoenfeld et al. 1989) did not reveal consistent alterations in MAP1B-deficient mice (Fig. 2). Apparent minor changes observed in individual experiments were not manifest when normalized with respect to the intensity of the corresponding tubulin bands. Thus, MAP1B deficiency was not compensated for by increased expression of other brain-specific MAPs.
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93 were indistinguishable in appearance from their wild-type littermates. In contrast, almost all homozygous pups (94%) displayed severe reduction in body weight that was more pronounced in the first 4 wk of life, in particular in the case of females (Table ). This reflected the fact that the weakest animals died during this time (Table ), with only the stronger animals displaying less severe weight reduction surviving into adulthood. The cause of this general weakness and body weight reduction is not known at this point. Homozygous pups appeared malnourished and dehydrated and showed a delay in body hair growth and eye-lid opening. However, not even the weakest, moribund animals had obvious neurological problems or pathological alterations (apart from the developmental defects in the brain, which were also found in those homozygous mutants that survived into adulthood, see below) that could explain their condition. Adult homozygous males and females were fertile, but were poor breeders. Quantitative assessment of activity, exploring activity, and ataxia revealed that exploring activity was absent in almost all homozygous MAP1B mutants (Fig. 3), whereas general activity and gait appeared normal. All phenotypic alterations observed in MAP1B –/– mice, including the reduction in body weight and each of the defects found in the nervous system (described below), occurred in 94–100% of mice homozygous for the MAP1B deletion and were never observed in heterozygotes or wild-type controls. Only a small percentage of homozygous mutants (3/52, 6%) did not show any abnormalities.
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93. In wild-type mice, MAP1B expression was widespread during the formation of the retinal layers, but in contrast to what had been reported for the rat (Hanley et al. 1999), it was downregulated in the adult (Fig. 4). We used heavy and light chain–specific antibodies that in rat retina produced results similar to those reported by Hanley et al. 1999, and observed in mouse retina at postnatal day 9 a distinct labeling of the inner plexiform layer (IPL) with a concentration of MAP1B in several discrete bands and staining in the outer nuclear layer (ONL; Fig. 4 A). In the adult mouse retina, only weak and diffuse label was present in the inner retina, while photoreceptors [inner segments (IS), ONL] were labeled more prominently (Fig. 4 C). The label, although diffuse, was specific, since by omitting the primary antibody it was lost (Fig. 4 B). When retinae of MAP1B –/– mice were immunostained for MAP1B, no specific fluorescence was detectable (Fig. 4 D). Despite this lack of MAP1B, the retinae of MAP1B-deficient mice did not show morphological changes (Fig. 4). The retinal layering and the cell densities appeared normal. We also immunolabeled such retinae with markers that recognize specific cell types in the mouse retina (Haverkamp, S., and H. Wässle, unpublished results). Horizontal cells immunoreactive for calbindin, amacrine cells immunoreactive for calretinin, and bipolar cells immunoreactive for protein kinase Cβ appeared unchanged (not shown).
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2,
3, and
2, the glycine receptors, the glutamate receptor subunits GluR1, 4, and 6/7, the N-methyl-D-arginine receptor subunits NR1C2' and NR2B, and the postsynaptic density protein PSD-95 (not shown).
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Peripheral Nerves in MAP1B-deficient Mice Have Axonal and Myelinization Defects Resulting in Reduced Motor Nerve Conduction Velocity
Histological and histomorphometrical assessment of the sciatic nerves revealed a marked predominance of small-caliber myelinated axons in MAP1B-deficient mice (Fig. 8 A). With the exception of axons in the 70- and 80-µm2 classes, numbers of axons in intermediate and large size classes were reduced compared with wild-type controls, resulting in a left shift of the size distribution histogram. In addition, the myelin sheaths of axons of a given diameter class had reduced thickness in MAP1B-deficient mice (Fig. 8 B). Concomitantly, the proportion of endoneural connective tissue was increased, probably due to reduced axon diameters, since we found no evidence for ongoing myelin degeneration or myelinophagocytosis. The overall number of axons appeared unchanged (2.93 ± 0.31 x 104, n = 3 in wild-type controls, and 3.05 ± 0.68 x 104, n = 4 in homozygous mutants). Consistent with this observation, motor nerve conduction velocity was reduced to 19.82 ± 2.93 (mean ± SD, n = 8) in homozygous mutants compared with 30.60 ± 6.71 (mean ± SD, n = 16) in wild-type controls. None of the conduction velocities of the homozygous animals was within 1 SD of the values observed in wild-type mice. The difference in conduction velocities between controls and homozygotes was statistically significant (P < 0.05) when compared with one way analysis of variance.
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| Discussion |
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93 Are the First True MAP1B-deficient Mice
93, and, in contrast to the two previous MAP1B gene-targeting studies (Edelmann et al. 1996; Takei et al. 1997), were able to assess for the first time the effects of MAP1B deficiency on the development of the murine nervous system. The previous MAP1B targeting studies produced inconclusive and contradictory results. The targeting strategy employed by Takei et al. 1997 reduced MAP1B to
5% of its normal level, but did not result in complete ablation of MAP1B expression. Not surprisingly, homozygous mutants merely displayed a transient retardation in development and did not reveal the effects of true MAP1B deficiency, a caveat also limiting the significance of their recent results obtained in MAP1B/tau double knockout mice in which they used the same incompletely inactivated MAP1B allele (Takei et al. 2000). Contradictory to the results obtained by Takei et al. 1997, Edelmann et al. 1996 reported that mice homozygous for a MAP1B allele termed MAP1B571 (which is interrupted at codon 571 by a stop codon) died in early embryonic development and 20% of mice heterozygous for MAP1B571 (which still expressed MAP1B from the intact allele) displayed ataxia and spastic tremor and abnormalities in the cerebellum. At present, it is not clear why the phenotype of MAP1B571 was so severe. One possibility is that the severity is influenced by the genetic background on which this mutation was introduced. In contrast to the mice generated in the present study, one component of the background of MAP1B571 mice was derived from 129P2/Ola, a strain displaying axonal guidance problems and defects in brain development in wild-type mice (Wahlsten 1982). It is conceivable that the additional reduction or ablation of MAP1B expression on this background lead to severe developmental problems. A second likely factor that might limit analysis of MAP1B function in knockout mice of Edelmann et al. 1996 is the potential expression of the 571 amino acid amino-terminal MAP1B fragment encoded by the targeted allele. This fragment might have dominant-negative activity (Tögel et al. 1998), resulting in the dominant phenotypes observed in mice heterozygous for MAP1B571.
Here we generated MAP1B
93, an allele carrying a deletion of most of the MAP1B gene. This deletion prevented synthesis of MAP1B from regular as well as alternative transcripts, resulted in complete ablation of MAP1B heavy chain and light chain expression, prevented the expression of amino-terminal MAP1B fragments, did not lead to dominant alterations in heterozygous mutants, and was analyzed on a genetic background permissive to complete MAP1B deficiency.
MAP1B Is Required for Axon Guidance
By generating true MAP1B-deficient mice, we were able to demonstrate that MAP1B was required for axon guidance in a subset of neurons during brain development. Histological examination of homozygous MAP1B mutant mice revealed a specific developmental brain defect, agenesis of the corpus callosum, and the formation of Probst bundles (Probst 1901). In addition, we found prominent aberrant growth of fibers in thick bundles, located in the lower layers of the cortex. This may suggest that callosal fibers, which are unable to cross the midline, still are at least in part targeted to cortical regions, albeit on the ipsilateral side. Agenesis of the corpus callosum has been observed in some inbred strains of mice and is also influenced by rearing conditions (Wahlsten 1982). However, in the present study, agenesis of the corpus callosum and the formation of Probst bundles strictly correlated with the MAP1B genotype and was observed in all mice homozygous for the MAP1B deletion, but never in heterozygous mutants or wild-type controls, demonstrating that MAP1B is essential for corpus callosum formation.
Despite the fact that MAP1B is expressed in axons, dendrites, and growth cones throughout the central nervous system during development, the axonal guidance defect is limited to the corpus callosum and the hippocampal commissure. One possible explanation for this specificity is that redundant backup mechanisms exist for the guidance of most axons, whereas corpus callosum formation is critically dependent on all components of a single mechanism. MAP1B might be a component of a signal transduction pathway guiding axons across an environment determined by midline glia cells. These cells express laminin on their cell surface (Liesi and Silver 1988) and it has been shown that MAP1B is necessary for laminin-enhanced axonal growth in vitro (DiTella et al. 1996). In addition, callosal axon guidance defects are observed in mice lacking the cdk5 activator p35 (Kwon et al. 1999), a protein implicated in regulation of laminin-induced MAP1B phosphorylation (Paglini et al. 1998). Thus, MAP1B might be involved in laminin/integrin-mediated cell adhesion and/or signaling and this pathway could be crucial for corpus callosum formation. Likewise, MAP1B, capable of binding to actin fibers (Pedrotti and Islam 1996; Tögel et al. 1998), might be involved in the regulation of actin polymerization in the growth cone by the netrin/MENA pathway, which is also involved in corpus callosum formation (Serafini et al. 1996; Fazeli et al. 1997; Lanier et al. 1999). Involvement of MAP1B in laminin or netrin signaling might not be mutually exclusive, since laminin and netrin share structural homologies (Serafini et al. 1996).
An alternative explanation for the selective defect in MAP1B-deficient brains might be that midline crossing of callosal fibers is limited to a temporal window. If callosal axons were to be slowed down in their progress towards the midline as a result of MAP1B deficiency, they might miss the permissive window and, instead of crossing, extend parallel to the midline or turn back. In this context, it is of interest that a Drosophila MAP termed Futsch is necessary for axonal growth and extension (Hummel et al. 2000). Futsch is quite distinct from any of the vertebrate MAPs, but shares two stretches of sequence homology with MAP1B and MAP1A.
MAP1B Is Required for Development and Function of the Peripheral Nervous System
In contrast to the previous MAP1B targeting studies, we were able to demonstrate that MAP1B deficiency lead to permanent defects in the peripheral nervous system. Morphometric analysis revealed that the axons constituting the adult sciatic nerve of MAP1B-deficient mice were of decreased diameters and that the thickness of myelin sheaths of the remaining axons was reduced. Electrophysiological measurements in the sciatic nerve showed a reduction in conductance velocities in MAP1B-deficient mice by
35%, consistent with the observed alterations in axon diameter and myelin sheaths. Thus, our findings extend observations of Takei et al. 1997, who reported that reduction of MAP1B expression leads to a delay in myelination in the optic nerve. The reduction in numbers of large myelinated axons observed in our mice is likely to be due to the failure of most MAP1B-deficient axons to grow to larger diameters and not to a selective loss of large-caliber axons in the adult, since we were unable to observe any signs of axon-degeneration and the numbers of axons per sciatic nerve did not significantly differ in wild-type and homozygous mutant mice. The reduction in the thickness of myelin sheaths could possibly be due to the lack of MAP1B in Schwann cells and/or the corresponding axons during the process of myelination. Both Schwann cells and axons contain MAP1B (Fawcett et al. 1994; Bush et al. 1996b; Ramón-Cueto and Avila 1997).
MAP1B Is Not Essential for Retina Development and GABAC Receptor Clustering
The recent finding that MAP1B interacts with the cytoplasmic domain of the retina-specific GABAC receptor subunit
1 has lead to the hypothesis that MAP1B belongs to a family of synapse-associated proteins that are involved in clustering ion channels at postsynaptic sites providing a link to the cytoskeleton and possibly contributing to the regulation of synaptic efficacy by electrical activity (Hanley et al. 1999). In contrast to previous MAP1B targeting studies, the generation of a true null allele of MAP1B allowed us to address the question of whether MAP1B was indeed essential for retina development and GABAC receptor clustering. If this were the case, one would expect an absence of GABAC immunoreactive puncta, or at least a reduction of their density, in the MAP1B-deficient mouse retina. However, we found no difference in the pattern of GABAC staining between MAP1B-deficient and wild-type mice. Whereas our results do not rule out that MAP1B participates in receptor clustering and linkage to the cytoskeleton, they do demonstrate that MAP1B does not play an essential role in GABAC receptor clustering.
| Acknowledgments |
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This research was supported by a grant from the Austrian Science Fund (Project No. F607).
Submitted: 21 April 2000
Revised: 16 October 2000
Accepted: 24 October 2000
Abbreviations used in this paper: GABA,
-aminobutyric acid; IPL, inner plexiform layer; MAP, microtubule-associated protein.
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