Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

External Link

Gustavo D. Aguirre, VMD, PhD

Retinal degeneration

Small or Companion Animal Medicine

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

The Cone Matrix Sheath In The Normal And Diseased Retina: Cytochemical And Biochemical Studies Of Peanut Agglutinin-Binding Proteins In Cone And Rod-Cone Degeneration, Kenneth Long, Gustavo Aguirre May 1991

The Cone Matrix Sheath In The Normal And Diseased Retina: Cytochemical And Biochemical Studies Of Peanut Agglutinin-Binding Proteins In Cone And Rod-Cone Degeneration, Kenneth Long, Gustavo Aguirre

Gustavo D. Aguirre, VMD, PhD

The fate of the cone-associated extracellular domain, or cone matrix sheath (CMS), was examined in two canine models of hereditary retinal degeneration. The diseases, which affect cones selectively (cd = cone degeneration), or rods and cones temporally (prcd = progressive rod-cone degeneration), were examined biochemically (SDS-PAGE/lectinblots) and cytochemically (light microscopy) using peanut agglutinin lectin (PNA) to selectively label this domain and associated structures. Most of the cones had disappeared in the adult cd retina. In the remaining cones, PNA labeled the ectopically located somata and the CMSs that were present around severely diseased ones. …


Experimental Eye Research Volume 35, Issue 6, December 1982, Pages 625–642 Cover Image Retinal Degenerations In The Dog Iii Abnormal Cyclic Nucleotide Metabolism In Rod-Cone Dysplasia, Gustavo Aguirre, Debora Farber, Richard Lolley, Paul O'Brien, James Alligood, R Fletcher Nov 1982

Experimental Eye Research Volume 35, Issue 6, December 1982, Pages 625–642 Cover Image Retinal Degenerations In The Dog Iii Abnormal Cyclic Nucleotide Metabolism In Rod-Cone Dysplasia, Gustavo Aguirre, Debora Farber, Richard Lolley, Paul O'Brien, James Alligood, R Fletcher

Gustavo D. Aguirre, VMD, PhD

In dogs bred to develop rod-cone dysplasia, retinal development is normal until 13 days of age.Afterwards, there is an arrest of visual cell differentiation. Rod inner segments remain diminutive and outer segments fail to elongate as in controls; the outer segments show lamellar disorientation and disorganization. Affected visual cells degenerate, but the degeneration process is more rapid and extensive for rods than cones.
Cyclic GMP levels become elevated in affected retinas early during the postnatal differentiation of visual cells; this elevation precedes any morphological evidence of photoreceptor disease. Retinal protein synthesis is normal during the time that retinal cGMP levels …