Types of Glial Cells in the Retina
🔹 1. Müller Glial Cells
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Most abundant glial cell in the retina.
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Span the entire thickness of the retina — from the inner limiting membrane (ILM) to the outer limiting membrane (OLM).
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Functions:
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Structural support
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Regulation of extracellular environment (ions, neurotransmitters)
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Light conduction (optical fiber-like role)
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Response to injury (reactive gliosis, GFAP upregulation)
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Blood-retinal barrier support
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🔹 2. Astrocytes
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Located mainly in the nerve fiber layer (NFL) and around the optic nerve head.
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Less numerous than Müller cells.
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Functions:
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Support for blood vessels (especially at the optic nerve head)
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Structural and metabolic support
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Express GFAP in both normal and injured retina
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Participate in inflammatory responses
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🔹 3. Microglia
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The resident immune cells of the retina.
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Distributed throughout all layers, especially:
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Inner plexiform layer (IPL)
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Outer plexiform layer (OPL)
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Functions:
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Immune surveillance
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Phagocytosis of debris
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Involved in inflammatory and degenerative retinal diseases
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Can change morphology in response to stress (from ramified to amoeboid)
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🧠 Summary Table:
Glial Cell Type | Location in Retina | Main Functions | GFAP Expression |
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Müller Cells | Spans entire retina | Structural, metabolic, response to injury | Low (normal), ↑ with injury |
Astrocytes | Nerve fiber layer | Vascular support, structural, inflammatory | High (normal and injured) |
Microglia | Throughout (esp. IPL/OPL) | Immune defense, debris clearing | No GFAP |
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