Calretinin-containing retinal amacrine cells are
heterogeneous with regard to their neurochemical properties.
In the rabbit retina, about 90% of them contain glycine,
as evidenced in the present study by double-label immunocytochemistry.
In a previous report, we showed that a small population
of amacrine cells contains both γ-aminobutyric acid
and calretinin. In this study, we further identified this
cell population by means of known secondary markers. However,
none of the markers we tested (choline acetyltransferase,
serotonin accumulation, NADPH-diaphorase, vasoactive intestinal
polypeptide) co-localized with calretinin. A small population
(1%) of the cells in the ganglion cell layer contains both
calretinin and glycine. Since calretinin-positive cells
in the ganglion cell layer have been identified as ganglion
cells based on soma size and presence of calretinin-positive
axons in the optic nerve fiber layer, this population may
represent a class of ganglion cell which contains glycine.
Our results, together with those of other studies, suggest
that calretinin is not a general marker of any of the well-known
amacrine cell types in the mammalian retina. Rather, calretinin,
just as other calcium-binding proteins, is distributed
in a species-specific manner. At the same time it appears
that, as shown for horizontal cells, one or more of the
major buffer-type calcium-binding proteins of the EF-hand
family is present in most of the retinal amacrine cells.