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Dive into the research topics where Masaki Tauchi is active.

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Featured researches published by Masaki Tauchi.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences | 1984

The Shape and Arrangement of the Cholinergic Neurons in the Rabbit Retina

Masaki Tauchi; Richard H. Masland

The acetylcholine-synthesizing neurons of the rabbit retina were selectively stained by intraocular injection of the fluorescent dye 4, 6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAP1). Retinas were then isolated from the eye, fixed for 10-30 min with 4% paraformaldehyde, and mounted flat on the stage of a fluorescence microscope. The acetylcholine-synthesizing cells were penetrated under visual control by microelectrodes filled with lucifer yellow CH. When the dye was electrophoretically injected into the cells, complete filling of their dendrites often occurred. Cells were successfully injected as long as one month after fixation of the tissue. Complete or nearly complete filling of 281 cells was accomplished, at retinal locations systematically covering the retinal surface. The cells stained with DAPI were found to form a single morphological population. They have two to seven primary dendrites, which branch repeatedly within a narrow plane and form a round or slightly oval dendritic tree. The branching becomes very fine for the distal one third of the dendritic tree, and the dendrites there are studded with small swellings. The distal dendritic tree lies mainly within one of the two thin strata of the inner plexiform layer where acetylcholine is present. The shape and size of the dendritic tree are continuously graded across the retina ; the dendritic tree is narrower and the branching denser in the central retina, wider and sparser in the periphery. From knowledge of the population density and the shape of the neurons, one can reconstruct the array of dendrites that exists within the inner plexiform layer. The overlap of the dendritic fields is an order of magnitude greater than of any other retinal neuron previously described. Because the cells not only overlap widely but branch quite profusely, a very dense plexus of cholinergic dendrites is created.


Trends in Neurosciences | 1986

The cholinergic amacrine cell

Richard H. Masland; Masaki Tauchi


The Journal of Neuroscience | 1985

Local order among the dendrites of an amacrine cell population

Masaki Tauchi; Richard H. Masland


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 1990

Shapes and distributions of the catecholamine-accumulating neurons in the rabbit retina

Masaki Tauchi; Nancy Madigan; Richard H. Masland


Neuroscience Research Supplements | 1989

Fractal analysis of ganglion cell dendritic branching patterns of the rat and cat retinae

Katsuko Morigiwa; Masaki Tauchi; Yutaka Fukuda


Neuroscience Research Supplements | 1985

A possible amacrine cell substrate for the detection of stimulus motion

Richard H. Masland; Masaki Tauchi


Neuroscience Research Supplements | 1993

1612 Input-output relationships of the avian retinopetal system

Hiroyuki Uchiyama; Naoyuki Yamamoto; Masaki Tauchi; Hironobu Ito


Neuroscience Research Supplements | 1993

1640 Three dimensional dendritic structure of the long survived axotomized retinal ganglion cells in the mammalian retina

Masaki Tauchi


Neuroscience Research Supplements | 1991

Retinal ganglion cells survived long after the optic nerve section in adult rats

Masaki Tauchi; Yutaka Fukuda


Neuroscience Research Supplements | 1990

The process of dendritic degeneration of retinal ganglion cells after axotomy and recovery by peripheral nerve transplant

Masaki Tauchi; Yutaka Fukuda; Katsuko Morigiwa; Kf So

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Nancy Madigan

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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