NERVE CELLS IMAGES. Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a...

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NERVE CELLS IMAGES

Transcript of NERVE CELLS IMAGES. Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a...

Page 1: NERVE CELLS IMAGES. Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a type of neuron, typically located near the inner surface.

NERVE CELLS IMAGES

Page 2: NERVE CELLS IMAGES. Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a type of neuron, typically located near the inner surface.

Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a type of neuron, typically located near the inner surface of the eye’s retina, that receives visual information from photoreceptors via two intermediate neuron types. Retinal ganglion cells collectively transmit visual information from the retina to several regions in the thalamus, hypothalamus and

midbrain. They vary significantly in terms of their size, connections, and responses to visual stimulation but they all share the defining property of having a long axon that extends into the brain. These axons form the optic nerve, optic chiasm and optic tract.

Credit: Annie Cavanagh, Wellcome Images.

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Retinal ganglion cell

Page 3: NERVE CELLS IMAGES. Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a type of neuron, typically located near the inner surface.

Confocal microscopy image showing layer 5 pyramidal neurons from a cortical brain slice. Neurons were visualised using a fluorescent calcium indicator. Pyramidal cells are so-called as they have a pyramid-shaped cell body (or soma); they have long, branching dendrites. They are found in the forebrain (cortex and hippocampus) of mammals and are thought to be involved in

cognitive function.Credit: Prof. M Hausser, UCL, Wellcome Images.

Pyramidal neurons

Page 4: NERVE CELLS IMAGES. Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a type of neuron, typically located near the inner surface.

Fluorescence microscopy image of hippocampal neurons labelled with an antibody against the GluR1 subtype of glutamate receptors.Credit: AJ Irving, Wellcome Images

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Neurons in the hippocampus

Page 5: NERVE CELLS IMAGES. Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a type of neuron, typically located near the inner surface.

Phase contrast light microscopy image of neurons in the human cerebellum. The cerebellum is the posterior part of the brain that coordinates sensory inputs and muscular responses. The large cell bodies belong to Purkinje cells. This was a thick section, silver-stained and counterstained.

Credit: Spike Walker, Wellcome Images

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Neurons in the cerebellum

Page 6: NERVE CELLS IMAGES. Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a type of neuron, typically located near the inner surface.

Colour-enhanced light microscopy image of pyramidal neurons forming a network in the brain. These are nerve cells from the cerebral cortex that have one large apical dendrite and several basal dendrites.

Credit: Dr Jonathan Clarke, Wellcome Images.

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Neurons in the brain

Page 7: NERVE CELLS IMAGES. Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a type of neuron, typically located near the inner surface.

Fluorescence microscopy image showing the cerebellar network of Purkinje neurons from a mouse. The neurons are visualised by labelling the cells with green fluorescent protein (GFP). Purkinje cells are specialised neurons found in layers within the cerebellum (at the back of the brain). In humans they are one of the

longest types of neurons in the brain and are involved in transmitting motor output from the cerebellum.Credit: Prof. M Hausser, UCL, Wellcome Images

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Neuronal network in the cerebellum

Page 8: NERVE CELLS IMAGES. Scanning electron micrograph of an isolated retinal ganglion cell. This is a type of neuron, typically located near the inner surface.

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