Photoreceptor layer of salmonid fishes: Transformation and loss of single cones in juvenile fish


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Authors: Cheng, CL; Flamarique, IN; Harosi, FI; Rickers-Haunerland, J; Haunerland, NH
Year: 2006
Journal: J Comp Neurol 495: 213-235
Title: Photoreceptor layer of salmonid fishes: Transformation and loss of single cones in juvenile fish
Abstract: The retinas of many vertebrates have cone photoreceptors that express multiple visual pigments. In many of these animals, including humans, the original cones to appear in the retina (which express UV or blue opsin) may change opsin types, giving rise to new spectral phenotypes. Here we used microspectrophotometry and in situ hybridization with cDNA probes to study the distribution of UV and blue cones in the retinas of four species of Pacific salmon (coho, chum, chinook, and pink salmon), in the Atlantic salmon, and in the rainbow/ steelhead trout. In Pacific salmon and in the trout, all single cones express a UV opsin at hatching lambda(max) of the visual pigment similar to 365 nm), and these cones later transform into blue cones by opsin changeover (lambda(max) of the blue visual pigment similar to 434 nm). Cones undergoing UV opsin downregulation exhibit either of two spectral absorbance profiles. The first is characterized by UV and blue absorbance peaks, with blue absorbance dominating the base of the outer segment. The second shows U-V absorbance diminishing from the outer segment tip to the base, with no sign of blue absorbance. The first absorbance profile indicates a transformation from U-V to blue phenotype by opsin changeover, while the second type suggests that the cone is undergoing apoptosis. These two events (transformation and loss of corner cones) are closely associated in time and progress from ventral to dorsal retina. Each double cone member contains green (lambda(max) similar to 510 nm) or red (lambda(max) similar to 565 nm) visual pigment (double cones are green/red pairs), and, like the rods (lambda(max) similar to 508 nm), do not exhibit opsin changeover. Unlike Pacific salmonids, the Atlantic salmon shows a mixture of ILTV and blue cones and a partial loss of corner cones at hatching. This study establishes the UV-to-blue cone transformation as a general feature of retinal growth in Pacific salmonids (genus Oncorhynchus).
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