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Fig. 3. Hybridisation of retinal photoreceptors with the HPO4 (ultraviolet-opsin) probe (A,C,EH) and with the HPO1 (green-opsin) probe (IK). (A,C) In zebrafish, HPO4 hybridisation is restricted to short single cones (arrows); these cones, which form rows with long single cones, are the most vitreally located cone types, as observed histologically (B,D; arrows). (E) In Atlantic salmon parr, HPO4 hybridisation is restricted to single corner cones (arrows); note that these cones face the partitioning membranes of adjacent double cones (arrowheads). (F) The same corner cones are labelled by HPO4 in the salmon alevin. (G) In the cichlid Labidochromis cearuleus, HPO4 hybridises to single cones (arrows), as is the case in the other cichlid species investigated Pseodotropheus spp. and Archocentrus nigrofasciatus. (H) In turbot larva, as in halibut larva (see Fig.1H), HPO4 hybridises to single photoreceptors in the ventral portion of the retina (arrows). (I) Intense HPO1 hybridisation in the retinal photoreceptor layer of cod larva. (J) In the same cod retina, no hybridisation is observed with the HPO1 sense probe applied to a section adjacent to that shown in I. (K) HPO1 hybridisation in the retinal photoreceptor layer of the herring larva. dc, double cone; lc, long single cone; onl, outer nuclear layer; rpe, retinal pigment epithelium. Scale bar: A,B,E,F,H, 12µm; C,D, 18µm; G, 15µm; IK, 21µm.
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