Zebrafish (Danio rerio) represents an
excellent genetic model for vertebrate visual system studies.
Because the opsin proteins are ideal markers of specific
photoreceptor cell types, we cloned six different zebrafish
opsin cDNAs. Based on pairwise alignments and phylogenetic
comparisons between the predicted zebrafish opsin amino
acid sequences and other vertebrate opsins, the cDNAs encode
rhodopsin, two different green opsins (zfgr1 and zfgr2),
a red, a blue, and an ultraviolet opsin. Phylogenetic analysis
indicates the zfgr1 protein occupies a well-resolved dendrogram
branch separate from the other green opsins examined, while
zebrafish ultraviolet opsin is closely related to the human
blue- and chicken violet-sensitive proteins. Polyclonal
antisera were generated against individual bacterial fusion
proteins containing either the red, blue, or ultraviolet
amino termini or the rod or green opsin carboxyl termini.
Immunolocalization on adult zebrafish frozen sections demonstrates
the green and red opsins are each expressed in different
members of the double cone cell pair, the blue opsin is
detected in long single cones, and the ultraviolet opsin
protein is expressed in the short single cones. In 120-h
postfertilization wholemounts, green, red, blue, and ultraviolet
opsin-positive cells are detected in an orderly arrangement
throughout the entire retina. The antibodies' photoreceptor-type
specificity indicates they will be useful for characterizing
both wild-type and mutant zebrafish retinas.