The biochemical and morphological specializations of rod and cone
photoreceptors reflect their roles in sight. The apoprotein opsin, which
converts photons into chemical signals, functions at one end of these
highly polarized cells, in the outer segment. Previous work has shown that
the mRNA of rod opsin, the opsin specific to rods, is renewed in the outer
segment with a diurnal rhythm in the retina of the teleost fish
Haplochromis burtoni. Here we show that in the same species, all
three cone opsin mRNAs (blue, green, and red) also have a diurnal rhythm
of expression. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with
primer pairs specific for the cone photoreceptor opsin subtypes was used
to detect opsin mRNA abundance in animals sacrificed at 3-h intervals
around the clock. All three cone opsins were expressed with diurnal
rhythms similar to each other but out of phase with the rod opsin rhythm.
Specifically, cone opsin expression occurs at a higher level near the
onset of the dark period, when cones are not used for vision. Finally, we
found that the rhythm of cone opsin expression in fish appears to be light
dependent, as prolonged darkness changes normal diurnal expression
patterns.