In mammals, each cone had been thought to
contain only one single type of photopigment. It was not
until the early 1990s that photopigment coexpression
was reported. In the house mouse, the distribution of
color cones shows a characteristic division. Whereas in
the upper retinal field the ratio of short wave to middleto-
long wave cones falls in the usual range (1:10), in the
ventral retinal field M/L-pigment expression is
completely missing. In the transitional zone, numerous
dual cones are detectable (spatial coexpression). In other
species without retinal division, dual cones appear
during development, suggesting that M/L-cones develop
from S-cones. Dual elements represent a transitory stage
in M/L-cone differentiation that disappear with
maturation (transitory coexpression). These two
phenomena seem to be mutually exclusive in the species
studied so far.
In the comparative part of this report the retinal cone
distribution of eight rodent species is reported. In two
species dual cones appear in adult specimens without
retinal division, and dual elements either occupy the
dorsal peripheral retina, or make up the entire cone
population. This is the first observation proving that all
cones of a retina are of dual nature. These species are
good models for the study of molecular control of opsin
expression and renders them suitable sources of dual cones for investigations on the role and neural
connections of this peculiar cone type.
In the developmental part, the retinal maturation of
other species is examined to test the hypothesis of
transitory coexpression. In these species S-pigment
expression precedes that of the M/L-pigment, but dual
cones are either identified in a small number or they are
completely missing from the developing retina. These
results exclude a common mechanism for M/L-cone
maturation: they either transdifferentiate from S-cones or
develop independently