“…The differentiation process in the fish retina can be analyzed by monitoring the chronotopographical appearance of the layered retinal structure and functional synapses, the arrest of proliferative activity, or the appearance of a variety of neurochemical macromolecules selectively expressed by retinal cell types (Sandy and Blaxter, '80; Sharma and Ungar, '80; Vecino et al, '93; Kvenseth et al, '96; de Miguel Villegas et al, '97; Hagedorn et al, '98; Doldán et al, '99; Hu and Easter, '99; Helvik et al, 2001; Peterson et al, 2001; Mader and Cameron, 2004; Candal et al, 2005a, 2008; Arenzana et al, 2006; Kitambi and Malicki, 2008; Bejarano‐Escobar et al, 2009). Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), an antigen expressed in the nuclei of cells during DNA replication, has previously been used to identify proliferating precursor cells in the teleost fish retina (Mack and Fernald, '97; Velasco et al, 2001; Cid et al, 2002; Candal et al, 2005a; Bernardos et al, 2007; Thummel et al, 2008; Bejarano‐Escobar et al, 2009). Thus, PCNA immunoreactivity has been observed in the juvenile and adult fish retina in different neurogenic niches, such as a neuroepithelial cell population located in the marginal edge of the retina that is called the circumferential germinal zone (CGZ), and proliferative cells located in the microenvironment around some Müller glia and in the outer nuclear layer (ONL) (Julian et al, '98; Otteson et al, 2001; Cid et al, 2002; Raymond et al, 2006; Bernardos et al, 2007; Thummel et al, 2008; Bejarano‐Escobar et al, 2009).…”