Smell experience during critical period alters brainDecember 06, 2007Unlike the circuitry of the visual system, that of the olfactory system was thought to be hardwired: Once the neurons had formed, no amount of sensory input could change their arrangement. Now researchers at Rockefeller University and their collaborators have upturned this scientific dogma by showing that there is a sensitive period during which the external environment can alter a circuit in the fly brain that detects carbon dioxide, a gas that alerts flies to food and mates. This research, to be published in the December 6 issue of Neuron, may suggest that this brain plasticity isn't limited to the carbon dioxide detection circuit. Rather, it may be a general feature of the olfactory system itself. "The circuit has a genetic plan, but that genetic plan can adjust to real world conditions," says Leslie Vosshall, head of the Laboratory of Neurogenetics and Behavior. "This paper is the first compelling case that the olfactory system is plastic." Using several imaging techniques, Vosshall and her colleagues traced the carbon dioxide circuit, a well-described pathway that consists of three different types of neurons, the axons and dendrites of which form an entangled ball called a glomerulus. The researchers exposed flies to elevated levels of carbon dioxide to see whether it would alter the shape of this circuit or how it functioned. The glomerulus's volume was already increased after two days of exposure (from birth) and kept on increasing for five days, at which point it stopped. The increase in this specific glomerulus could only be induced by elevated levels of carbon dioxide and was also reversible. After those initial few days, however, the researchers saw a different story unfold. If they didn't expose the flies to carbon dioxide within the first five days, genetics locked in the glomerulus's size such that no matter how long the flies were exposed to the gas, the glomerulus's volume didn't increase. These findings suggest that the fly's external environment can rewire the carbon dioxide detection circuit only during a five-day window of development. "During this critical period, the olfactory system is flexible enough to calibrate its genetic map to its local environment," says first author Silke Sachse, a former postdoc in the Vosshall lab who is now a group leader in optical imaging at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Jena, Germany. "But once that window closes, the circuit is no longer plastic." To figure out the mechanism by which the glomerulus increases its volume, the Vosshall group imaged the three types of neurons that make up the glomerulus -- olfactory sensory neurons, projection neurons and interneurons -- to see whether their structure or function had changed. The olfactory sensory neurons, which report sensory information to glomeruli, did not show any sign of structural or functional changes. However, the projection neurons, which send information from the glomeruli to the brain, and the interneurons, which communicate with the two types of neurons as well as the glomeruli, showed significant functional changes. "Usually the sensory neurons collect information and send it to the brain and it is the job of the brain to interpret what the information means," says Vosshall. "For plasticity to be useful, it probably makes sense to delegate that job to the brain rather than to the external sensory neurons." Rockefeller University |
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| Related Olfactory System Current Events and Olfactory System News Articles How the 100th protein structure solved at Diamond impacts our understanding of how insects smell New research announced today, Wednesday 30th September, by a team of leading scientists working with the UK's national Synchrotron, Diamond Light Source, could have a significant impact on the development and refinement of new eco-friendly pest control methods for worldwide agriculture. How moths key into the scent of a flower Moths need just the essence of a flower's scent to identify it, according to new research from The University of Arizona in Tucson. Neural mapping paints a haphazard picture of odor receptors Despite the striking aromatic differences between coffee, peppermint, and pine, a new mapping of the nose's neural circuitry suggests a haphazard patchwork where the receptors for such disparate scents are as likely as not to be neighbors. MIT paves way to 'artificial nose' MIT biological engineers have found a way to mass-produce smell receptors in the laboratory, an advance that paves the way for "artificial noses" to be created and used in a variety of settings. Odd protein interaction guides development of olfactory system Scientists have discovered a strange mechanism for the development of the fruit fly antennal lobe, an intricate structure that converts the chaotic stew of odors in the environment into discrete signals in the brain. Disabling a sensory organ prompts female mice to act like male mice By short-circuiting the sensory organ that detects the chemical cues mice use to attract mates, a team of Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) researchers has prompted female mice to behave like male mice in the throes of courtship. New research shows sharks use their noses and bodies to locate smells Sharks are known to have a keen sense of smell, which in many species is critical for finding food. However, according to new research from Boston University marine biologists, sharks can not use just their noses to locate prey; they also need their skin - specifically a location called the lateral line. Biosensor sniffs out explosives Temple University School of Medicine researchers have developed a new biosensor that sniffs out explosives and could one day be used to detect landmines and deadly agents, such as sarin gas, according to a paper in the June issue of Nature Chemical Biology. When smell cells fail they call in stem cell reserves Hopkins researchers have identified a backup supply of stem cells that can repair the most severe damage to the nerves responsible for our sense of smell. Common algae helps illustrate mammalian brain electrical circuitry Mice whose brain cells respond to a flash of light are providing insight into the complexities of the sense of smell and may ultimately yield a better understanding of how the human brain works. More Olfactory System Current Events and Olfactory System News Articles |
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