The sense of smell Outline Main Olfactory System Odor Detection Odor Coding Accessory Olfactory System Pheromone Detection Pheromone Coding 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Chapter 52 Molecular Basis of Olfaction and Taste Copyright © 2012, American Society for Neurochemistry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Advertisements

Olfaction Notes Maddie Cline, Kelly Piper, Meg Mori, Emma Ivanauskas.
Physiology Behrouz Mahmoudi Olfactory System 1.
Essam Eldin Abdel Hady Salama
Olfaction The Sense of Smell.
Gustation and Olfaction A running nose!. Why Taste? Help distinguish safe from unsafe ◦ Bitter, sour = unpleasant ◦ Salty, sweet, “meaty” (umami) = pleasant.
1 Bi / CNS 150 Lecture 16 Wednesday, November 5, 2014 Olfaction Bruce Cohen Reading: Kandel Chapter 32, pp (not taste) Lulu.
Taste & Smell Pre-lab Web questions.
The Chemosensory System MEDS 5371 Spring 2012 Royce Mohan, PhD.
Vision, Hearing, and Smell: the Best-Known Senses
OLFACTORY SYSTEM BY: SULIE GARCIA AND VALERIE GONZALEZ.
Neurotransmitters Ca ++ K+K+ Na + Where a venom (or drug) could work... Receptor Agonists / Antagonists Reuptake Inhibitors.
The Olfactory System. Olfactory System Chemical sensing system with receptor organs in the nasal passages Receptors synapse directly into the brain; heavy.
The Chemical Senses Gustation and Olfaction. The peripheral taste system Primary receptors: about 4000 taste buds in tongue and oral cavity Each taste.
LECTURE 18: OLFACTION AND TASTE REQUIRED READING: Kandel text, Chapter 32 Smell and Taste are the chemical senses Smell (olfaction) is the discriminating.
The Sense of Smell Gonçalo Martins.
The sense of smell Outline Main Olfactory System Odor Detection Odor Coding Accessory Olfactory System Pheromone Detection Pheromone Coding 1.
Slide 1 Smell Olfaction brings both good news and bad news Pheromones Smell— a mode of communication as well as of detecting environment Important signals.
OLFACTION AND GUSTATION
SMELL AND TASTE Jeffrey Zhao, Michael Dawkins, Ryan Fischer, Leah Politte, Sarah Mariani, Alexa Stanley.
PSYC 330: Perception THE CHEMICAL SENSES. The Chemical Senses Smell and Taste – Olfaction and gustation Odors – Volatile molecules Tastes – Soluble molecules.
Smell (Olfaction). Smell is a chemical sense. You inhale something of whatever of whoever it is you smell. You smell something when molecules of a substance.
The human senses: Smell The sense of smell, called olfaction, involves the detection and perception of chemicals floating in the air.
The Chemical Senses. Chemoreceptors  Chemically sensitive cells located throughout the body to monitor: Irritating chemicals on skin or in mucus Ingested.
Chemical Senses Gustation (taste)+ Olfaction (smell) = Flavor.
Anthony J Greene1 Olefaction. Anthony J Greene2 Smell Chemical detection without the danger of ingesting poison Object identification Sexual signaling.
Sense of Smell.
Olfactory The sense of smell Olfactory Bulbs The olfactory bulbs relay sensory signals to the olfactory tract. small axons from the olfactory epithelium.
Warm Up: “Pepsi Challenge” Which do you like bettter?
 Olfact = To smell  Olfaction detects chemicals in solution which is detected in the Olfactory Epithelium which is a yellow-tinged patch located in.
{ Need some help today???? I’ve got your back..
Hursh Patel Sharon Li.  Why do you think taste and smell work so closely together?  How many taste buds does an average human have?  What is a Tastant?
Chapter 8 The Chemical Senses. Introduction Animals depend on the chemical senses to identify nourishment, poison, potential mate Chemical sensation –Oldest.
Prof. Kristin Scott 291 LSA OFFICE HOURS M 11 AM-12 NOON W 11 AM-12 NOON, F 2-3pm and by appointment POWERPOINT SLIDES ON
The Nervous System: Sensory Systems
1 Sense of Smell. Smell (=Olfaction) 2 Normal individual can discriminate more than odors, but not highly developed in human as in some animals.
 The sense of smell is referred to as the “ Olfaction ”.  Our Olfaction depends on the ability of us to detect chemicals.  Our sense of smell is not.
Senses Part 1.
Olfactory, Gustatory Objectives: For each sense identify… specialized organs, anatomy receptor structure and specializations receptor signal transduction.
Aim: To understand how the olfactory transduction system is organized Are there several receptor protein “species” each of which detect a class of odorant.
Sensory Physiology 10.
II Sensory Chemoreceptors: A diverse and evolutionarily ancient class of receptors.
Chapter 17: The Special Senses
Sensory Receptors.
Figure 15.1 Organization of the human olfactory system.
Kelsey Inman Elissa Stiles Cameron Ponder Joey Trejo.
Senses: Taste and Smell Chemical “conversation” – Especially important for large social groups – Recognize territory (Dog) – Navigate during migration.
Cell Communication Chapter 9.
Copyright © 2007 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3e Chapter 8: The Chemical Senses.
Smell (Olfaction). Smell is a chemical sense. You inhale something of whatever of whoever it is you smell. You smell something when molecules of a substance.
Special Senses 12.1 Olfaction.
Fortune Telling by René Magritte “This is not a nose” Bayındır Group Journal Club The Sense of Smell and Its Cellular and Molecular Logic Ekin Özgür 16/12/2009.
Olfaction. Smell Classification Odors Odorants Anatomy of the Nose Olfactory Cleft Primary Olfaction Cortex Amygdala-Hippocampal Complex Entorhinal Cortex.
Taste/Gustation & Smell/Olfaction By: Jordan, Dalton, Miranda, and Tyler.
Sensory Pathways and Sensations Humans can distinguish among many different types of internal and external stimuli because we have highly developed sensory.
Sense of Smell Dr.Mohammed Sharique Ahmed Quadri Assistant Professor Physiology Al Maarefa College 1.
Gustation and Olfaction. Why Taste? Help distinguish safe from unsafe ◦ Bitter, sour = unpleasant ◦ Salty, sweet, “meaty” (umami) = pleasant.
Special Senses.
Ch. 10: Sensory Physiology
Domina Petric, MD Olfaction.
Something in the Air? New Insights into Mammalian Pheromones
Lecture 19 : Olfaction 11/9/09.
Smell (Olfaction): detection of Odorants
PSY391S March 8, 10, 2006 John Yeomans
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم Sense of Smell.
How Does the Brain Smell?
A New Family of Odorant Receptors in Drosophila
Sensory physiology Smell (olfaction) – the cells
A Novel Family of Putative Pheromone Receptors in Mammals with a Topographically Organized and Sexually Dimorphic Distribution  Gilles Herrada, Catherine.
Presentation transcript:

The sense of smell Outline Main Olfactory System Odor Detection Odor Coding Accessory Olfactory System Pheromone Detection Pheromone Coding 1

Human experiment: How well do we taste without smell? 2

Brief Anatomy of the Olfactory System mucus 4

Olfactory neurons respond to odors CineoleIsoamyl Acetate Acetophenone Firestein et al., J Physiol neuron 1 neuron 2 neuron 3 5

Olfactory Receptors are G Protein Coupled Receptors (GPCRs) largest family of receptors hydrophobic/ hydrophilic domains seven transmembrane regions Ligand-binding domain in plane of membrane (TM3,5,6) G protein binding domain in loop 3 (btwn TM 5 and 6) and C-terminus 6

Humans have about 370 odorant receptors Mice have about

Each olfactory neuron contains one receptor 1.Each receptor is in 0.1% of cells 2.Ten receptors are in 1% of cells 3.Isolated olfactory neuron makes mRNA for only one receptor 8

How is olfactory information mapped in the bulb? Receptor map (labeled lines) Complex map (mixed lines) In the Nose: Neurons express one receptor Neurons with the same receptor are in random locations Topographic map? Odorant receptor map? Complex map? 9

Neurons with the same receptor (blue) send axons to the same place Epithelium to bulb Bulb cross-section 10

Neurons with same receptor send axons to one glomerulus Neurons with different receptors project to different glomeruli The olfactory system uses labeled lines Map of odor receptors!!! 11

Fruit flies have 60 different receptors Neurons with the same receptor project to one glomerulus Glomerular structure is a general feature of olfactory systems 12

Epithelium Bulb Basic Feature of Coding in the Olfactory Bulb Olfactory neurons express 1 out of 1000 receptors Neurons with the same receptor converge on single glomeruli in olfactory bulb. The glomeruli serve as modules, and are selectively sensitive to particular odors Model: Different odors activate different brain regions 13

Response of Olfactory Bulbs to an Odorant Molecule, with the Use of a Voltage Sensitive Dye. Technologies: calcium-sensitive dyes, voltage-sensitive dyes and intrinsic signals (changes in blood flow, oxygen levels) Results: Odors activate a few glomeruli Same glomeruli activated on repeated exposure Different odors activate different glomeruli Is there a map of different smells in the brain? Rat olfactory bulb, olfactory imaging Raw data C6 odor 2 times C3 odor then C6 odor Plan: monitor neural activation in the brain 14

How does an olfactory neuron choose only one receptor? How do neurons find the right glomerulus? How are odors processed by the brain? Open questions in olfaction 15

The receptor is involved in axon guidance Replace one receptor with another, targeting changes 16 A. M71 promoter-M71receptor-GFP B. M71 promoter- M71 receptor--RFP C. co-label D. M71 promoter-M71receptor-GFP E. M72 promoter- M72 receptor--RFP F. co-label M71 promoter-M71receptor-GFP M72 promoter- M71 receptor--RFP G. co-label A B C D E F G Expt: Replace one M 72 receptor with M71, targets to M71 glomerulus

Signal Transduction in the Olfactory Epithelium 17

Cellular Structure of Olfactory Bulbs Lateral Olfactory Tract Glomeruli Olfactory Nerve Periglomerular Cells Granule Cells Mitral/Tufted Cells Receptor Cells 18

Central Pathways of the Olfactory System 1.Olfactory sensory neurons project directly to the brain 2.From the olfactory bulb, information is sent to five different brain regions 19

People sniff when they imagine pleasant odors 20

Accessory Olfactory System The Second Nose: the Vomeronasal organ detects pheromones (chemical cues secreted by animals) best evidence of pheromones in insects, many mammals triggers stereotyped behaviors (mating and fighting) 21

The two noses in a mouse (vomeronasal organ) 22

How does the How does the VNO sense pheromones? Two large families of receptors (GPCRS) Not related to olfactory receptors Logic similar: one receptor per cell Projections different: neurons with same receptor project to many little glomeruli 23

Anatomy in the Vomeronasal System One receptor per neuron Neurons with same receptor project to many “glomeruli” 24

Signal Transduction in the Vomeronasal System 25

What happens to mice when their VNO doesn’t work? 26

Do humans sense pheromones thru the VNO? There is a VNO There is not an Accessory Olfactory Bulb TRP channel is a pseudogene VNO receptors are pseudogenes 27

Main points about the olfactory system 1)Lots of receptors 2)One receptor per cell 3)Labeled lines in the olfactory bulb 4)Maps of different smells 28