Olfaction Flashcards

1
Q

Advantages of olfaction

A
  • locate and track food/prey at a distance
  • long-distance warning beyond line-of-sight and in the dark
  • sexual attraction
  • hedonic reward system
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2
Q

Physiological and behavioural responses to odours

A
  • visceral responses: smell food (salivation and gastric motility), noxious smell (gag)
  • infants recognise mothers by scent
  • mothers can recognise baby by scent
  • women housed together synchronise menstrual cycles
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3
Q

Role of the turbinates

A
  • increase surface area of the epithelium
  • covered in thin olfactory neuroepitheloum
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4
Q

The neuroepithelium contains…

A
  • olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs)
  • supporting/sustentacular cells
  • a stem-cell population from which new OSNs are generated
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5
Q

Targets of the VSN axons

A

in glomeruli in the accessory olfactory bulb (AOB)

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6
Q

What is the cribiform plate

A
  • bony structure with tiny holes, separating the nose from the brain
  • OSN axons pass through these holes to enter the brain
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7
Q

Location of the apical dendrite of a sensory neuron

A
  • projects through support cells to the nasal cavity
  • capped by dendritic cilia
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8
Q

Why can cilia be considered structures for olfactory signal transduction

A

they have receptor sites for odorant molecules

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9
Q

How is an action potential generated

A
  • odors are detected by the receptors
  • odors are transduced into an electrical signal
  • generation of AP
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10
Q

Structure of ORs

A

GPCRs

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11
Q

OR activation of Adenyl cyclase type-III

A

via Golf (G protein)

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12
Q

Role of cAMP in olfactory signal transduction

A

opens a nonselective cyclic-nucleotide gated (CNG) cation channel, depolarising ciliary membrane

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13
Q

Effect of Ca2+ influx

A

opens Ca2+-activated chloride channels

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14
Q

Effect of Cl- leaving ORN

A
  • down conc gradient
  • further depolarises cell
  • provides amplification
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15
Q

Effect of AP generation in ORNs

A

release of glutamate

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16
Q

Intracellular Cl- concentration of OSNs

A
  • unusually high
  • due to membrane pump NKCC1
  • maintains its own Cl- battery in case the Na+ gradient is insufficient to support threshold current
17
Q

Define amplifiable response

A
  • 1 odor molecule activates many G proteins
  • one AC many cAMP molecules
18
Q

Why is adaptation important

A

allows for sensitivity and extends range of concentration of odor stimulation

19
Q

Role of calcium entry via CNG channels in adaptation

A
  • negative feedback pathway
  • increase of intracellular calcium acts on channel to decrease sensitivity to cAMP, thereby requiring a stronger odor stimulus to produce sufficient cAMP
20
Q

Why is calcium entry important in adaptation response

A

they have very steep concentration-response relations, so the cells are particularly sensitive to small changes in concentration

21
Q

How is an odor encoded

A

by the specific combination of responding neurons

22
Q

Sensory neuron responses

A
  • respond to a single odorant or a specific repertoire of chemically related odorants
  • respond to odorant by inward current flow, which depolarises neuron
  • relationship between odorant concentration and size/duration of inward current
  • sufficient depolarisation triggers AP
23
Q

Define the glomerulus

A

spherical structures containing the incoming axons of the OSNs, the first processing station in the brain

24
Q

Role of the periglomerular cell

A

(inhibitory) connects one glomerulus to another

25
Q

Role of the granule cell

A

(inhibitory) connects one mitral cell to another

26
Q

Role of mitral cells

A

(excitatory) recieve odor information from a receptor/sensory neuron, refine the signal and amplify it an

27
Q

Projection of impulses

A
  • activation of mitral cells
  • impulses flow from olfactory bulbs
  • through lateral olfactory tracts
  • to thalamus, hypothalamus, amygdala, and other regions of limbic system
28
Q

Projection of impulses in thalamus

A

sent to piriform lobe of olfactory cortex and part of frontal lobe (where smells are interpreted and identified)

29
Q

Projection of impulses in hypothalamus, amygdala and other regions of limbic system

A

smell innervates emotional responses

30
Q

How is olfaction tied to memory

A

it skips the thalamus and the main olfacotry bulb is directly connected to the amygdala, which is involved in the formation of memories/emotional experiences

31
Q

How is olfaction unique

A
  • direct and intimate connection to the limbic system
  • explains why scents tend to have such a strong emotional associations
32
Q

Anatomical peculiarities

A
  • each sensory neuron expresses only a single receptors
  • cells expressing the same receptor converge on only 1 or few glomeruli
  • there are 10,000,000 neurons and 1000 receptors
  • each mitral cell innervates a single glomerulus via its apical dendrites
  • cells for detecting an odor are dispersed in epithelium
  • all detection of the odor is gathered and summated into a specific cluster of olfactory bulb neurons