HUF 2-56 Sensations of smell and taste Flashcards

1
Q

Olfactory epithelium

A
  • Olfactory sensory neurons
  • Dorsal and posterior nasal cavity
  • Quite breathing: only small portion of air reaches it
  • Active sniffing: ↑ fraction
  • Surface of nasal cavity inflated by presence of conchae (highly vascular; erectile tissue)
  • Cold: lose sensation of smell
    ∵ Conchae are engorged with blood
    => ↓ air reaching olfactory epithelium
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2
Q

Olfactory sensory neurons

A
  • Cilia: odorant receptor molecules
  • Short-lived; constantly replaced by new cells from basal stem cells
  • Bowman’s gland
    => Lipid-rich mucus
    ∴ Lipid-soluble => odor
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3
Q

Odorant receptor superfamily

A
  • GPCR; 7 transmembrane domains
  • Diversity in aa sequence
    => Recognise diff. molecular features of odorants
  • ~400 functional members in human (largest family in human genome)
  • Each olfactory sensory neurons express ONE and ONLY ONE of these receptors
    ∵ aa changes in 1 single odorant receptor
    => Diff. in odor perception among individuals
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4
Q

Chemoelectrical transduction by odorant receptors

A
- GPCR
=> cAMP
=> Open cyclic nucleotide-gated channels
=> Na+ and Ca2+ influx
=> Deplorisation
=> Firing of olfactory sensory receptors
  • Desensitisation of odorant receptors
    => Cease to notice odor after cont. exposure
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5
Q

How do odorant receptors code diff. odors?

A

Odorant molecule coded by combination of odorant receptors that the molecule activates

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6
Q

Organisation of olfactory bulb

A
  • Olfactory neurons bearing same olfactory receptors spread across olfactory epithelium
  • Axons converge to glomerulus (specialised synaptic regions in olfactory epithelium)
  • Diff. odorants produce diff. patterns of glomerulus activities
  • Mitral cells: convey signal collected in glomeruli into CNS
    => Recognition
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7
Q

Central processing of olfactory info.

A

1° olfactory cortical areas

  • Ant. olfactory nu.
  • Olfactory tubercle
  • Piriform cortex
  • Amygdala
  • Entorhinal cortex
  • Emotive aspects of olfactory sensation

2° olfacotry cortical areas

  • Orbitofrontal cortex (from thalamus)
  • Frontal cortex
  • Conscious discrimination of odors
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8
Q

Common disorders of smell sensation

A

Anosmia: absence of sense of smell
Hyposmia: diminished olfactory sensitivity
Dysosmia: distorted sense of smell

Causes:

  • Absence / disrupted functions of odorant receptors
  • Hypogonadism (Kallmann’s syndrome)
  • Ageing: olfactory threshold ↑ with age
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9
Q

Taste papilla

A

3 types:

  1. Circumvallate
  2. Foliate
  3. Fungiform

Innervation:

  • Ant. 2/3: chorda tympani
  • Pos. 1/3: CN9

Tongue, oral mucosa of palate and epiglottis

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10
Q

Taste buds and taste cells

A
  • 50 - 150 taste cells in each taste bud => Gustatory aff. n.
  • Microvilli in taste pore (in contact with dissolved tastants)
  • Saliva: food molecule delivery
  • Taste cells are short-lived (9-10 days)
    ∴ Constantly replaced by basal cells (stem cells)
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11
Q

Types and meaning of taste

A
  1. Sweet: source of metabolic energy
  2. Bitter: poison
  3. Sour: acidity e.g. fruit not ripe yet; bacterial activity
  4. Salty: NaCl (electrolyte)
  5. Umami: GLU (source of protein)

Specific region of tongue is more sensitive to specific taste

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12
Q

Chemoelectric transduction of taste

A

Sweet: Molecules bind to GPCR
Bitter: Molecules block K+ channels directly OR bind to GPCR (intracelluar signalling => membrane excitability)
Sour: Direct entry of H+ through Na-channels OR blockade of K+ channels
Salty: Na+ pass through Na-selective ion channels directly

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13
Q

Central projections of gustatory signals

A
  1. Chorda tympani => Geniculate ganglion
    CN9 => Petrosal ganglion
    Pharynx => Nodose ganglion (CN10)
  2. Gustatory area of nu. of solitary tract
  3. VP / VM nu. of thalamus
  4. Gustatory cortex (ant. insula-frontal operculum)
  5. 2° gustatory cortical area in orbitofrontal cortex
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14
Q

Common disorders of taste sensation

A

Ageusia: absence of sense of taste
Hypogeusia: diminished taste sensitivity
Dysgeusia: distorted sense of taste
Bell’s palsy: impair taste sensation

‘Taste’: combination of sensation of taste, olfaction, temp., somatosensation (pain, texture)

Gustatory cortex: also receives thermal, mechanical and nociceptive stimuli
Orbitofrontal cortex: integrate olfactory and gustatory signal
=> final taste sensation

  • Diminished sensation of smell in common cold or flu
    => ↓ sensation of taste
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