Neuroanatomy of Gustation and Olfaction Flashcards

1
Q

What is the role of olfactory receptor neurons?

A

Allows you to recognize thousands of air-borne odors even at extremely low concentrations

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2
Q

What is the significance of thin nasal bones?

A

Thin bones allows the olfactory receptor neurons to be sensitive to facial trauma

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3
Q

Describe the taste capabilities of the gustatory system

A

Very limited range

Sweet, salty, sour, bitter and umami (important for identifying amino acids)

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4
Q

What allows you to accept/reject foods and taste things other than the four basic tastes

A

Different combination of taste receptors

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5
Q

What is the significance of the olfactory bulb and tract?

A

Olfactory receptors synapse at the bulb in the cribiform plate and processes odors.
Tract transmits sensory info to the brain

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6
Q

*Anatomy of the cribriform plate

A

The bulb sits here. Located at rostral end of the olfactory sulcus and anterior cranial fossa

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7
Q

*Anatomy of olfactory receptor neurons

A

Located on the roof of nasal cavity/inferior surface of cribriform plate, along nasal septum and medial wall of superior nasal conchae

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8
Q

What is CN I?

A

Olfactory receptor Neuron. Has a single dendritic process that receives info from envt. Receptors are in the olfactory mucosa of the superior nasal cavity

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9
Q

What is the importance of ducts and glands?

A

Keep the olfactory epithelium moist

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10
Q

*What is the role of the supporting cells?

A

Surround the olfactory nerve bodies. Have receptors extending to the olfactory epithelium to catch smell molecules

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11
Q

Cilia on ORNs

A

Nonmotile and contain GPCR (ligand gated) receptors. Ligand binding = signal sent to olfactory bulb

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12
Q

What is the significance of the lamina propria?

How about Basal cells?

A
  • Holds immune cells (important since the mucosa is exposed to external envt)
  • act as stem cells for ORNs and supporting cells
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13
Q

What is the significance of Brush cells?

How about Mucus

A
  • ciliated columnar epithelial cells

- made and secreted by glands and ducts in the Olfactory epithelium

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14
Q

Describe how the smell molecules reach the olfactory bulb

A

Smell molecule ligand binds to GPCR on ORN > contact mucus layer on olfactory epithelium and interacts with odorant binding proteins in the mucus > adenyl cyclase activation = increase cAMP > ion channels open and increase in Ca and Na influx > action potential to the olfactory bulb

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15
Q

*Describe the organization of the olfactory bulb

A

An ORN GPCR accepts a particular smell ligand. In the bulb the ORNs are grouped according to the ligand they respond to. Different ORN combination results in smelling different things

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16
Q

What is the significance of granule cell layer?

A

Deepest of the olfactory bulb. Has granule cells which are the interneurons of the olfactory bulb that help regulate other cells

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17
Q

*What is the significance of the mitral cell layer?

A

Has mitral cell bodes and axons of the tufted cells that carry sensory info received from the ORNs and transmit it to the brain

18
Q

What is the importance of the External plexiform layer?

A

Has dendrites of the tufted, mitral and granule cells. Cross talk between these cells happen in this layer.

19
Q

What molecule do granule cells use to modulate tufted and mitral cell output?

A

GABA (lowers mitral/tufted cell activity)

20
Q

*What is the importance of the glomerular cell layer?

A

ORNs synapse to the olfactory bulb in this layer

21
Q

*What is the importance of the olfactory nerve layer?

A

Has the ORN axons that penetrate the cribriform plate

22
Q

**What is the role of centrifugal fibers?

A

Carry info from brain to bulb via the anterior commissure. Regulates feedback loops

23
Q

What is the olfactory glomeruli? Describe the nature of the ORNs synapsing on the glomerulus

A

ORNs will synapse on tufted and mitral cells in the glomerulus.
One glomerulus has lots of ORNs sensitive to the same odor molecule synapsing but ORN only synapses on 1 glomerulus.

24
Q

How do you adapt to smell?

A

Negative feedback of granular cells inhibit the propagation of info by mitral and tufted cells when you smell something for long enough

25
Q

How is info about olfaction transmitted to the brain?

A

Via mitral/tufted cells to the lateral olfactory tract

26
Q

Importance of olfactory projections to the hippocampus, amygdala and dorsomedial thalamic nucleus

A

Hippocampus - memory
Amygdala - recognize danger and fear
Dorsomedial nucleus - secondary projection from the olfactory cortex for further info processing

27
Q

Draw the different projections of olfactory info from the lateral olfactory tract

A

Ok

28
Q

What is the paleocortex and neocortex and what are their significance?

A

Paleocortex (primitive cortex) where the olfactory cortex is. Sends projections to other areas (neocortex areas)
Neocortex helps discriminate odors

29
Q

Significance of the orbitofrontal cortex?

A

Where integration of smell and taste occur

30
Q

Where are taste buds found?

A

All over the oropharyngeal cavity, not just the tongue

31
Q

Describe the pathway of taste perception

A

Taste molecules diffuse through taste pore and bind to receptors on apical microvilli > cell depolarize or hyperpolarize > action potential relayed to afferents > fibers from the facial nerve (chorda tympani) synapse to the solitary tract > solitary nucleus > gustatory nucleus (rostral portion of the solitary nucleus)

32
Q

Importance of the chorda tympani and soft palate

A
  • Innervates the fungiform papillae and anterior foliate papillae (anterior 2/3)
  • taste buds here are innervated by the greater superficial petrosal nerve (also from CN VII)
33
Q

Importance of the pontomedullary junction and geniculate ganglia

A

Afferents from facial nerve carry info and enter the brainstem here
Where sensory cell bodies of CN VII are. Carry taste to the rostral solitary nucleus (gustatory nucleus)

34
Q

Tongue innervation

A

Anterior 2/3 = lingual n. (from CN V) for sensation and chorda tympani for taste
Posterior 1/3 = CN IX

35
Q

Which papillae does VII innervate?
Which papillae does IX innervate?
Which does X innervate?

A

Filiform, fungiform and anterior foliate
Posterior foliate, vallate
Median glosso-epiglottic fold

36
Q

*Describe the gustation pathway

A

Taste molecule binds receptors on papillae > depolarize the taste bud receptors > AP > travels to solitary tract > solitary nucleus > ipsilateral central tegmental tract > parvicellular ventral posteromedial nucleus > ipsilateral posterior limb of internal capsule > frontal operculum and anterior insular cortex > Brodmann area 3b > Lateral posterior orbitofrontal cortex with all other action potentials

37
Q

What is anosmia?

Hyposomia?

A
  • loss of smell

- decreased sensitivity to odorants

38
Q

What is ageusia?
Hypoguesia?
Parageusia/dysgeusia

A

Complete loss of taste. Rare since many CNs ( VII , IX and X) carry taste info
Decreased taste sensitivity
Altered taste perception (due to drug use)

39
Q

Lesions of CN VII

A

Can be caused by vestibular schwannoma in the Internal Auditory meatus by compressing the chorda tympani. Results in loss of taste in anterior 2/3 of tongue on ipsilateral side, ipsilateral facial paralysis, hearing loss (due to stapedius), impaired gland secretion

40
Q

Lesion of distal geniculate ganglion?

A

Facial nerve fibers synapse here first. Facial paralysis possibly with or without taste loss