L4 - overview of the olfactory and gustatory systems Flashcards

1
Q

what is the labelled line code

A

neurons encode for different taste - would have dedicated channel just for sweet taste, leads to behaviour from eating sweet taste
no interlinked between channels

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2
Q

What is the combinational code

A

identity of stimulus is encoded by the entire population - different neurons activated by different stimuli
it is a combination of the extent of activation of different neurons that gives the taste

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3
Q

olfactory sensory transduction pathway

A

1) odorant molecule binds to an olfactory receptor
2) activates alpha subunit of a G-protein
3) alpha subunit binds to the enzyme adenylyl cyclase
4) adenylyl cyclase turns ATP into cAMP
5) cAMP opens a cation channel which allows Na and Ca2+ to tender the cell
6) Ca2+ activates a calcium activated Cl- channel
7) Cl- exits, causing depolarisation of the sensory neuron, fires AP

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4
Q

what happens in insects

A

instead of a G-protein receptor, they have ion channels

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5
Q

number of olfactory receptors in humans

A

300/400

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6
Q

number of olfactory receptors in mice and dogs

A

1000

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7
Q

number of olfactory receptors in drosophila

A

50

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8
Q

olfactory receptor specificity

A

each receptor is not specific to a specific odour, however they respond more to certain odours

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9
Q

what happens as olfactory sensory neurones mature

A

they narrow down to a express a singe olfactory receptor each

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10
Q

where do the same olfactory neuron receptors converge

A

on the same glomerulus

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11
Q

structure of drosophila olfactory receptor neurons

A

fly has olfactory receptor neurons on antennae
the neurons that express the same receptor are scattered around the antennae however their. axons converge in the same antenna lobe

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12
Q

drosophila equivalent of olfactory bulb

A

antenna lobe

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13
Q

where do sensory neurones transfer information to ?

A

second order neurons at glomeruli - this ensure that odour specificity is maintained

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14
Q

what rate do sensory neurons spike at

A

an even rate

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15
Q

describe the spiking rate of the projection neurons

A

spikes a lot at the beginning and tails off towards the end.
This happens because the synapse between the olfactory sensory neuron and the projection neuron is rapidly adapting, this is because the presynaptic terminal runs out of readily releasable synaptic vesicles

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16
Q

why is the spiking rate of projection neurons important

A

causes nerves to respond more to the start of an odour rather than a continuous response
therefore the NS dan focus on changes in odour concentrations

17
Q

what does the convergence of sensory neurons onto second order neurons do

A

reduces nouse in neural signals - averages all the sam noise

strengthens weak responses. - good if want to amplify or enhance weak signals in the environment

18
Q

what is the function of local neurones / granule / glomeruli cells

A

they are local neurons that. live in the antenna/olfacory bulb. They transfer information between different glomeruli (lateral inter-glomerula. cross talk)

19
Q

what is a gain control function of local neurons

A

able to respond and process stimuli that is very weak and sensitive
not sensitive to changes in strong odours

20
Q

what allows this transfer function to shift from being very steep and the beginning to having a more shallow continuous response

A

inhibitory local neurons

21
Q

what do the local inhibitory neurons inhibit

A

they inhibit the synapse between the ORN and the PN - in response to more stimulation of glomeruli

22
Q

de-correlation

A

make responses of neuronal population to different odour as different as possible

23
Q

what happens to correlations if know out the inhibitory neurones

A

they correlations between odours increase, therefore showing that the inhibitory neurons are important

24
Q

what does synapsing of neurons onto a second order cell allow ?

A

removing noise, synaptic adaptation, lateral inhibition (gain control and de-correlation responses)

25
Q

function of the piriform cortex (humans) / mushroom body (insects)

A

learned behaviour - associate smell with event/reward

26
Q

function of the amygdala (humans) / lateral horn (insects)

A

innate behaviour

27
Q

lateral horn neurons vs mushroom body neurons

A

lateral horn responds to lots of different odours

mushroom body responds to much fewer odours

28
Q

how do C.elegans respond to odours

A

sensory neuron responds to an attractive odour which signals to another odour which inhibits turning behaviour so goes towards good odour

29
Q

fly olfactory search strategy

A

3D space
odour comes off in odour plumes - follow plumes back to the source
smell 2 seconds in the past

30
Q

what receptors does taste transduction use

A

metabotropic G-protein receptors and inotropic receptors

31
Q

outline lateral inhibition on taste

A

tasting bitter compounds can inhibit sweet tasting compounds

1) bitter sensing neuron detects bitter compounds
2) Activates GABAergic interneuron
3) Which releases GABA onto the synaptic terminals of the sweet presynaptic neuron
4) inhibits the synaptic release of sweet sensing neuron