PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Smell is a symphony

Stowers researchers present a new model for how the brain is organized to process odor information

Smell is a symphony
2012-03-20
(Press-News.org) Just like a road atlas faithfully maps real-word locations, our brain maps many aspects of our physical world: Sensory inputs from our fingers are mapped next to each other in the somatosensory cortex; the auditory system is organized by sound frequency; and the various tastes are signaled in different parts of the gustatory cortex.

The olfactory system was believed to map similarly, where groups of chemically related odorants - amines, ketones, or esters, for example - register with clusters of cells that are laid out next to each other.

When researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research traced individual odor molecules' signal deep into the brain, they found evidence that this "chemotopic" hypothesis of olfaction is insufficient, paving the way for a new model of how the sense of smell works, and how it came about.

"When we mapped the individual chemical features of different odorants, they mapped all over the olfactory bulb, which processes incoming olfactory information," says Associate Investigator C. Ron Yu, PhD, who led the study published in this week's online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. "From the animal's perspective that makes perfect sense. The chemical structure of an odor molecule is not what's important to them. They really just want to learn about their environment and associate olfactory information with food or other relevant information."

The brain receives information about odors from olfactory receptors, which are embedded in the membrane of sensory neurons in the nasal cavity. Any time an odor molecule interacts with a receptor, an electrical signal travels to so-called glomeruli in the olfactory bulb. Each glomerulus receives input from olfactory receptor neurons expressing only one type of olfactory receptor. The overall glomerular activation patterns within the olfactory bulb are thought to represent specific odors.

"Chemotopy is a very attractive model," says Yu. But it had never been mapped accurately based on the earlier available technologies and recent experiments suggested that the chemotopic hypothesis breaks down at a fine level. To increase the resolution of the "olfactory map," Yu and his team generated a new line of transgenic mice with superb sensitivity and devised equipment that allowed them to deliver hundreds of odor stimuli to a single mouse.

When the Stowers researchers examined the activation pattern at the level of single glomeruli, they found that certain odors activated glomeruli within a distinct area of the olfactory bulb, while others signaled to glomeruli located all over the map. Odors from different classes intermingled, too, suggesting that the glomeruli have not evolved to only detect the chemical shapes of specific odorants.

This makes sense, as there are hundreds of thousands of odors, says Limei Ma, PhD, a research specialist at Stowers and first author on the new study. "Many of them could be really novel to the organism, something they never encountered before," she says. "The system must have the capability to recognize and encode anything."

VIDEO: Any time an odor molecule interacts with an olfactory receptor in the nasal cavity, an electrical signal travels to so-called glomeruli in the olfactory bulb. Each glomerulus receives input from...
Click here for more information.

So if glomeruli didn't have a fidelity to certain molecular shapes, as the chemotopic hypothesis had suggested, what did unite them? The team was led to a "tunotopic" hypothesis of the olfactory system. Individual olfactory receptors are "tuned" during evolution not to one particular kind of odorant, but to a variety of molecules. In combination, these receptors can then respond to those millions of smells. Glomeruli with similar tuning properties tend to be near each other. From a computing standpoint, this arrangement helps to enhance contrast among similar odors, explains Ma.

"The evolution of these receptors is not dictated by the chemical structures that they recognize," says Yu. "Most of our receptors have descended from a few common ancestral genes. Initially, they are more likely tuned to similar odors. When receptors accumulate mutations, it adds to their repertoire of natural odors they recognize."

Imagine a roomful of musicians. In chemotopy, the musicians are clustered according to their instruments and never play with other instruments. The team's tunotopic hypothesis is closer to an actual symphony: Different instruments overlap to create many more different sounds than the individual ones could.

Yu and his team think, further, that the tunotopic hypothesis may help us understand visual, auditory, and somatosensory processing as well. In the case of olfaction, tunotopy allows the animal to better distinguish among the nuances of odors. That precision, from an evolutionary perspective, would come in handy as the animal sorted through its environment.

It also helps us adapt to a constantly changing world.

"When you have a new chemical synthesized, like new perfumes and food flavors, you don't have to create new brain regions to react to it," says Ma. "What you do is use the existing receptors to sense all these chemicals and then tell your brain whether this is novel, whether it's similar, or whether it's something really strange."



INFORMATION:

Researcher who also contributed to the work include Qiang Qiu, Elden Q. Yu, Richard Alexander and Winfried Wiegraebe at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research, Stephen Gradwohl, a former Stowers Scholar and now at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, and Aaron Scott, formerly at the Stowers Institute and now at the University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia.

The work was supported by funding from the Stowers Institute and the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.

About the Stowers Institute for Medical Research

The Stowers Institute for Medical Research is a non-profit, basic biomedical research organization dedicated to improving human health by studying the fundamental processes of life. Jim Stowers, founder of American Century Investments, and his wife Virginia opened the Institute in 2000. Since then, the Institute has spent over 800 million dollars in pursuit of its mission.

Currently the Institute is home to over 500 researchers and support personnel; over 20 independent research programs; and more than a dozen technology development and core facilities.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Smell is a symphony

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists develop a software tool for estimating heart disease risk

2012-03-20
University of Granada researchers have developed a software tool that makes an accurate estimation of the risk that a person has to suffer a heart disease. In addition, this software tool allows the performance of massive risk estimations, i.e. it helps estimating the risk that a specific population group has of suffering a heart condition. The researchers employed a sample including 3 000 patients. Heart conditions increasingly affect working age population, which can make individuals loss potential years of work and productivity. Understanding the risk for ...

Empowered citizens or hopeful bystanders?

2012-03-20
The new political appetite for 'localism' in town planning has triggered anxiety within local communities and amongst those charged with making it work, according to new research funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC). A study led by Professor Nick Gallent of the Bartlett School of Planning, University College London, looked at how communities in Kent have sought to influence the policies of local authorities and service providers and how, in the recent past, they have engaged with planning professionals around the production of 'parish plans'. The ...

First complete full genetic map of promising energy crop

2012-03-20
Researchers in Wales and the United States have collaborated to complete the first high-resolution, comprehensive genetic map of a promising energy crop called miscanthus. The results – published in the current edition of the peer-reviewed, online journal PLoS One – provide a significant breakthrough towards advancing the production of bioenergy. The breakthrough results from the long-term collaboration between energy crop company Ceres, Inc., based in Thousand Oaks, California, USA, and the Institute of Biological, Environmental and Rural Sciences (IBERS) at Aberystwyth ...

Lifestyle study highlights key differences in relapsing and progressive onset MS

2012-03-20
Patients with relapsing onset Multiple Sclerosis (MS) who consumed alcohol, wine, coffee and fish on a regular basis took four to seven years longer to reach the point where they needed a walking aid than people who never consumed them. However the study, published in the April issue of the European Journal of Neurology, did not observe the same patterns in patients with progressive onset MS. The authors say that the findings suggest that different mechanisms might be involved in how disability progresses in relapsing and progressive onset MS. Researchers asked patients ...

Scientists develop tools to make more complex biological machines from yeast

2012-03-20
Scientists are one step closer to making more complex microscopic biological machines, following improvements in the way that they can "re-wire" DNA in yeast, according to research published today in the journal PLoS ONE. The researchers, from Imperial College London, have demonstrated a way of creating a new type of biological "wire", using proteins that interact with DNA and behave like wires in electronic circuitry. The scientists say the advantage of their new biological wire is that it can be re-engineered over and over again to create potentially billions of connections ...

Researchers develop blueprint for nuclear clock accurate over billions of years

Researchers develop blueprint for nuclear clock accurate over billions of years
2012-03-20
A clock accurate to within a tenth of a second over 14 billion years – the age of the universe – is the goal of research being reported this week by scientists from three different institutions. To be published in the journal Physical Review Letters, the research provides the blueprint for a nuclear clock that would get its extreme accuracy from the nucleus of a single thorium ion. Such a clock could be useful for certain forms of secure communication – and perhaps of greater interest – for studying the fundamental theories of physics. A nuclear clock could be as much ...

Soy-based S-equol supplement reduces metabolic syndrome risk factors

2012-03-20
Washington, DC. (March 19, 2012) – A 12-week treatment of the fermented soy germ-based nutritional supplement containing S-equol significantly lowered hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), LDL cholesterol and improved vascular stiffness, all factors that occur as part of metabolic syndrome, according to a first-of-its-kind peer-reviewed study reported in a poster at the Women's Health 2012 annual meeting. "This study is the first to provide evidence that a daily supplement of soy-based S-equol favorably change metabolic syndrome risk factors, particularly in women. Because not all ...

Study: Including ads in mobile apps poses privacy, security risks

2012-03-20
Researchers from North Carolina State University have found that including ads in mobile applications (apps) poses privacy and security risks. In a recent study of 100,000 apps in the official Google Play market, researchers noticed that more than half contained so-called ad libraries. And 297 of the apps included aggressive ad libraries that were enabled to download and run code from remote servers – which raises significant privacy and security concerns. "Running code downloaded from the Internet is problematic because the code could be anything," says Dr. Xuxian Jiang, ...

Kloverpoint Integrates Twitter with its Content Publishing and Social Collaboration Services

2012-03-20
Kloverpoint Technologies Inc. is pleased to announce the release of its newest tool that will allow its network members to quickly post updates and announcements to Twitter regarding new content created and published on Kloverpoint. Creating and sharing webpages and photo albums are some of the main features of Kloverpoint. The integration of Twitter with Kloverpoint allows for quick announcement postings that will notify Twitter followers that new content is available on Kloverpoint. "With the release of our newest tool, Kloverpoint users will not need to ...

Targeted X-ray treatment of mice prevents glaucoma

2012-03-20
Jackson Laboratory researchers have demonstrated that a single, targeted x-ray treatment of an individual eye in young, glaucoma-prone mice provided that eye with apparently life-long and typically complete protection from glaucoma. In research published March 19 in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Gareth Howell, Ph.D., Simon John, Ph.D., (professor and Howard Hughes Medical Investigator) and colleagues also used sophisticated genomics methods to uncover some of the very first pathways to change during glaucoma in these mice. The first pathway they detected to change ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Multisite review shows serious adverse events occur frequently in outpatient care

Study highlights need for improvement of patient safety in outpatient settings

Sylvester researchers develop a nanoparticle that can penetrate the blood-brain barrier

Caterbot? Robatapillar? It crawls with ease through loops and bends

Geologists, biologists unearth the atomic fingerprints of cancer

Purdue pharmacy researcher receives $2.4 million NIH grant to fight antimicrobial-resistant lung infections

The Clues for Cleaner Water

New $14.5 million center to help US Navy overcome emerging challenges

Now available from Penn Nursing: innovative, online psychedelic course

Greet receives funding for Abstraction in the Andes, 1950 - 1970

Mindfulness training enhances opioid addiction treatment

Using advanced genetic techniques, scientists create mice with traits of Tourette disorder

3D video conferencing tool lets remote user control the view

The Ottawa Hospital is expanding life-saving biotherapeutics research and manufacturing to its new campus thanks to $59 million grant

Early neurodevelopmental assessments for predicting long-term outcomes in infants at high risk of cerebral palsy

Snowfall and drought: $4.8 million field campaign will improve forecasts in western US, led by U-M

SwRI Workbench for Offline Robotics Development™ (SWORD™) launched at Automate 2024

Science doesn't understand how ice forms (video)

Study reveals APOE4 gene duplication as a new genetic form of Alzheimer's disease

Study highlights key predictors of adolescent substance use; special issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry focuses on substance use disorders

Racial and ethnic disparities in initiation of direct oral anticoagulants among Medicare beneficiaries

Behavioral interventions to improve breast cancer screening outreach

Venus has almost no water. A new study may reveal why

DDT pollutants found in deep sea fish off Los Angeles coast

Turbid waters keep the coast healthy

Microscopic heart vessels imaged in super-resolution for first time at Imperial

Clinical trial shows that cytisinicline can help people quit vaping

Groundbreaking microcapacitors could power chips of the future

Machine learning for maternal health: University of Oklahoma engineer receives NSF Career Award for preeclampsia study

Unraveling isopods' culinary secrets and why it matters for ecosystems

[Press-News.org] Smell is a symphony
Stowers researchers present a new model for how the brain is organized to process odor information