Structured odorant response patterns across a complete olfactory receptor neuron population

Citation:

Si G*, Kanwal JK*, Hu Y, Tabone CJ, Baron J, Berck M, Vignoud G, Samuel ADT. Structured odorant response patterns across a complete olfactory receptor neuron population. Neuron. 2019;101 (5) :950-962.

Abstract:

Odor perception allows animals to distinguish odors, recognize the same odor across concentrations, and determine concentration changes. How the activity patterns of primary olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs), at the individual and population levels, facilitate distinguishing these functions remains poorly understood. Here, we interrogate the complete ORN population of the Drosophila larva across a broadly sampled panel of odorants at varying concentrations. We find that the activity of each ORN scales with the concentration of any odorant via a fixed dose-response function with a variable sensitivity. Sensitivities across odorants and ORNs follow a power-law distribution. Much of receptor sensitivity to odorants is accounted for by a single geometrical property of molecular structure. Similarity in the shape of temporal response filters across odorants and ORNs extend these relationships to fluctuating environments. These results uncover shared individual- and population-level patterns that together lend structure to support odor perceptions.

Notes:

Associated Commentary - Order in Odors: A Power Law Structures Encoding of Stimulus Identity and Intensity 

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 06/17/2021