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1.
J Comp Neurol ; 502(3): 468-82, 2007 May 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17366613

ABSTRACT

In past studies in which we mapped 2-deoxyglucose uptake evoked by systematically different odorant chemicals across the entire rat olfactory bulb, glomerular responses could be related to each odorant's particular oxygen-containing functional group. In the present study we tested whether aliphatic odorants containing two such functional groups (esters, ketones, acids, alcohols, and ethers) would stimulate the combination of glomerular regions that are associated with each of the functional groups separately, or whether they would evoke unique responses in different regions of the bulb. We found that these very highly water-soluble molecules rarely evoked activity in the regions responding to the individual functional groups; instead, they activated posterior glomeruli located about halfway between the dorsal and ventral extremes in both the lateral and the medial aspects of the bulb. Additional highly water-soluble odorants, including very small molecules with single oxygenic groups, also strongly stimulated these posterior regions, resulting in a statistically significant correlation between posterior 2-deoxyglucose uptake and molecular properties associated with water solubility. By showing that highly water-soluble odorants stimulate a part of the bulb associated with peripheral and ventral regions of the epithelium, our results challenge a prevalent notion that such odorants would activate class I odorant receptors located in zone 1 of the olfactory epithelium, which projects to the dorsal aspect of the bulb.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping , Odorants , Olfactory Bulb/cytology , Olfactory Receptor Neurons/physiology , Oxygen , Smell/physiology , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Deoxyglucose/metabolism , Esters/chemistry , Ketones/chemistry , Molecular Conformation , Olfactory Receptor Neurons/drug effects , Organic Chemicals/pharmacology , Rats , Rats, Wistar
2.
J Comp Neurol ; 500(4): 720-33, 2007 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17154254

ABSTRACT

Many naturally occurring volatile chemicals that are detected through the sense of smell contain unsaturated (double or triple) carbon-carbon bonds. These bonds can affect odors perceived by humans, yet in a prior study of unsaturated hydrocarbons we found only very minor effects of unsaturated bonds. In the present study, we tested the possibility that unsaturated bonds affect the recognition of oxygen-containing functional groups, because humans perceive odor differences between such molecules. We therefore compared spatial activity patterns across the entire glomerular layer of the rat olfactory bulb evoked by oxygen-containing odorants differing systematically in the presence, position, number, and stereochemistry of unsaturated bonds. We quantified activity patterns by mapping [(14)C]2-deoxyglucose uptake into anatomically standardized data matrices, which we compared statistically. We found that the presence and number of unsaturated bonds consistently affected activity patterns, with the largest effect related to the presence of a triple bond. Effects of bond saturation included a loss of activity in glomeruli strongly activated by the corresponding saturated odorants and/or the presence of activity in areas not stimulated by the corresponding saturated compounds. The position of double bonds also affected patterns of activity, but cis vs. trans configuration had no measurable impact in all five sets of stereoisomers that we studied. These results simultaneously indicate the importance of interactions between carbon-carbon bond types and functional groups in the neural coding of odorant chemical information and highlight the emerging concept that the rat olfactory system is more sensitive to certain types of chemical differences than others.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Hydrocarbons, Cyclic/chemistry , Olfactory Bulb/physiology , Smell/physiology , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Hydrocarbons, Cyclic/metabolism , Odorants , Rats , Receptors, Odorant/metabolism , Statistics, Nonparametric , Stereoisomerism , Structure-Activity Relationship
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