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1.
J Neurosci ; 33(34): 13903-13, 2013 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23966710

ABSTRACT

Animals modulate their courtship and territorial behaviors in response to olfactory cues produced by other animals. In rodents, detecting these cues is the primary role of the accessory olfactory system (AOS). We sought to systematically investigate the natural stimulus coding logic and robustness in neurons of the first two stages of accessory olfactory processing, the vomeronasal organ (VNO) and accessory olfactory bulb (AOB). We show that firing rate responses of just a few well-chosen mouse VNO or AOB neurons can be used to reliably encode both sex and strain of other mice from cues contained in urine. Additionally, we show that this population code can generalize to new concentrations of stimuli and appears to represent stimulus identity in terms of diverging paths in coding space. Together, the results indicate that firing rate code on the temporal order of seconds is sufficient for accurate classification of pheromonal patterns at different concentrations and may be used by AOS neural circuitry to discriminate among naturally occurring urine stimuli.


Subject(s)
Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Olfactory Bulb/cytology , Sex Characteristics , Vomeronasal Organ/cytology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Female , Likelihood Functions , Linear Models , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Mice, Inbred CBA , Odorants , Olfactory Bulb/physiology , Psychophysics , Species Specificity , Vomeronasal Organ/physiology
2.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 71(2 Pt 1): 021912, 2005 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15783357

ABSTRACT

A reduced kinetics model is proposed for ion permeation in low-conductance potassium ion channels with zero net electrical charge in the selectivity filter region. The selectivity filter is assumed to be the only conductance-determining part of the channel. Ion entry and exit rate constants depend on the occupancy of the filter due to ion-ion interactions. The corresponding rates are assumed slow relative to the rates of ion motion between binding sites inside the filter, allowing a reduction of the kinetics model of the filter by averaging the entry and exit rate constants over the states with a particular occupancy number. The reduced kinetics model for low-conductance channels is described by only three states and two sets of effective rate constants characterizing transitions between these states. An explicit expression for the channel conductance as a function of symmetrical external ion concentration is derived under the assumption that the average electrical mobility of ions in the selectivity filter region in a limited range of ion concentrations does not depend on these concentrations. The simplified conductance model is shown to provide a good description of the experimentally observed conductance-concentration curve for the low-conductance potassium channel Kir2.1, and also predicts the mean occupancy of the selectivity filter of this channel. We find that at physiological external ion concentrations this occupancy is much lower than the value of two ions observed for one of the high-conductance potassium channels, KcsA.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/chemistry , Cell Membrane/physiology , Ion Channel Gating/physiology , Membrane Potentials/physiology , Models, Biological , Potassium Channels/chemistry , Potassium Channels/physiology , Animals , Computer Simulation , Electric Conductivity , Humans , Kinetics
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