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Distinct odorant receptor response patterns to aliphatic odorants in freely behaving mice.

Publication ,  Journal Article
de March, CA; Breheny, P; Titlow, WB; Matsunami, H; McClintock, TS
Published in: Chem Senses
January 22, 2025

In mammals, odors are encoded by a combinatorial code determined by the pattern of responses across hundreds of odorant receptors expressed monogenically and monoallelically in olfactory sensory neurons. The compositions of these receptor response patterns are largely unknown and overlap between them has yet to be explored. Activity-dependent reporter gene expression in freely behaving S100a5-tauGFP mice allowed capture of activated olfactory sensory neurons and identified 168 receptors responsive to moderate concentrations of 1 or more of 12 aliphatic (5 to 8 carbons) ketones, alcohols, and carboxylic acids. These 12 response patterns are remarkably different, with only 19% of the receptors responding to more than 1 of these odorants. This distinctiveness corresponds with the ease of discrimination of these odorants and may help maintain perceptual constancy in the face of response pattern variability, such as across odorant concentrations. This set of 168 receptors is not specific to aliphatic odorants but instead has 16% overlap with the receptors responsive to 7 odors tested previously in vivo, consistent with a receptor repertoire evolved to produce combinatorial codes. Aliphatic odorant response pattern similarity depends more upon odorant functional group than carbon chain length but the impact of chain length increases with the number of carbons. The response patterns to these aliphatic odorants are mostly composed of unrelated receptors, except some patterns contain minor subsets of closely related receptors. These findings argue that the major selective forces driving OR evolution are expansion of the odorant receptor gene family and the production of distinct response patterns.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Chem Senses

DOI

EISSN

1464-3553

Publication Date

January 22, 2025

Volume

50

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • Receptors, Odorant
  • Olfactory Receptor Neurons
  • Odorants
  • Neurology & Neurosurgery
  • Mice, Inbred C57BL
  • Mice
  • Male
  • Ketones
  • Carboxylic Acids
  • Animals
 

Citation

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de March, C. A., Breheny, P., Titlow, W. B., Matsunami, H., & McClintock, T. S. (2025). Distinct odorant receptor response patterns to aliphatic odorants in freely behaving mice. Chem Senses, 50. https://doi.org/10.1093/chemse/bjaf041
March, Claire A. de, Patrick Breheny, William B. Titlow, Hiroaki Matsunami, and Timothy S. McClintock. “Distinct odorant receptor response patterns to aliphatic odorants in freely behaving mice.Chem Senses 50 (January 22, 2025). https://doi.org/10.1093/chemse/bjaf041.
de March CA, Breheny P, Titlow WB, Matsunami H, McClintock TS. Distinct odorant receptor response patterns to aliphatic odorants in freely behaving mice. Chem Senses. 2025 Jan 22;50.
de March, Claire A., et al. “Distinct odorant receptor response patterns to aliphatic odorants in freely behaving mice.Chem Senses, vol. 50, Jan. 2025. Pubmed, doi:10.1093/chemse/bjaf041.
de March CA, Breheny P, Titlow WB, Matsunami H, McClintock TS. Distinct odorant receptor response patterns to aliphatic odorants in freely behaving mice. Chem Senses. 2025 Jan 22;50.
Journal cover image

Published In

Chem Senses

DOI

EISSN

1464-3553

Publication Date

January 22, 2025

Volume

50

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • Receptors, Odorant
  • Olfactory Receptor Neurons
  • Odorants
  • Neurology & Neurosurgery
  • Mice, Inbred C57BL
  • Mice
  • Male
  • Ketones
  • Carboxylic Acids
  • Animals