Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Faculty of Biology and Medicine University of Lausanne, Switzerland.
Front Neuroanat. 2014 Aug 27;8:87. doi: 10.3389/fnana.2014.00087. eCollection 2014.
In the mouse, the Grueneberg ganglion (GG) is an olfactory subsystem implicated both in chemo- and thermo-sensing. It is specifically involved in the recognition of volatile danger cues such as alarm pheromones and structurally-related predator scents. No evidence for these GG sensory functions has been reported yet in other rodent species. In this study, we used a combination of histological and physiological techniques to verify the presence of a GG and investigate its function in the rat, hamster, and gerbil comparing with the mouse. By scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmitted electron microscopy (TEM), we found isolated or groups of large GG cells of different shapes that in spite of their gross anatomical similarities, display important structural differences between species. We performed a comparative and morphological study focusing on the conserved olfactory features of these cells. We found fine ciliary processes, mostly wrapped in ensheating glial cells, in variable number of clusters deeply invaginated in the neuronal soma. Interestingly, the glial wrapping, the amount of microtubules and their distribution in the ciliary processes were different between rodents. Using immunohistochemistry, we were able to detect the expression of known GG proteins, such as the membrane guanylyl cyclase G and the cyclic nucleotide-gated channel A3. Both the expression and the subcellular localization of these signaling proteins were found to be species-dependent. Calcium imaging experiments on acute tissue slice preparations from rodent GG demonstrated that the chemo- and thermo-evoked neuronal responses were different between species. Thus, GG neurons from mice and rats displayed both chemo- and thermo-sensing, while hamsters and gerbils showed profound differences in their sensitivities. We suggest that the integrative comparison between the structural morphologies, the sensory properties, and the ethological contexts supports species-dependent GG features prompted by the environmental pressure.
在小鼠中,Grueneberg 神经节(GG)是一个嗅觉子系统,涉及化学和热感觉。它特别参与识别挥发性危险线索,如警报信息素和结构相关的捕食者气味。然而,在其他啮齿动物物种中,尚未报道这些 GG 感觉功能的证据。在这项研究中,我们使用组织学和生理学技术的组合来验证 GG 的存在,并在大鼠、仓鼠和沙鼠中研究其功能,同时与小鼠进行比较。通过扫描电子显微镜(SEM)和透射电子显微镜(TEM),我们发现了不同形状的孤立或成群的大型 GG 细胞,尽管它们在大体解剖上相似,但在物种之间显示出重要的结构差异。我们进行了一项比较和形态学研究,重点研究这些细胞的保守嗅觉特征。我们发现了精细的纤毛突起,它们主要被包绕在神经细胞体中的胶质细胞中,在不同数量的簇中,这些突起深入地内陷。有趣的是,胶质细胞的包裹、微管的数量及其在纤毛突起中的分布在不同的啮齿动物之间存在差异。通过免疫组织化学,我们能够检测到已知的 GG 蛋白的表达,如膜鸟苷酸环化酶 G 和环核苷酸门控通道 A3。这些信号蛋白的表达和亚细胞定位都表现出物种依赖性。在来自啮齿动物 GG 的急性组织切片制备上进行钙成像实验,表明化学和热诱发的神经元反应在物种之间存在差异。因此,来自小鼠和大鼠的 GG 神经元显示出化学和热感觉,而仓鼠和沙鼠在其敏感性方面表现出明显的差异。我们认为,结构形态、感觉特性和行为背景之间的综合比较支持由环境压力引起的物种依赖性 GG 特征。