Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Brain Disease and Bioinformation, Research Center for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Xuzhou Medical University, Xuzhou, 221004, China.
Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Brain Disease and Bioinformation, Research Center for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Xuzhou Medical University, Xuzhou, 221004, China
J Neurosci. 2019 Dec 11;39(50):10002-10018. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1234-19.2019. Epub 2019 Oct 31.
In awake rodents, the neural representation of olfactory information in the olfactory bulb is largely dependent on brain state and behavioral context. Learning-modified neural plasticity has been observed in mitral/tufted cells, the main output neurons of the olfactory bulb. Here, we propose that the odor information encoded by mitral/tufted cell responses in awake mice is highly dependent on the behavioral task demands. We used fiber photometry to record calcium signals from the mitral/tufted cell population in awake, head-fixed male mice under different task demands. We found that the mitral/tufted cell population showed similar responses to two distinct odors when the odors were presented in the context of a go/go task, in which the mice received a water reward regardless of the identity of the odor presented. However, when the same odors were presented in a go/no-go task, in which one odor was rewarded and the other was not, then the mitral cell population responded very differently to the two odors, characterized by a robust reduction in the response to the nonrewarded odor. Thus, the representation of odors in the mitral/tufted cell population depends on whether the task requires discrimination of the odors. Strikingly, downstream of the olfactory bulb, pyramidal neurons in the posterior piriform cortex also displayed a task-demand-dependent neural representation of odors, but the anterior piriform cortex did not, indicating that these two important higher olfactory centers use different strategies for neural representation. The most important task of the olfactory system is to generate a precise representation of odor information under different brain states. Whether the representation of odors by neurons in olfactory centers such as the olfactory bulb and the piriform cortex depends on task demands remains elusive. We find that odor representation in the mitral/tufted cells of the olfactory bulb depends on whether the task requires odor discrimination. A similar neural representation is found in the posterior piriform cortex but not the anterior piriform cortex, indicating that these higher olfactory centers use different representational strategies. The task-demand-dependent representational strategy is likely important for facilitating information processing in higher brain centers responsible for decision making and encoding of salience.
在清醒的啮齿动物中,嗅球中嗅觉信息的神经表示在很大程度上取决于大脑状态和行为背景。在嗅球的主要输出神经元——僧帽细胞中,已经观察到学习修饰的神经可塑性。在这里,我们提出,在清醒的小鼠中,由僧帽细胞反应编码的气味信息高度依赖于行为任务的要求。我们使用光纤光度法在不同任务需求下记录清醒、头部固定的雄性小鼠中僧帽细胞群体的钙信号。我们发现,当两种不同的气味在“go/go”任务中呈现时,即无论呈现的气味是什么,老鼠都会得到水奖励,僧帽细胞群体对这两种气味表现出相似的反应。然而,当同样的气味在“go/no-go”任务中呈现时,一种气味被奖励,另一种气味不被奖励,那么僧帽细胞群体对这两种气味的反应非常不同,表现为对未奖励气味的反应明显减弱。因此,僧帽细胞群体对气味的表示取决于任务是否需要区分气味。引人注目的是,在嗅球的下游,后梨状皮层的锥体神经元也表现出对气味的任务需求依赖性神经表示,但前梨状皮层则没有,这表明这两个重要的高级嗅觉中枢使用不同的神经表示策略。嗅觉系统最重要的任务是在不同的大脑状态下生成气味信息的精确表示。神经元在嗅觉中枢(如嗅球和梨状皮层)中的气味表示是否取决于任务需求仍然难以捉摸。我们发现,嗅球中僧帽细胞的气味表示取决于任务是否需要气味辨别。在后梨状皮层中发现了类似的神经表示,但在前梨状皮层中则没有,这表明这些更高的嗅觉中枢使用不同的表示策略。任务需求依赖性表示策略可能对于促进负责决策和突显编码的高级大脑中枢的信息处理很重要。