Christensen T A, Waldrop B R, Hildebrand J G
Arizona Research Laboratories, Division of Neurobiology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA.
J Neurosci. 1998 Aug 1;18(15):5999-6008. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.18-15-05999.1998.
Studies of olfaction have focused mainly on neural processing of information about the chemistry of odors, but olfactory stimuli have other properties that also affect central responses and thus influence behavior. In moths, continuous and intermittent stimulation with the same odor evokes two distinct flight behaviors, but the neural basis of this differential response is unknown. Here we show that certain projection neurons (PNs) in the primary olfactory center in the brain give context-dependent responses to a specific odor blend, and these responses are shaped in several ways by a bicuculline-sensitive GABA receptor. Pharmacological dissection of PN responses reveals that bicuculline blocks GABAA-type receptors/chloride channels in PNs, and that these receptors play a critical role in shaping the responses of these glomerular output neurons. The firing patterns of PNs are not odor-specific but are strongly modulated by the temporal pattern of the odor stimulus. Brief repetitive odor pulses evoke fast inhibitory potentials, followed by discrete bursts of action potentials that are phase-locked to the pulses. In contrast, the response to a single prolonged stimulus with the same odor is a series of slow oscillations underlying irregular firing. Bicuculline disrupts the timing of both types of responses, suggesting that GABAA-like receptors underlie both coding mechanisms. These results suggest that glomerular output neurons could use more than one coding scheme to represent a single olfactory stimulus. Moreover, these context-dependent odor responses encode information about both the chemical composition and the temporal pattern of the odor signal. Together with behavioral evidence, these findings suggest that context-dependent odor responses evoke different perceptions in the brain that provide the animal with important information about the spatiotemporal variations that occur in natural odor plumes.
嗅觉研究主要集中在气味化学信息的神经处理上,但嗅觉刺激还有其他特性,这些特性也会影响中枢反应,进而影响行为。在飞蛾中,用相同气味进行连续和间歇性刺激会引发两种不同的飞行行为,但这种差异反应的神经基础尚不清楚。在这里,我们表明,大脑初级嗅觉中枢中的某些投射神经元(PNs)对特定气味混合物产生依赖于背景的反应,并且这些反应通过一种荷包牡丹碱敏感的GABA受体以多种方式形成。对PN反应的药理学剖析表明,荷包牡丹碱会阻断PNs中的GABAA型受体/氯离子通道,并且这些受体在塑造这些球状输出神经元的反应中起关键作用。PNs的放电模式并非气味特异性的,而是受到气味刺激的时间模式的强烈调节。短暂的重复气味脉冲会引发快速抑制电位,随后是与脉冲锁相的离散动作电位爆发。相比之下,对相同气味的单个长时间刺激的反应是不规则放电背后的一系列缓慢振荡。荷包牡丹碱会破坏这两种反应的时间,这表明类似GABAA的受体是这两种编码机制的基础。这些结果表明,球状输出神经元可以使用不止一种编码方案来表示单个嗅觉刺激。此外,这些依赖于背景的气味反应编码了关于气味信号的化学成分和时间模式的信息。与行为证据一起,这些发现表明,依赖于背景的气味反应在大脑中引发不同的感知,为动物提供有关自然气味羽流中发生的时空变化的重要信息。