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J Neurophysiol (March 1, 2003). 10.1152/jn.00747.2002
Submitted on Submitted 30 August 2002; accepted in final form 18 October 2002
1Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520; and 2Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543
Wachowiak, Matt and
Lawrence B. Cohen.
Correspondence Between Odorant-Evoked Patterns of Receptor Neuron
Input and Intrinsic Optical Signals in the Mouse Olfactory Bulb. J. Neurophysiol. 89: 1623-1639, 2003. We compared odorant-evoked patterns of receptor neuron
input to the mouse olfactory bulb, imaged with a calcium-sensitive dye,
with those of intrinsic optical signals imaged from the same preparations. Both methods yielded patterns of glomerular activity that
showed a strong concentration dependence, a loosely organized chemotopy, and involved widely distributed glomeruli. Presynaptic calcium and intrinsic signals showed similar odorant concentration thresholds. Intrinsic signal foci were larger than their corresponding calcium signals, and input to multiple adjacent glomeruli often appeared as a single intrinsic focus. Nonetheless, at near-threshold concentrations, the correspondence between the glomerular calcium and
intrinsic signals averaged 75%, with a 71% correspondence between the
most strongly activated glomeruli. The correspondence between strongly
activated glomeruli decreased as odorant concentration increased,
dropping to 51% at 5- to 15-fold higher concentrations. Intrinsic
signal foci often saturated at lower concentrations than the calcium
signal, implying a smaller dynamic range, and suprathreshold
concentrations could recruit strong intrinsic signals in areas showing
little or no calcium signal. These differences were such that, at
suprathreshold concentrations, the chemotopy of calcium and intrinsic
signal response maps often differed. These results suggest that
intrinsic optical signals closely reflect receptor neuron input to
glomeruli at low odorant concentrations but reflect additional
processes at higher concentrations (activation of second-order neurons,
centrifugal input, or constraints on the coupling between neuronal
activity and hemodynamic changes). Intrinsic signals that are not
associated with receptor neuron input have the potential to impact the
interpretation of spatial coding strategies in the olfactory bulb.
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