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Review
. 2007 Jul-Sep;51(2-4):132-9.
doi: 10.1016/j.neuint.2007.05.020. Epub 2007 Jun 13.

Deorphanizing vertebrate olfactory receptors: recent advances in odorant-response assays

Affiliations
Review

Deorphanizing vertebrate olfactory receptors: recent advances in odorant-response assays

Kazushige Touhara. Neurochem Int. 2007 Jul-Sep.

Abstract

Olfactory receptors (ORs) comprise the largest multigene G protein-coupled receptor families in organisms from fish to primates, and play a critical role in recognizing thousands of odorant molecules. Recent achievement of functional OR expression in heterologous cells led to identification of ligands for some ORs, revealing a combinatorial receptor coding scheme in the olfactory sensory system. Using the functional assay, the odorant-binding site in ORs has been elucidated, showing that a binding pocket constructed by transmembrane helices provides the molecular basis for agonist and antagonist specificity. To retrospectively identify ORs that recognize a particular odorant of interest, two functional cloning strategies have been developed: one is a strategy wherein OR genes are amplified from single olfactory neurons that show odorant responsiveness in Ca(2+) imaging, and another is an approach based on glomerular activity by combining in vivo bulbar Ca(2+) imaging and retrograde dye labeling of innervating olfactory neurons. The conventional ligand-screening approach and the functional cloning strategies in an odorant-directed manner have allowed us to match ORs to the cognate odorants both in vitro and in vivo.

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