Rat olfactory bulb mitral cells receive sparse glomerular inputs
- PMID: 18786363
- DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2008.07.039
Rat olfactory bulb mitral cells receive sparse glomerular inputs
Abstract
Center-surround receptive fields are a fundamental unit of brain organization. It has been proposed that olfactory bulb mitral cells exhibit this functional circuitry, with excitation from one glomerulus and inhibition from a broad field of glomeruli within reach of the lateral dendrites. We investigated this hypothesis using a combination of in vivo intrinsic imaging, single-unit recording, and a large panel of odors. Assuming a broad inhibitory field, a mitral cell would be influenced by >100 contiguous glomeruli and should respond to many odors. Instead, the observed response rate was an order of magnitude lower. A quantitative model indicates that mitral cell responses can be explained by just a handful of glomeruli. These glomeruli are spatially dispersed on the bulb and represent a broad range of odor sensitivities. We conclude that mitral cells do not have center-surround receptive fields. Instead, each mitral cell performs a specific computation combining a small and diverse set of glomerular inputs.
Comment in
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A lateral look at olfactory bulb lateral inhibition.Neuron. 2008 Sep 11;59(5):682-4. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2008.08.018. Neuron. 2008. PMID: 18786352
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