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. 1995 Feb 2;373(6513):435-7.
doi: 10.1038/373435a0.

Quantal-like current fluctuations induced by odorants in olfactory receptor cells

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Quantal-like current fluctuations induced by odorants in olfactory receptor cells

A Menini et al. Nature. .

Abstract

Many sensory systems have evolved signal detection capabilities that are limited only by the physical attributes of the stimulus. For example, 'hair' cells of the inner ear can detect displacements of atomic dimensions. Likewise, both in vertebrates and in invertebrates photoreceptors can detect a single photon. The olfactory stimulus also has a quantal unit, the single odorant molecule. Insects are reportedly able to detect a single pheromone molecule, whereas quantal responses in vertebrate olfactory receptor cells have not been reported yet. Psychophysical measurements indicate that a minimum of 50 odorant molecules are necessary for human olfactory detection, suggesting that an individual receptor may be activated by a single odorant molecule. We report here measurements of current fluctuations induced by odorants that suggest a quantal event of about 0.3-1 pA, presumably triggered by the binding of a single odorant molecule.

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  • Single odorant molecules?
    Gold GH, Lowe G. Gold GH, et al. Nature. 1995 Jul 6;376(6535):27. doi: 10.1038/376027a0. Nature. 1995. PMID: 7646719 No abstract available.

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