Reshaping of Bulbar Odor Response by Nasal Flow Rate in the Rat
Publication Details
Featured Authors

Emmanuelle Courtiol

Nathalie Buonviso
Experiment Type
Acute
Animal Model
Rat
Brain Region
Olfactory Bulb
Brain Signal
LFP
NeuroNexus Category
Penetrating Electrode
Abstract
Background: The impact of respiratory dynamics on odor response has been poorly studied at the olfactory bulb level.
However, it has been shown that sniffing in the behaving rodent is highly dynamic and varies both in frequency and flow
rate. Bulbar odor response could vary with these sniffing parameter variations. Consequently, it is necessary to understand
how nasal airflow can modify and shape odor response at the olfactory bulb level.
Methodology and Principal Findings: To assess this question, we used a double cannulation and simulated nasal airflow
protocol on anesthetized rats to uncouple nasal airflow from animal respiration. Both mitral/tufted cell extracellular unit
activity and local field potentials (LFPs) were recorded. We found that airflow changes in the normal range were sufficient to
substantially reorganize the response of the olfactory bulb. In particular, cellular odor-evoked activities, LFP oscillations and
spike phase-locking to LFPs were strongly modified by nasal flow rate.
Conclusion: Our results indicate the importance of reconsidering the notion of odor coding as odor response at the bulbar
level is ceaselessly modified by respiratory dynamics.
Citation
Emmanuelle Courtiol, Corine Amat, Marc The´venet, Belkacem Messaoudi, Samuel Garcia, Nathalie Buonviso. ''Reshaping of Bulbar Odor Response by Nasal Flow Rate in the Rat.'' PLoS ONE, 6(1), e16445. 2011. 10.1371/journal.pone.0016445
Country
France
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