4.4 Review

Olfactory-induced locomotion in lampreys

Journal

CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH
Volume 387, Issue 1, Pages 13-27

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00441-021-03536-2

Keywords

Olfaction; Locomotion; Sensorimotor integration; Neuromodulation; Lamprey

Categories

Funding

  1. Great Lakes Fishery Commission [54021, 54035, 54067]
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [15129]
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [217435-01, 03916-2014]
  4. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec-Sante
  5. Universite de Montreal -Etudes superieures et postdoctorales

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The olfactory system plays a crucial role in animal behavior, including feeding, mating, and evading predators. Studies on lampreys have identified neural pathways responsible for olfactomotor behavior, shedding light on the mechanisms underlying sensorimotor transformations. Modulation of bulbar neural activity by various inputs provides control over motor behavior in response to olfactory cues.
The olfactory system allows animals to navigate in their environment to feed, mate, and escape predators. It is well established that odorant exposure or electrical stimulation of the olfactory system induces stereotyped motor responses in fishes. However, the neural circuitry responsible for the olfactomotor transformations is only beginning to be unraveled. A neural substrate eliciting motor responses to olfactory inputs was identified in the lamprey, a basal vertebrate used extensively to examine the neural mechanisms underlying sensorimotor transformations. Two pathways were discovered from the olfactory organ in the periphery to the brainstem motor nuclei responsible for controlling swimming. The first pathway originates from sensory neurons located in the accessory olfactory organ and reaches a single population of projection neurons in the medial olfactory bulb, which, in turn, transmit the olfactory signals to the posterior tuberculum and then to downstream brainstem locomotor centers. A second pathway originates from the main olfactory epithelium and reaches the main olfactory bulb, the neurons of which project to the pallium/cortex. The olfactory signals are then conveyed to the posterior tuberculum and then to brainstem locomotor centers. Olfactomotor behavior can adapt, and studies were aimed at defining the underlying neural mechanisms. Modulation of bulbar neural activity by GABAergic, dopaminergic, and serotoninergic inputs is likely to provide strong control over the hardwired circuits to produce appropriate motor behavior in response to olfactory cues. This review summarizes current knowledge relative to the neural circuitry producing olfactomotor behavior in lampreys and their modulatory mechanisms.

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