4.8 Article

Parallel processing by distinct classes of principal neurons in the olfactory cortex

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.73668

Keywords

olfaction; piriform cortex; sensory processing; Ntng1; parallel pathways; neural coding; Mouse

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [DC015525, DC016782, U19 NS112953]
  2. Holland-Trice Scholar Award
  3. Holland-Trice Graduate Fellowship

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The study found that semilunar (SL) and superficial pyramidal (PYR) neurons play different roles in odor processing in the olfactory cortex, with SLs receiving and integrating olfactory bulb input, and PYRs transforming and transmitting this input.
Understanding how distinct neuron types in a neural circuit process and propagate information is essential for understanding what the circuit does and how it does it. The olfactory (piriform, PCx) cortex contains two main types of principal neurons, semilunar (SL) and superficial pyramidal (PYR) cells. SLs and PYRs have distinct morphologies, local connectivity, biophysical properties, and downstream projection targets. Odor processing in PCx is thought to occur in two sequential stages. First, SLs receive and integrate olfactory bulb input and then PYRs receive, transform, and transmit SL input. To test this model, we recorded from populations of optogenetically identified SLs and PYRs in awake, head-fixed mice. Notably, silencing SLs did not alter PYR odor responses, and SLs and PYRs exhibited differences in odor tuning properties and response discriminability that were consistent with their distinct embeddings within a sensory-associative cortex. Our results therefore suggest that SLs and PYRs form parallel channels for differentially processing odor information in and through PCx.

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