4.7 Article

Adult-born and preexisting olfactory granule neurons undergo distinct experience-dependent modifications of their olfactory responses in vivo

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 46, Pages 10729-10739

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2250-05.2005

Keywords

neurogenesis; plasticity; neuronal survival; integration; olfaction; granule cell

Categories

Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [HD18655, P30 HD018655] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS045523, R37 NS041590, NS41590, NS45523, R01 NS049553, R01 NS041590, NS49553] Funding Source: Medline

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Neurogenesis continues throughout adulthood in the mammalian olfactory bulb and hippocampal dentate gyrus, suggesting the hypothesis that recently generated, adult-born neurons contribute to neural plasticity and learning. To explore this hypothesis, we examined whether olfactory experience modifies the responses of adult-born neurons to odorants, using immediate early genes (IEGs) to assay the response of olfactory granule neurons. We find that, shortly after they differentiate and synaptically integrate, the population of adultborn olfactory granule neurons has a greater population IEG response to novel odors than mature, preexisting neurons. Familiarizing mice with test odors increases the response of the recently incorporated adult-born neuron population to the test odors, and this increased responsiveness is long lasting, demonstrating that the response of the adult-born neuron population is altered by experience. In contrast, familiarizing mice with test odors decreases the IEG response of developmentally generated neurons, suggesting that recently generated adult- born neurons play a distinct role in olfactory processing. The increased IEG response is stimulus specific; familiarizing mice with a set of different, distractor odors does not increase the adult-born neuron population response to the test odors. Odor familiarization does not influence the survival of adult-born neurons, indicating that the changes in the population response of adultborn neurons are not attributable to increased survival of odor-stimulated neurons. These results demonstrate that recently generated adult- born olfactory granule neurons and older, preexisting granule neurons undergo contrasting experience-dependent modifications in vivo and support the hypothesis that adult-born neurons are involved in olfactory learning.

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