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Segregation of Odor Identity and Intensity during Odor Discrimination in Drosophila Mushroom Body
Author(s) -
Shouzhen Xia,
Tim Tully
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
plos biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.127
H-Index - 271
eISSN - 1545-7885
pISSN - 1544-9173
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pbio.0050264
Subject(s) - odor , mushroom bodies , biology , piriform cortex , neuroscience , olfaction , olfactory system , identity (music) , genetics , drosophila melanogaster , gene , central nervous system , physics , acoustics
Molecular and cellular studies have begun to unravel a neurobiological basis of olfactory processing, which appears conserved among vertebrate and invertebrate species. Studies have shown clearly that experience-dependent coding of odor identity occurs in “associative” olfactory centers (the piriform cortex in mammals and the mushroom body [MB] in insects). What remains unclear, however, is whether associative centers also mediate innate (spontaneous) odor discrimination and how ongoing experience modifies odor discrimination. Here we show in naïve flies that G αq -mediated signaling in MB modulates spontaneous discrimination of odor identity but not odor intensity (concentration). In contrast, experience-dependent modification (conditioning) of both odor identity and intensity occurs in MB exclusively via G αs -mediated signaling. Our data suggest that spontaneous responses to odor identity and odor intensity discrimination are segregated at the MB level, and neural activity from MB further modulates olfactory processing by experience-independent G αq -dependent encoding of odor identity and by experience-induced G αs -dependent encoding of odor intensity and identity.

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