» Articles » PMID: 10531048

The Olfactory Bulb: Coding and Processing of Odor Molecule Information

Overview
Journal Science
Specialty Science
Date 1999 Oct 26
PMID 10531048
Citations 284
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Olfactory sensory neurons detect a large variety of odor molecules and send information through their axons to the olfactory bulb, the first site for the processing of olfactory information in the brain. The axonal connection is precisely organized so that signals from 1000 different types of odorant receptors are sorted out in 1800 glomeruli in the mouse olfactory bulb. Individual glomerular modules presumably represent a single type of receptor and are thus tuned to specific molecular features of odorants. Local neuronal circuits in the bulb mediate lateral inhibition among glomerular modules to sharpen the tuning specificity of output neurons. They also mediate synchronized oscillatory discharges among specific combinations of output neurons and may contribute to the integration of signals from distinct odorant receptors in the olfactory cortex.

Citing Articles

Recalibrating Olfactory Neuroscience to the Range of Naturally Occurring Odor Concentrations.

Wachowiak M, Dewan A, Bozza T, OConnell T, Hong E J Neurosci. 2025; 45(10).

PMID: 40044450 PMC: 11884396. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1872-24.2024.


Activity-dependent synaptic competition and dendrite pruning in developing mitral cells.

Imai T Front Neural Circuits. 2025; 19:1541926.

PMID: 40034992 PMC: 11873734. DOI: 10.3389/fncir.2025.1541926.


Gene expression differences in the olfactory bulb associated with differential social interactions and olfactory deficits in Pax6 heterozygous mice.

Daems C, Baz E, DHooge R, Callaerts-Vegh Z, Callaerts P Biol Open. 2025; 14(2).

PMID: 39902612 PMC: 11832127. DOI: 10.1242/bio.061647.


Flexible analysis of spatial transcriptomics data (FAST): a deconvolution approach.

Zhang M, Parker J, An L, Liu Y, Sun X BMC Bioinformatics. 2025; 26(1):35.

PMID: 39891065 PMC: 11786350. DOI: 10.1186/s12859-025-06054-y.


Glia control experience-dependent plasticity in an olfactory critical period.

Leier H, Foden A, Jindal D, Wilkov A, Van der Linden Costello P, Vanderzalm P Elife. 2025; 13.

PMID: 39883485 PMC: 11781797. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.100989.