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Publication : A transcriptional rheostat couples past activity to future sensory responses.

First Author  Tsukahara T Year  2021
Journal  Cell Volume  184
Issue  26 Pages  6326-6343.e32
PubMed ID  34879231 Mgi Jnum  J:328678
Mgi Id  MGI:6844852 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2021.11.022
Citation  Tsukahara T, et al. (2021) A transcriptional rheostat couples past activity to future sensory responses. Cell 184(26):6326-6343.e32
abstractText  Animals traversing different environments encounter both stable background stimuli and novel cues, which are thought to be detected by primary sensory neurons and then distinguished by downstream brain circuits. Here, we show that each of the approximately 1,000 olfactory sensory neuron (OSN) subtypes in the mouse harbors a distinct transcriptome whose content is precisely determined by interactions between its odorant receptor and the environment. This transcriptional variation is systematically organized to support sensory adaptation: expression levels of more than 70 genes relevant to transforming odors into spikes continuously vary across OSN subtypes, dynamically adjust to new environments over hours, and accurately predict acute OSN-specific odor responses. The sensory periphery therefore separates salient signals from predictable background via a transcriptional rheostat whose moment-to-moment state reflects the past and constrains the future; these findings suggest a general model in which structured transcriptional variation within a cell type reflects individual experience.
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