|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Activity-dependent genes in mouse olfactory sensory neurons.

First Author  Fischl AM Year  2014
Journal  Chem Senses Volume  39
Issue  5 Pages  439-49
PubMed ID  24692514 Mgi Jnum  J:299344
Mgi Id  MGI:6492348 Doi  10.1093/chemse/bju015
Citation  Fischl AM, et al. (2014) Activity-dependent genes in mouse olfactory sensory neurons. Chem Senses 39(5):439-49
abstractText  Activity-dependent survival of olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) may allow animals to tune their olfactory systems to match their odor environment. Activity-dependent genes should play important roles in this process, motivating experiments to identify them. Both unilateral naris occlusion of mice for 6 days and genetic silencing of OSNs decreased S100A5, Lrrc3b, Kirrel2, Slc17a6, Rasgrp4, Pcp4l1, Plcxd3, and Kcnn2 while increasing Kirrel3. Naris occlusion also decreased Eml5, Ptprn, and Nphs1. OSN number was unchanged and stress-response mRNAs were unaffected after 6 days of naris occlusion. This leaves odor stimulation as the most likely cause of differential abundance of these mRNAs, but through a mechanism that is slow or indirect for most because 30-40 min of odor stimulation increased only 3 of 11 mRNAs decreased by naris occlusion: S100A5, Lrrc3b, and Kirrel2. Odorant receptor (OR) mRNAs were significantly more variable than the average mRNA, consistent with difficulty in reliably detecting changes in these mRNAs after 6 days of naris occlusion. One OR mRNA, Olfr855, was consistently decreased, however. These results suggest that the latency from the cessation of odor stimulation to effects on activity-dependent OSN survival must be a week or more in juvenile mice.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

11 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression