Journal article

Multi-glomerular projection of single olfactory receptor neurons is conserved among amphibians


Authors listWeiss, L; Jungblut, LD; Pozzi, AG; Zielinski, BS; O'Connell, LA; Hassenklöver, T; Manzini, I

Publication year2020

Pages2239-2253

JournalThe Journal of Comparative Neurology

Volume number528

Issue number13

ISSN0021-9967

eISSN1096-9861

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1002/cne.24887

PublisherWiley


Abstract
Individual receptor neurons in the peripheral olfactory organ extend long axons into the olfactory bulb forming synapses with projection neurons in spherical neuropil regions, called glomeruli. Generally, odor map formation and odor processing in all vertebrates is based on the assumption that receptor neuron axons exclusively connect to a single glomerulus without any axonal branching. We comparatively tested this hypothesis in multiple fish and amphibian species (both sexes) by applying sparse cell electroporation to trace single olfactory receptor neuron axons. Sea lamprey (jawless fish) and zebrafish (bony fish) support the unbranched axon concept, with 94% of axons terminating in single glomeruli. Contrastingly, axonal projections of the axolotl (salamander) branch extensively before entering up to six distinct glomeruli. Receptor neuron axons labeled in frog species (Pipidae, Bufonidae, Hylidae, and Dendrobatidae) predominantly bifurcate before entering a glomerulus and 59 and 50% connect to multiple glomeruli in larval and postmetamorphotic animals, respectively. Independent of developmental stage, lifestyle, and adaptations to specific habitats, it seems to be a common feature of amphibian olfactory receptor neuron axons to frequently bifurcate and connect to multiple glomeruli. Our study challenges the unbranched axon concept as a universal vertebrate feature and it is conceivable that also later diverging vertebrates deviate from it. We propose that this unusual wiring logic evolved around the divergence of the terrestrial tetrapod lineage from its aquatic ancestors and could be the basis of an alternative way of odor processing.



Authors/Editors




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleWeiss, L., Jungblut, L., Pozzi, A., Zielinski, B., O'Connell, L., Hassenklöver, T., et al. (2020) Multi-glomerular projection of single olfactory receptor neurons is conserved among amphibians, The Journal of Comparative Neurology, 528(13), pp. 2239-2253. https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.24887

APA Citation styleWeiss, L., Jungblut, L., Pozzi, A., Zielinski, B., O'Connell, L., Hassenklöver, T., & Manzini, I. (2020). Multi-glomerular projection of single olfactory receptor neurons is conserved among amphibians. The Journal of Comparative Neurology. 528(13), 2239-2253. https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.24887


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:09