INTRACELLULAR RESPONSES OF IDENTIFIED RAT OLFACTORY-BULB INTERNEURONS TO ELECTRICAL AND ODOR STIMULATION

被引:120
作者
WELLIS, DP [1 ]
SCOTT, JW [1 ]
机构
[1] EMORY UNIV,SCH MED,SCH MED,DEPT ANAT & CELL BIOL,ATLANTA,GA 30322
关键词
D O I
10.1152/jn.1990.64.3.932
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Intracellular recordings were made from 28 granule cells and 6 periglomerular cells of the rat olfactory bulb during odor stimulation and electrical stimulation of the olfactory nerve layer (ONL) and lateral olfactory tract (LOT). Neurons were identified by injection of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) or biocytin and/or intracellular response characteristics. Odorants were presented in a cyclic sniff paradigm, as reported previously. All interneurons could be activated from a wide number of stimulation sites on the ONL, with distances exceeding their known dendritic spreads and the dispersion of nerve fibers within the ONL, indicating that multisynaptic pathways must also exist at the glomerular region. All types of interneurons also responded to odorant stimulation, showing a variety of responses. Granule cells responded to electrical stimulation of the LOT and ONL as reported previously. However, intracellular potential, excitability, and conductance analysis suggested that the mitral cell-mediated excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) is followed by a long inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP). An early negative potential, before the EPSP, was also observed in every granule cell and correlated with component I of the extracellular LOT-induced field potential. We have interpreted this negativity as a 'field effect,' that may be diagnostic of granule cells. Most granule cells exhibited excitatory responses to odorant stimulation. Odors could produce spiking responses that were either nonhabituating (response to every sniff) or rapidly habituating (response to first sniff only). Other granule cells, while spiking to electrical stimulation, showed depolarizations that did not evoke spikes to odor stimulation. These depolarizations were transient with each sniff or sustained across a series of sniffs. These physiological differences to odor stimulation correlated with granule cell position beneath the mitral cell layer for 12 cells, suggesting that morphological subtypes of granule cells may show physiological differences. Some features of the granule cell odor responses seem to correlate with some of the features we have observed in mitral/tufted cell intracellular recordings. Only one cell showed inhibition to odors. Periglomerular (PG) cells showed a response to ONL stimulation that was unlike that found in other olfactory bulb neurons. There was a long-duration hyperpolarization after a spike and large depolarization or burst of spikes (20-30 ms in duration). Odor stimulation produced simple bursts of action potentials, suggesting that PG cells may simply follow input from the olfactory nerve. In conclusion, the electrical stimulation experiments indicate that additional inhibitory pathways must be considered in interpreting granule cell layer circuitry while an additional excitatory pathway might also be present within the glomerular layer. Furthermore, the odor stimulation experiments show direct interneuronal involvement in sensory processing at two levels within the olfactory bulb, as in visual processing in the retina.
引用
收藏
页码:932 / 947
页数:16
相关论文
共 67 条
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1987, RETINA APPROACHABLE
[3]   ELECTRICAL-FIELD EFFECTS - THEIR RELEVANCE IN CENTRAL NEURAL NETWORKS [J].
FABER, DS ;
KORN, H .
PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 1989, 69 (03) :821-863
[4]   STABILITY CHARACTERISTICS OF POSITIVE FEEDBACK IN A NEURAL POPULATION [J].
FREEMAN, WJ .
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, 1974, BM21 (05) :358-364
[5]   TOPOGRAPHIC ORGANIZATION OF PRIMARY OLFACTORY NERVE IN CAT AND RABBIT AS SHOWN BY EVOKED-POTENTIALS [J].
FREEMAN, WJ .
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1974, 36 (01) :33-45
[6]   RELATION OF GLOMERULAR NEURONAL-ACTIVITY TO GLOMERULAR TRANSMISSION ATTENUATION [J].
FREEMAN, WJ .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1974, 65 (01) :91-107
[7]   RESPONSES OF OLFACTORY RECEPTOR CELLS TO STEP PULSES OF ODOR AT DIFFERENT CONCENTRATIONS IN SALAMANDER [J].
GETCHELL, TV ;
SHEPHERD, GM .
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON, 1978, 282 (SEP) :521-540
[8]   SHORT-AXON CELLS IN OLFACTORY BULB - DENDRODENDRITIC SYNAPTIC INTERACTIONS [J].
GETCHELL, TV ;
SHEPHERD, GM .
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON, 1975, 251 (02) :523-548
[9]   SYNAPTIC ACTIONS ON MITRAL AND TUFTED CELLS ELICITED BY OLFACTORY NERVE VOLLEYS IN RABBIT [J].
GETCHELL, TV ;
SHEPHERD, GM .
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON, 1975, 251 (02) :497-522
[10]   GOLGI ANALYSES OF DENDRITIC ORGANIZATION AMONG DENERVATED OLFACTORY-BULB GRANULE CELLS [J].
GREER, CA .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, 1987, 257 (03) :442-452