A molecular odorant transduction model and the complexity of spatio-temporal encoding in the Drosophila antenna

被引:6
|
作者
Lazar, Aurel A. [1 ]
Yeh, Chung-Heng [1 ]
机构
[1] Columbia Univ, Dept Elect Engn, New York, NY 10027 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
RECEPTORS; INTENSITY; ADAPTATION; MECHANISMS; RESPONSES; PROTEINS;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007751
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Author summary Identity and concentration, intrinsically embedded in the odorant space, are two key characteristics of olfactory coding that define the level of complexity of neural processing throughout the olfactory system in the fruit fly. In this paper we advance a theoretical foundation for understanding these two characteristics by quantifying mathematically the odorant space and devising a biophysical model of the olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs). To validate our modeling approach, we propose and apply an algorithm to estimate the affinity value and the dissociation rate, the two characteristics that define odorant identity, of multiple odorant-receptor pairs. We then evaluate our model with a multitude of odorant waveforms and demonstrate that the model output reproduces the temporal responses of OSNs obtained from in vivo electrophysiology recordings. Furthermore, we evaluate the model at the OSN population level and quantify on the molecular level the spatio-temporal level of complexity of the transformation taking place between the odorant space and the OSNs. The resulting concentration-dependent spatio-temporal code determines the level of complexity of the input space driving olfactory processing in the downstream neuropils. Lastly, our model demonstrates that the currently available data for OSN responses only enables estimation of affinity value. This calls for new experiments for massively identifying the odorant-receptor dissociation rates of relevance to flies. Over the past two decades, substantial amount of work has been conducted to characterize different odorant receptors, neuroanatomy and odorant response properties of the early olfactory system of Drosophila melanogaster. Yet many odorant receptors remain only partially characterized, and the odorant transduction process and the axon hillock spiking mechanism of the olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) have yet to be fully determined. Identity and concentration, two key characteristics of the space of odorants, are encoded by the odorant transduction process. Detailed molecular models of the odorant transduction process are, however, scarce for fruit flies. To address these challenges we advance a comprehensive model of fruit fly OSNs as a cascade consisting of an odorant transduction process (OTP) and a biophysical spike generator (BSG). We model odorant identity and concentration using an odorant-receptor binding rate tensor, modulated by the odorant concentration profile, and an odorant-receptor dissociation rate tensor, and quantitatively describe the mechanics of the molecular ligand binding/dissociation of the OTP. We model the BSG as a Connor-Stevens point neuron. The resulting spatio-temporal encoding model of the Drosophila antenna provides a theoretical foundation for understanding the neural code of both odorant identity and odorant concentration and advances the state-of-the-art in a number of ways. First, it quantifies on the molecular level the spatio-temporal level of complexity of the transformation taking place in the antennae. The concentration-dependent spatio-temporal code at the output of the antenna circuits determines the level of complexity of olfactory processing in the downstream neuropils, such as odorant recognition and olfactory associative learning. Second, the model is biologically validated using multiple electrophysiological recordings. Third, the model demonstrates that the currently available data for odorant-receptor responses only enable the estimation of the affinity of the odorant-receptor pairs. The odorant-dissociation rate is only available for a few odorant-receptor pairs. Finally, our model calls for new experiments for massively identifying the odorant-receptor dissociation rates of relevance to flies.
引用
收藏
页数:31
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