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The Journal of Neuroscience, November 1, 2001, 21(21):8396-8407
Odorant Feature Detection: Activity Mapping of Structure Response
Relationships in the Zebrafish Olfactory Bulb
Stefan H.
Fuss and
Sigrun I.
Korsching
Institut für Genetik, Universität zu Köln, 50674 Köln, Germany
 |
ABSTRACT |
The structural determinants of an odor molecule necessary and/or
sufficient for interaction with the cognate olfactory receptor(s) are
not known. Olfactory receptor neurons expressing the same olfactory
receptor converge in the olfactory bulb. Thus, optical imaging of
neuronal activity in the olfactory bulb can visualize at once the
contributions by all the different olfactory receptors responsive to a
particular odorant. We have used this technique to derive estimates
about the structural requirements and minimal number of different
zebrafish olfactory receptors that respond to a series of naturally
occurring amino acids and some structurally related compounds.
We report that the
-carboxyl group, the
-amino group, and
L-conformation of the amino acid are all required for
activation of amino acid-responsive receptors. Increasing carbon chain
length recruits successively more receptors. With increasing
concentrations, the activity patterns induced by a homolog series of
amino acids became more similar to each other. At intermediate
concentrations patterns were unique across substances and across concentrations.
The introduction of a terminal amino group (charged) both recruits
additional receptors and prevents binding to some of the receptors that
were responsive to the unsubstituted analog. In contrast, the
introduction of a
-hydroxyl group (polar) excluded the odorants from
some of the receptors that are capable of binding the unsubstituted
analog. Cross-adaptation experiments independently confirmed these
results. Thus, odorant detection requires several different receptors
even for relatively simple odorants such as amino acids, and individual
receptors require the presence of some molecular features, the absence
of others, and tolerate still other molecular features.
Key words:
olfactory bulb; odorant feature; zebrafish; odorant; olfactory receptor; Danio rerio; Calcium Green; optical
imaging
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Odor space is multidimensional
because of the vast multitude of olfactory receptors (ORs) involved in
odorant recognition [~1000 in rat (Buck and Axel, 1991
), ~100 in
fish (Ngai et al., 1993
; Barth et al., 1996
; Korsching et al., 1997
),
57 in Drosophila (Vosshall et al., 2000
), ~100 in
Caenorhabditis elegans (Troemel et al., 1995
)]. Each OR can
be thought of as spanning a dimension of this odor space. A particular
molecule qualifies as odorant if it interacts with at least one of
these ORs. The perceived odor of an odorant is determined by the
characteristic combination of the OR that it activates, each with
distinctive affinities, and thus a particular odorant maps to a
particular point in the odor space and is characterized by the
corresponding response vector. Recently, odorant response spectra of
individual OR molecules have begun to be characterized (Krautwurst et
al., 1998
; Zhao et al., 1998
; Malnic et al., 1999
; Speca et al., 1999
;
Touhara et al., 1999
; Wetzel et al., 1999
; Araneda et al., 2000
),
mostly in in vitro systems, but no synopsis of the receptor
repertoire for a particular odorant has been possible yet.
Odorant-induced activity of ORs is conveyed to the olfactory bulb,
where the primary afferents of olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) form
synapses with projection neurons and local interneurons within the
olfactory glomeruli (Shepherd, 1993
; Mori et al., 1999
). Recent
molecular work provides strong evidence that any particular ORN
expresses only a single type of OR (Wang et al., 1998
; Malnic et al.,
1999
) (but see Rawson et al., 2000
; Vosshall et al., 2000
). Neurons
expressing the same OR molecule are scattered within the olfactory
epithelium but converge onto single glomeruli as they project to the
olfactory bulb (Mombaerts et al., 1996
). Thus, a glomerulus integrates
odor responses for an individual OR. As a consequence, imaging the
odorant-induced activity in the presynaptic (input) compartment of
glomeruli at once visualizes the receptor repertoire activated by that
particular odorant. Previous work from our lab has demonstrated the
feasibility of selectively imaging odorant-induced neuronal activity in
the input compartment of glomeruli (Friedrich and Korsching, 1997
,
1998
), using zebrafish as experimental system. Proteinogenic amino
acids (AAs) were found to activate many glomeruli with complex response
characteristics (Friedrich and Korsching, 1997
).
In this study, we used optical imaging of odorant-induced calcium
changes in receptor neuron terminals in the zebrafish olfactory bulb to
systematically analyze responses to variations in the chemical
structure of AA odorants. Stimuli could be applied repetitively and
therefore be compared with high accuracy within a single preparation. AAs are well known behaviorally relevant stimuli for fish, and many
structurally related compounds are available. Thus, data obtained at the bulbar level reveal aspects of the structural determinants of AA odorants, as well as the tuning specificities of the
AA-responsive glomeruli and their underlying ORs.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Adult male zebrafish, Danio rerio (>6 months of
age), of the Tü/Tü and AB/Tü wild-type strains from
our local rearing facility were used for all experiments. Animals were
maintained in flow-through tanks, kept under a 14/10 hr light/dark
cycle and fed on fish flakes (Sera, Heinsberg, Germany).
Dye labeling of primary sensory afferents. Axonal tracing of
Calcium Green-1 dextran was performed essentially as described by
Friedrich and Korsching (1997)
. Briefly, sensory afferents were labeled with a 12% solution of the calcium-sensitive probe Calcium Green-1 dextran [10,000 molecular weight; Molecular Probes, Leiden, The Netherlands; in 0.1% Triton X-100 (Sigma,
Deisenhofen, Germany), 2 mM NaCl). Fish were
immobilized with tricaine (Sigma) and wrapped in a wet paper towel, and
a volume of 1 µl was injected into the fish's left naris. Olfactory
cilia recover completely within 2 d from Triton X-100 treatment,
and bulbar fluorescence of ORN terminals is clearly detectable at the
same time.
Preparation of explants. A reduced preparation, comprising
the olfactory system and the rostral half of the telencephalon, was cut
and transferred ventral side down to a coverslip that lined the bottom
of a custom-built recording chamber. The preparation was superfused
continuously with artificial CSF (ACSF) composed of (in
mM): 131 NaCl, 20 NaHCO3, 2 KCl, 1.25 KH2PO4, 2 MgSO4, 2.5 CaCl2, pH 7.4, bubbled with 95% O2/5%
CO2 (Mathieson and Maler, 1988
).
Optical imaging of bulbar responses. Preparations were
viewed with an inverted microscope (Zeiss, Göttingen, Germany) at 10 or 20× magnification. Calcium Green-1 fluorescence was detectable at 470 nm excitation wavelength using a monochromator system
(Polychrome II; T.I.L.L. Photonics, Martinsried, Germany).
Exposure times varied between 80 and 200 msec. Image series of the
anterolateral olfactory bulb were acquired at 2 Hz frame rate before
and during stimulation with odorants using a 12 bit cooled CCD camera
system (640 × 480 pixel, 2 × 2 binning; T.I.L.L. Imago;
T.I.L.L. Photonics). Series were fed into a conventional computer and
corrected for background and bleaching, and
F/F was calculated using a five-frame prestimulus average as F. For illustration purposes, 10 frames comprising the response peak were averaged, low-pass filtered with a 3 × 3 Gaussian filter kernel, and false color coded for signal intensity.
Stimulation with odorants. Working concentrations of
odorants (see Fig. 1) (Fluka, Steinheim, Germany) were prepared freshly from 10
2
M stock solutions each time. Stocks were renewed
at least every month and kept frozen at
20°C until use. Alaninol,
putrescine, 2-amino propane, and 2-amino pentane were not stored as
stock solutions but were prepared freshly each time to avoid any
degradation. For stimulation, a volume of 200 µl odorant solution was
intercalated (HPLC valve; Knauer, Berlin, Germany) into a constant
carrier stream of ACSF (1.5-2.5 ml/min; stable for a given
experiment). Odorants reached a peak of ~70% of the injected
concentration at the explant site, as estimated by application of a
fluorescent stimulus. The concentrations that are given always refer to
the injected odorant concentration. The concentrations that were used varied between
10
2 and
10
7
M, the former approaching the solubility limit
for 2-amino octanoic acid. Within an experiment, the order of stimulus
application was randomized or with increasing concentration (some
dose-response curves). It was found that results do not depend on the
order of application.
For adaptation experiments the carrier solution was switched to ACSF
containing the adapting stimulus at the same concentration as the test
stimuli (100 µM) and was applied for at least 10 min before stimulation with another odorant. Readaptation was achieved by
switching back to pure ACSF 10 min before stimuli were retested. During
adaptation, images were taken at 30 sec intervals to trace the signal
time course.
Image transformations. Activity was nearly always contained
within a 200 × 100 pixel subframe, which was chosen for further analysis. To obtain a quantitative measure of overall responses, we
calculated the spatial extent of the response area. Fluorescence intensity values were thresholded at
F/F = 1% (corresponding to 2-3 SD of noise level), and the number of all
pixels above threshold was determined. This number was normalized to
the corresponding value obtained for a reference response within the
same experiment. The normalized response areas (nRAs) can then be
compared across animals, allowing the results to be averaged over
different preparations.
To visualize directly the pattern differences between an image pair,
four independent trials recorded in the same preparation were averaged
for each stimulus, and the intensity values for each corresponding pair
of pixels were subtracted from each other. Negative values were set to
0 (clipped difference). In this way a positive difference image was
obtained. Therefore subtraction was always performed in both possible directions.
To obtain a quantitative measure of pattern dissimilarity, we
calculated the dissimilarity index (DI) for an image
pair (cf. Johnson et al., 1998
). DIs were always calculated
for image pairs within a preparation but could then be compared across
preparations. We first normalized images by a z-score
transformation and afterward subtracted intensity values pixel-wise
from each other. The absolute values of all pixels within these
difference images were averaged and yielded a dissimilarity
index for each image pair. Lower values represent more similar response
patterns, and higher values represent more dissimilar response patterns
(DI = 0 for identical pictures and DI
1 for pure noise pictures). The DIs obtained for
repeated trials with the same stimulus
(DIintertrial, a measure of the noise
level) were subtracted from the DIs obtained for trials with
pairs of stimuli to obtain a measure of the "specific" pattern dissimilarity (sDI).
 |
RESULTS |
Basic properties of amino acid-induced signals
We systematically altered chemical features of simple AA stimuli
to decipher the structural determinants of the AA-OR interaction. AA
consist of an
-carbon atom surrounded asymmetrically by an
-amino
group, an
-carboxyl group, an
-hydrogen, and a variable residue,
which is characteristic for a given AA. With the exception of the
-hydrogen, we introduced changes into any of the remaining three
moieties or the stereo conformation of the whole molecule (Fig.
1). All structural variations had clear
influences on either overall signal intensity or the spatial
distribution of signals within the olfactory bulb. Moreover, both
parameters were sensitive to changes in stimulus concentration.

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Figure 1.
Overview of compounds investigated. The
list of all AAs and their analogs tested is arranged according to chain
length and functional group. All abbreviations and trivial names used
elsewhere are given here. Chain length is given in the first
column and refers to the number of carbon atoms in the
backbone. Column 2 contains AAs with
D-conformation; columns 3-7
contain AAs with L-conformation; columns
8-11 contain various AA derivatives.
|
|
Stimulation of the nasal epithelium with any
L-
-AA (see Fig. 1) evoked broad,
multifocal patterns of activity restricted to the
anterolateral subregion of the ventral olfactory bulb. These patterns
were highly reproducible upon repetitive stimulation of the same
preparation but varied somewhat among different preparations, for
either technical or biological reasons (compare Figs.
2, 3, 8, and 9, all of which were
recorded from different animals).

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Figure 2.
L- -AA-configuration is required for
response. A, Carboxylic acids are compared with AAs in a
representative preparation. The anterolateral region of the olfactory
bulb is shown. F/F values are false
color-coded (blue to red: 0.5 to 4%
change). Note the lack of response to carboxylic acids.
B, Quantitation of response areas for carboxylic acids
and AAs. Stimulus concentrations were
10 4 M for
carboxylic acids and AAs. Response areas above threshold
( F/F > 1%) are normalized
(nRA) to the first AA stimulus (AA pre).
CA, Carboxylic acid (chain length as in
A); AA post, AA stimulus given after
stimulation with carboxylic acid. Values shown are means and SEM of
four trials (total of 3 preparations). C, Quantitation
of response areas for other AA analogs. None of the analogs (for
abbreviations see Fig. 1) elicited a response, in contrast to the
corresponding AAs with the same chain length (used as reference value).
Values shown are means and SEM of 3-22 trials (2-5 preparations). For
2-amino pentane and putrescine, two trials were measured.
D, Quantitation of response areas for L- and
D-AAs. Response to the L-conformation is taken
as reference value. Note the nearly complete absence of response to the
D-conformation. Values shown are means and SEM of eight
trials (total of 4 preparations).
|
|
Both the
-amino group and the
-carboxyl group as well as
L-conformation are required
First we wanted to know which moieties of AA are essential for
activation of any AA-responsive glomerulus. The
-amino group was removed, resulting in carboxylic acids. In many
air-breathing vertebrates, homologous series of carboxylic acids have
been shown to be potent odorants that could be discriminated easily by
the olfactory system (Mori et al., 1992
; Laska and Teubner, 1998
; Johnson et al., 1999
; Rubin and Katz, 1999
). A series of carboxylic acids with carbon chain lengths ranging from two (acetic acid) to eight
(octanoic acid) were compared with their AA analogs. All carboxylic
acids failed completely to evoke signals within the AA-responsive
subregion of the olfactory bulb (Fig. 2A) for all
concentrations tested, i.e., between
10
5 and
10
2
M. A quantitative evaluation of the response area
confirmed this result (Fig. 2B). In contrast, all
aliphatic
-AAs with corresponding backbone length (glycine to
2-aoa) were potent activators of glomerular responses (Fig.
2A,B), with thresholds ranging
between 10
6
and 10
4
M (see below). The amino group indeed is required
specifically in the
-position, because
- and
-positions (3-aba
and 4-aba, the neurotransmitter GABA), were not stimulatory, in
contrast to the corresponding
-AA, 2-aba (Fig. 2C).
Changing the carboxyl group to a completely saturated methyl group
leads to 2-amino alkanes. 2-Amino propane and 2-amino pentane, the
saturated analogs of the AA alanine and 2-apa, did not evoke any
response of the AA receptors even at
10
2
M (Fig. 2C). Even the less drastic substitution
of the charged carboxyl moiety with a polar hydroxyl group (alaninol)
was not able to rescue AA responses (Fig. 2C). A naturally
occurring diamine, putrescine (1,4-diamino butane), is set free during
rotting processes and therefore might be behaviorally relevant for
fish. However, putrescine was not stimulatory (Fig. 2C), in
contrast to its strong odor for air-breathing vertebrates.
Because both residues at the
-carbon atom, the
-amino
group and the carboxyl group, are required, we tested whether its stereo conformation is also mandatory. We tested
D-enantiomeres of three stimulatory AAs, which belonged to
different subclasses (basic: lysine; short-chain neutral: alanine;
long-chain neutral: methionine). At a concentration
of 10
4
M, all L-isomeres elicited strong responses.
The corresponding D-isomeres did not evoke any responses
within the ventrolateral olfactory bulb at the same concentration (Fig.
2D). Indeed, up to
10
2
M, the highest concentration tested,
no response was observed. Thus, zebrafish AA receptors do require the
L-configuration of AA for activation. Inactive
compounds do not evoke activity within other bulbar subregions.
As described above,
-AA-related compounds do not elicit signals
within the AA-responsive subregion of the bulb. Still, these compounds
might interact with a different set of ORs and therefore evoke
responses within different bulbar subregions. Thus, signals were
recorded from the whole olfactory bulb. However, none of the
-AA-related compounds tested (carboxylic acids, amines, putrescine, alaninol, 3-aba, and 4-aba) and none of the D-isomeres
(D-lys, D-ala, and D-met) elicited
a signal in any subregion of the olfactory bulb (data not shown). AA
signals arise in the upper third along the ventrodorsal axis of the
bulb; nevertheless, they were clearly visible in all focal planes
extending through the entire dorsoventral axis of the olfactory bulb,
despite some blurring of the signal in the dorsalmost optical sections
(tested with alanine at
10
3 and
10
4
M). In contrast, for the closely related alaninol, no
signals were observed in any of the corresponding focal planes,
regardless of the concentration tested
(10
2-10
5
M; data not shown).
Inactive compounds may influence signals elicited by the related
active compounds
L-AA responses could be obtained repetitively before
and after application of D-isomeres (data not shown). AAs
were effective before and after stimulation with carboxylic acids (Fig.
2A,B) or amines (data not shown),
and their responses did not differ noticeably in either strength or
spatial distribution of the signals, indicating that the inactive
compounds did not elicit any toxic effects and that the absence of
signals is indeed caused by a failure to activate the AA receptors.
However, simultaneous application of active and inactive compounds
altered the signal in some cases. For example, concomitant application
of alaninol and alanine reduced the response area to 50%
(p < 0.005; n = 9 trials;
Student's t test) compared with alanine applied alone.
Simultaneous application of propanoic acid and alanine increased the
response area to 154% (p < 0.005;
n = 7 trials). Thus, propanoic acid seems to elicit a
facilitatory effect, whereas alaninol acts as antagonist.
Taken together, our data have shown that all structural motives of the
AA backbone region (
-amino as well as the
-carboxyl group and the
L-conformation) are absolutely required for the activation
of AA-responsive ORs in zebrafish. All of the tested analogs that
differed in any of these aspects failed completely to elicit a specific response.
Increases in carbon chain length successively recruit
active glomeruli
Modifications of the AA side chain, on the other hand, resulted in
changed activity patterns rather than a complete loss of activity. To
compare the effects of small structural changes, we first analyzed the
effects of increasing carbon chain length with a homologous series of
unbranched aliphatic L-AAs ranging from glycine (chain
length of two) to 2-aoa (chain length of eight). Representative
experiments are shown in Figures 2A and
3A.
Even the smallest AA, glycine, activated ~25 different glomeruli in
the olfactory bulb (counted in seven animals). As carbon chain length
increases, new foci of activity are successively recruited. Glomeruli
activated by shorter AAs were activated to a higher extent by longer
compounds. This unexpected result is a general feature, although in
some experiments a few glomeruli preferring shorter AAs have also been
detected (see Fig. 6D for an example). Thus, signal
complexity and overall signal intensity generally increase with
increasing backbone length. A quantitative evaluation for all
experiments shows a continuous increase of response area with chain
length (see Fig. 4). We stress that the response is not limited to the
proteinogenic AAs glycine and alanine; indeed, even stronger responses
are observed for the nonproteinogenic AAs (Figs. 2A,
3).

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Figure 3.
Increases in carbon chain length successively
recruit active glomeruli. A, Images are averages of four
trials. Shown is F/F, color-coded as
before (color scale 0.5 to 3%). Increasing chain length recruits
additional glomeruli and increases signal intensity in already
activated glomeruli. B, Difference images for the data
shown in A (color scale 0-2.5%). All possible
difference images are arranged as matrix. In the top
triangle, the shorter AA was subtracted; in the bottom
triangle, the longer one was subtracted.
Difference foci are visible only in the top triangle.
The weak signal in the 2-aoa minus 2-aha subtraction may reflect a
reduced actual concentration of 2-aoa attributable to solubility
problems. The ala response already shows a clear difference focus
(open arrowhead). The addition of a single carbon atom
at the transition between 2-aba and 2-apa gives rise to several
additional activity foci (arrowhead). These foci lie
close together and are seen in any difference pattern, where 2-aba or
shorter stimuli were subtracted. An additional focus (open
arrow) begins to be visible at the 2-apa to 2-aha transition
(somewhat obscured by noise in the adjacent area) and becomes prominent
in the 2-aoa versus 2-apa comparison. A medium-sized focus
(arrow) is activated uniquely by 2-aoa, because it is
not observed with any of the shorter AAs tested, including 2-aha. Scale
bar, 100 µm.
|
|
For a visualization of the tuning characteristics of individual
glomeruli, we performed pixel-wise subtraction of signal intensities between pairs of stimuli as described in Materials and Methods. In such
subtraction pictures, foci are visible when the underlying glomerulus
responds differentially to the two stimuli. Difference foci were
visible only where responses obtained with shorter AAs were subtracted
from those elicited with longer compounds (Fig. 3B) but not
in the inverse subtraction, confirming the qualitative observation. All one-carbon extensions in chain length, except that between ala and 2-aba, elicit
activity in one to several additional foci. Some foci reflect sharp
transitions, e.g., a group of glomeruli not visible in the 2-aba
response, but prominent in the 2-apa response (Fig. 3B).
Even the longest AA, 2-aoa, activates an additional glomerulus, despite
its generally somewhat weaker response. It should be noted that the
exact number and position of such foci are not constant between
animals, for technical and/or biological reasons. However, foci with
similar response characteristics and positions were observed repeatedly
in different animals.

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Figure 4.
Response area as function of chain length.
Threshold was set at F/F = 1%;
area above threshold was quantified and normalized to the average area
of all chain lengths. Note the steady increase of response area with
increasing chain length. The slight drop between alanine and 2-aba is
not significant. Values shown are means ± SEM of 16 trials (total
of 9 preparations).
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Thus some foci, and by inference their underlying receptors, appear
sharply tuned to particular minimal chain lengths, whereas others
exhibit broader tuning curves visualized as gradual increases with
increasing chain length. At least five different foci orgroups of foci
are involved in the response to neutral aliphatic AAs, distinguishable
by their onset of response at different chain lengths. For
a listing of response categories that occur, see Table
1.
The discriminating ability for chain length depends
on concentration
To enable comparisons of pattern differences across
animals, we calculated pattern dissimilarity between different chain
lengths as difference index DI and averaged DI across all
preparations. The contribution of intertrial variability was evaluated
by calculating the dissimilarity indices for repeated trials of the
same stimulus for all AAs and all concentrations. These values
represent the noise level in the dissimilarity analysis.
The discriminating ability for chain length was pronounced at
the intermediate concentrations
10
4 and
10
5
M, with significance values ranging between
p < 0.05 and p < 0.0001 (Fig.
5). At both higher and lower
concentrations, chain length is not discriminated significantly, albeit
for different reasons. At lower concentrations, signals approach noise
levels (Fig. 6). At higher
concentrations, signal-to-noise ratio is high, but response patterns
for different chain lengths become more similar, possibly because
saturation range is reached for an increasing number of AA receptors
underlying these response patterns (compare Fig. 6), making them less
distinctive.

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Figure 5.
Quantitative analysis of the discriminating
ability for neutral AAs at different concentrations. Specific
difference indices (sDI = DIchain length pair DIintertrial) as function of chain length
difference ( chain length = 0-6) are shown
for concentrations between 10 7
and 10 2 M. The
concentration (molar) is indicated to the
left of the corresponding bar graph. A particular
chain-length difference represents data from different stimulus pairs,
e.g., chain length = 4 contains data from image
pairs gly/aha and 2-aba/2-aoa. The sDI scale to the
bottom right is valid for all bar graphs.
sDI values are given as means ± SEM. Stimulus
concentration drastically affects the discriminating ability for
differences in chain length. Discriminating ability is pronounced only
at 10 4 and
10 5 M. Pattern
dissimilarity increases with increasing difference in carbon chain
length. Significance levels of sDI values are indicated
by asterisks (*p < 0.05; **p < 0.005; ***p < 0.001; ****p < 0.0001).
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Figure 6.
Concentration dependence of responses to
three aliphatic AAs. From top to bottom,
decreasing stimulus concentration (given as log
conc. [M]), responses to gly, ala, and 2-aha are shown in
false color (color scale 0.5 to 3.5%). Dose-response curves for
foci a-d (encircled in the image for
10 2 M ala) are
shown for all three AAs (color coded). Note that focus c
does not saturate for any of the three AAs, in contrast to foci
a, b, and d. Same
preparation as shown in Figure 2.
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Response patterns at the "discriminating" concentrations
10
4 and
10
5
M tend to show increasing dissimilarity for increasing
differences in carbon chain length (Fig. 5). Thus, larger differences
in chain length are better resolved. However, even a change of one
methylene group, a small difference in stimulus structure, can
elicit a significantly different response pattern (Fig.
7).

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Figure 7.
Concentration differences do not
compensate for chain-length differences. Pattern dissimilarity is
expressed as sDI and given as function of
both chain-length difference and concentration difference. Surround
matrices ( chain length = 2 to + 2 and
concentration = 10 2 to 100-fold) are shown in
gray scale in the top row.
Reference images are from ala (left panel), 2-aba
(middle panel), and 2-apa (right
panel) at 10 4
M concentration. The surround matrix is not complete for
ala and 2-apa, e.g., chain length = 2 is not
possible for ala. The bottom row contains for each gray
square the numerical value of the sDI
(bold) ± SEM and the significance level
(Mann-Whitney U test; 14 pairings/value, 17 pairings
for DIintertrial; p > 0.05 is depicted as not significant; n.s.). Data are
from three preparations with six trials total per stimulus. This
two-dimensional representation shows that in most cases chain-length
differences may not be compensated by differences in concentration, and
vice versa.
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Differences in concentration do not compensate for differences in
chain length
It is conceivable that pattern dissimilarity for chain-length
differences might be compensated for by differences in concentration; e.g., glycine at higher concentrations might elicit a pattern undistinguishable from 2-aba at lower concentrations.
Therefore we examined the concentration dependence of the response
patterns for all six AAs. Typical results for two very similar AAs and
a more distant one (gly, ala, and 2-aha, respectively) are shown in
Figure 6. For all odorants, signal complexity grew with increasing
concentration. At the lowest concentration tested (10
7
M), none of the stimuli was strong enough to elicit
glomerular responses. With increasing concentrations, the longer
chain-length stimuli were the first that reached threshold.
Successively shorter stimuli reached threshold with increasing
concentrations. At
10
2
M, the highest concentration tested, signals became more
similar to each other.
For quantitative analysis, we first established dose-response curves
of many individual activity foci for all six AA stimuli (Fig. 6 and
data not shown). Results for three different AAs, gly, ala, and 2-aha,
for each of four foci, are illustrated (Fig. 6). Most of these
dose-response curves are sigmoidal, with their rise phase spanning two
to three logarithmic units, in good accordance with the expectation for
receptor ligand interaction (Sveinsson and Hara, 1990
). These curve
shapes are consistent with the notion that individual foci represent
the contribution of a single type of OR. Some dose-response curves do
not saturate, possibly because of insufficient binding affinity or
because responses of two different foci could not be resolved
optically. Note that individual foci in most cases distinguish clearly
between different AAs, with 5- to 50-fold differences in half-maximal
activation values (Fig. 6). Different foci need up to 10-fold
differences in concentration to reach half-maximal values for the same
AA. As a consequence, we never observed a combination (AA and
concentration) with a response identical to that of another
combination. In other words, even the limited set of four foci appeared
sufficient to distinguish between highly related stimuli.
To quantify overall pattern similarity as a function of concomitant
changes in chain length and concentration, we obtained dissimilarity
indices for relative differences of chain length (up to two carbon atom
difference) and concentration (up to 100-fold), using as reference the
2-aba response at
10
4
M concentration (Fig. 7). Note that in this surround matrix
for pattern similarity, concentration differences give rise to
sDI values in the range of those caused by differences in
chain length. Thus, compensation of one parameter by the other appears
conceivable. Nevertheless, all combinations of chain length and
concentration differences are significantly more dissimilar than the
corresponding noise levels, although some combinations give rise to
lower dissimilarity than the respective one-dimensional changes of
either chain length or concentration (Fig. 7). Very similar results are
obtained using shorter AAs as reference value (Fig. 7, ala;
and data not shown). Longer AAs, although generally quite similar, show
a tendency to impaired discrimination in comparisons with long AAs
(Fig. 7, 2-apa; and data not shown), possibly because with
increasing chain length the relative importance of another added
methylen group diminishes. Thus, in the vast majority of cases, pattern dissimilarity for chain-length differences is partially reduced but not
eliminated by counteracting differences in concentration.
Taken together, our data indicate that at the level
investigated, the zebrafish olfactory system has a high discriminatory power, allowing for the distinction of closely related compounds over a
wide concentration range. Whether later stages of olfactory signal
processing keep all this information remains to be seen. It will be
interesting to determine which degree of pattern differences (i.e.,
sDI level) can manifest itself in behavioral tests of odor discrimination.
Systematic variations of the side chain functional group in
amino acids
We wanted to know how different functional groups, i.e.,
particular chemical features, are encoded within the activated receptor repertoire. To that end, we compared effects of small variations in the
side group at a particular backbone length. This comparison was
repeated at another carbon chain length to evaluate whether results
might be generalized. The presence and absence of a terminal amino
group were examined using the pairs ornithine/2-apa and lysine/2-aha
(carbon chain lengths 5 and 6, respectively). The presence and absence
of a
-hydroxyl group were examined with the pairs serine/alanine and
threonine/2-aba (carbon chain lengths 3 and 4, respectively).
The presence as well as the absence of a terminal amino group are
represented by distinct glomeruli
Responses elicited by the two basic AAs were located exclusively
within the ventrolateral olfactory bulb [for lysine, confirming results obtained by Friedrich and Korsching (1997)
]. Response patterns
generated by ornithine and lysine appeared similar to each other but
were evidently different from responses obtained with the
corresponding neutral AAs 2-apa and 2-aha (Fig.
8A). Responses of the
neutral AAs extended more medially than the ornithine/lysine signals.
Moreover, the ornithine/lysine responses consisted of more distinct
foci than the responses to 2-apa and 2-aha. Several foci were activated
by all four AAs; i.e., they possess a relatively broad tuning
curve.

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Figure 8.
Differential responses to presence and absence of
a terminal amino group and a -hydroxyl group. A,
Responses to two basic AAs (orn and lys)
and their aliphatic counterparts (2-apa and
2-aha) are shown in the top row (color
scale 0.5 to 7%). Difference images are shown below (color scale
0-5%). Note several categories of response properties
(arrowhead, nNH2 required, chain
length-independent; arrow, nNH2 required,
chain length-dependent; open arrowhead, nNH2
not tolerated, chain length-independent; open arrow,
nNH2 not tolerated, chain length-dependent). Glomeruli
activated by any compound (nNH2 tolerated) are only visible
in the top row, not in the difference images.
B, Responses to two polar AAs (ser and
thr) and their aliphatic counterparts
(ala and 2-aba) are shown in the
top row (color scale as above). Difference images are
shown below. Several glomeruli do not tolerate the -OH group; some
of these are chain length-dependent (arrowhead). No
glomeruli requiring the -OH group are visible. Scale bar, 100 µm.
|
|
Subtraction analysis revealed foci specific either for a combination of
chemical features or for a particular chemical feature (Figs.
8A, 9, Table 1). Some
glomeruli require the presence of the terminal amino group
independently of the particular chain length examined. These detect
single features of the side chain, whereas other glomeruli only
recognize the terminal amino group at a particular position, i.e.,
chain length. These might be labeled "holistic" detectors, because
they require both a particular chain length and a particular functional
group for activation. To our surprise we also detected glomeruli that
require the absence of the N-terminal amino group to be activated (Fig.
8A, Table 1). Again, some of these generalize for
both chain lengths examined, whereas others require a particular chain
length. Some glomeruli are activated by both the basic AAs and the
corresponding neutral AAs; i.e., they tolerate but do not require the
presence of the functional group (Table 1). In all three categories
(required, not tolerated, tolerated), differential dependence on chain
length is observed, supporting the presence of more than three
different ORs underlying the observed responses. Thus many glomeruli
with distinct response properties have a share in the representation of
a single AA.

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Figure 9.
Adaptation and cross-adaptation of AA responses.
Top to bottom, Responses to 2-apa, orn,
2-aha, and lys (color scale 0.5 to 5%). Left to
right, Consecutive stimuli are given: stimulus itself;
adapted with 2-apa; encased, computed difference image (stimulus minus
2-apa response); stimulus itself after recovery period; adapted with
orn; encased, computed difference image (stimulus minus orn response);
stimulus itself after recovery period. Adaptation with stimulus leads
to complete loss of response; cross-adaptation eliminates responses in
a subset of glomeruli. Reversal of adaptation is complete
(DI for preadaptation/postadaptation comparison in the
range of intertrial DIs). Difference images obtained by
pixel-wise subtraction mimic adapted responses closely (color scale
0-3%). The somewhat higher noise in the "biological subtraction"
is characteristic for single trials. Images for the "digital
subtraction" were averaged over four trials and accordingly show less
noise. Scale bar, 100 µm.
|
|
Only the absence of a
-hydroxyl group is represented by
distinct glomeruli
Responses elicited by the two polar AAs were located exclusively
within the ventrolateral olfactory bulb [for serine, confirming results obtained by Friedrich and Korsching (1997)
]. Response patterns
generated by the
-hydroxyl AAs, serine and threonine, were evidently
different from signals obtained with alanine and 2-aba and appeared
less extended than those of their corresponding aliphatic counterparts
(Fig. 8B). Difference analysis clearly showed that
the unsubstituted AAs activated more glomeruli, and to a larger extent,
than the
-hydroxyl AAs. Some glomeruli recognized all four
components and did not distinguish between the presence and absence of
the functional group. However, of those glomeruli that do distinguish
between the presence and absence of the
-hydroxyl group, we only
observed glomeruli requiring the absence of the
-hydroxyl group
(independent of or dependent on chain length, respectively), but never
detected glomeruli specific for the presence of the
-hydroxyl group.
Thus the receptor repertoire for the polar AAs appears more restricted
than that for the corresponding unpolar AAs and may be a subset of the
latter repertoire. At least three different ORs seem to be involved in
the response to ala. By comparing tuning properties between polar and
basic AAs, further subdivisions in the receptor repertoire become
visible (Table 1).
Glomeruli with related response properties tend to
be clustered
AA-responsive glomeruli with related tuning curves
similar chain
length requirements or similar functional group requirements
tend to
be grouped together (compare Figs. 2, 3, 8, and 9). Thus the spatial
arrangement of glomerular response patterns is not random but
chemotopic, even for small changes in odorant structure. A similar
tuning curve might indicate a similar structure, i.e., sequence of the
underlying OR. Consistent with this hypothesis, it has been observed in
mammals that similar ORs project to neighboring glomeruli (Tsuboi et
al., 1999
; Strotmann et al., 2000
). Accordingly, a certain level of
chemotopic representation is observed in mammals as well (cf. Johnson
and Leon, 2000
; Uchida et al., 2000
; Meister and Bonhoeffer, 2001
).
Cross-adaptation resembles simple mathematical calculations
Because odor responses desensitize quickly, cross- adaptation
within a group of related odorants can be used to obtain an estimate
for the minimal number of different receptors available for neuronal
representation of this odorant group. We applied this technique to
obtain an independent evaluation of our conclusions drawn from the
image subtraction analysis. We adapted the explant by continuously
superfusing it with any one of four stimuli (2-apa, 2-aha, ornithine,
and lysine) and successively tested all four stimuli again.
Responses to the continuous stimulus resemble those evoked by transient
stimulation. Signals rise over the first minute of stimulation and
decay within the following 2 min. Within 3-4 min, baseline is
restored; i.e., complete adaptation has occurred. Reversal of
adaptation is complete after 10 min without stimulus. Directly after
adaptation a stimulus pulse with the adapting odorant did not elicit a
specific signal (Fig. 9). Stimulation with other odorants revealed
unique activity patterns that depended on the relatedness of the test
stimulus to the adapting stimulus (Fig. 9). These response patterns
exhibit a striking similarity to the subtraction images described
above, the adapting stimulus corresponding to the subtracted image.
Figure 9 shows a typical experiment (note the remarkable similarity of
the basic, nonadapted patterns to those of Fig. 8, which were obtained
with another animal). All categories of tuning properties (Table 1)
observed in the subtraction analysis (Fig. 8) could be found in the
adapted response patterns. These experiments show first that calcium
imaging is an excellent method for quantitative studies of adaptation
and cross-adaptation. Second, they provide strong support for the
validity of our image subtraction analysis and the conclusions drawn
from it. The close correspondence of patterns obtained by
cross-adaptation and subtraction analysis indicates that, indeed, an
array of ORs with diverse tuning curves is involved in the response to
even a simple odorant like an amino acid.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Neuronal representation of odorants is generally achieved via
combinatorial activation of several broadly tuned glomeruli (Friedrich
and Korsching, 1997
; Galizia et al., 1999
; Johnson et al., 1999
; Rubin
and Katz, 1999
; Meister and Bonhoeffer, 2001
). Recent molecular studies
have shown a one-to-one correspondence of ORs and glomeruli such that
terminals of ORNs expressing a single type of OR converge onto a single
glomerulus (two for rodents) in the olfactory bulb or antennal lobe
(Ressler et al., 1994
; Mombaerts et al., 1996
; Vosshall et al., 2000
).
Taking advantage of this OR-to-glomerulus correspondence, we have
imaged presynaptic calcium changes in glomeruli, induced by a group of
simple and systematically related odorants, to study odorant feature
detection by a complete OR repertoire. Our approach complements the
functional analysis of recombinant ORs (Krautwurst et al., 1998
;
Zhao et al., 1998
; Malnic et al., 1999
; Touhara et al., 1999
; Araneda et al., 2000
), which may not necessarily detect the main ligands of the
ORs and would be practically impossible to use for the complete
receptor repertoire.
The small size and transparent nature of the olfactory bulb in
zebrafish are very convenient for imaging (Friedrich and Korsching, 1997
) and allow visualization of all glomerular responses to an odorant. It should be noted that a glomerulus both integrates and
averages signals of individual ORNs, and thus odor responses are
expected to be somewhat more robust than those of individual ORNs.
Because the calcium dye is introduced specifically in the terminals of
the ORNs, glomerular signals should reflect the underlying receptor
events of these cells and not contain intense bulbar processing
[albeit some evidence for dopaminergic and GABAergic modulation has
been uncovered recently (Keller et al., 1998
; Koster et al., 1999
;
Aroniadou-Anderjaska et al., 2000
)]. Other methods of imaging
neuronal activity (e.g., 2-deoxyglucose-uptake, c-fos levels, intrinsic signals) do not distinguish between the input and
output compartments of the glomeruli (Lancet et al., 1982
; Guthrie et
al., 1993
; Cinelli et al., 1995
; Johnson et al., 1998
, 1999
; Yang et
al., 1998
; Galizia et al., 1999
; Rubin and Katz, 1999
; Johnson and
Leon, 2000
; Meister and Bonhoeffer, 2001
).
Because the ORN-to-glomerulus correspondence has not been demonstrated
in zebrafish so far, tuning properties of glomeruli may be broader than
those of the underlying ORN, but in any case yield a minimal estimate
for the ORN and thus OR specificity. The number of glomeruli with
different tuning properties yields an estimate for the number of
different ORs involved in the response to the corresponding odorants.
The actual OR number might be higher, because testing of other analogs
might have revealed differential sensitivities not detectable with the
set of analogs examined here. Overestimation of OR numbers appears less
likely. Mixed innervation of one glomerulus would result in a new,
artificially broad response category, but cross-adaptation should only
be partial in this case. We found cross-adaptation for broadly tuned
glomeruli, i.e., no evidence for mixing of glomerular input.
Without exception, AA-responsive ORs require both the
-amino and the
-carboxyl group in the L-conformation.
Electro-olfactogram recording in catfish shows some response to
D-ala (Caprio and Byrd, 1984
). However, it is possible that
this signal arises from a non-neuronal component of the
electro-olfactogram like that observed for bile acids (Erickson and
Caprio, 1984
). A response domain requiring particular functional groups
has been described in the rodent olfactory bulb as well [fatty
acid/aldehyde domain (Imamura et al., 1992
; Johnson and Leon, 2000
;
Uchida et al., 2000
)]. Such a clustering of ORs that require a
particular functional group may emerge as a general scheme for odorant
representation, notwithstanding the differences in odorants between
air-breathing and water-living taxa.
Requirements for the side chain are more relaxed, and different side
chains recruit varying subsets of AA receptors. The structure of an AA
odorant can therefore be divided into two subregions, the AA functional
group and the side chain. The side chain consists of a hydrogen in the
smallest AA possible, glycine. Even glycine was able to activate as
many as 25 different glomeruli, but possibly fewer than 25 ORs, because
some glomeruli might be innervated by ORNs expressing the same ORs. On
the other hand, the actual number of glycine-responsive ORs should be
larger than one, because the glycine response comprises foci with
different dose-response curves. Thus, even the simplest AA is not
represented by a single "glycine OR" but by a combination of
"AAs-ORs," an impressive demonstration of the combinatorial nature
of the odor code. Successive elongation of the side chain resulted in
the recruitment of additional glomeruli and therefore additional ORs. A
lower-bound estimate of at least five different ORs involved in the
response to neutral aliphatic AAs can be derived from the number of
different minimal chain-length requirements of glomeruli.
Most glomeruli show a continuous increase of signal strength with
increasing chain length. Only a few glomeruli were found to be
inversely tuned, preferentially to shorter chain lengths. It is
remarkable that these tuning properties are matched closely by the
representation of fatty acids in the rat olfactory bulb as studied by
2-deoxyglucose labeling (Johnson et al., 1999
), and they are also
observed for isolated mammalian ORNs (Malnic et al., 1999
). Conflicting
results (bell-shaped tuning curves) could be caused by difficulties in
obtaining identical vapor concentrations for different chemicals (Rubin
and Katz, 1999
; Araneda et al., 2000
; Meister and Bonhoeffer, 2001
), a
problem not present for water-soluble odorants. Other properties of
response patterns and tuning curves for volatile odorants, like the
increasing complexity of the response pattern with increasing chain
length and definite pattern changes for small increases in chain length
(Johnson et al., 1998
, 1999
; Uchida et al., 2000
; Meister and
Bonhoeffer, 2001
), are also similar to results reported here for a
group of water-soluble odorants (AAs). However, it is difficult to
interpret these similarities, one reason being that none of those
studies has measured specifically the receptor neuron component of the glomerular signal. To distinguish among contributions from receptor neuron input, mitral cell output, and activity from inhibitory interneurons, it will be necessary to develop specific imaging methods
for the postsynaptic compartment in the olfactory bulb, the mitral
cells, to complement existing electrophysiological studies (Imamura et
al., 1992
; Mori et al., 1992
; Katoh et al., 1993
; Yokoi et al.,
1995
).
Concentration is another parameter that heavily influences the response
pattern. Presumably because of the affinity differences within the
receptor repertoire recruited to a response, pattern dissimilarities
for responses to different concentrations of the same compound are
pronounced. It should be noted that some combinations of different
chain length and different concentration elicit patterns more similar
to each other than the corresponding uni-dimensional change in
concentration. In these cases, however, pattern dissimilarity is mostly
reduced but not eliminated. This is consistent with the notion that
odor stimuli might be discriminated from each other regardless of their concentration.
The introduction of amino and hydroxyl functional groups in the side
chain visualized further subdivisions of the receptor repertoire and
thus indicates the presence of additional receptors within the group of
AA-responsive ORs. Interestingly, no receptors specific for the polar
AAs serine and threonine were found; i.e., the
-hydroxyl group does
not seem to participate in the binding interaction.
On the basis of our results, we propose a model for the AA-OR
interaction (Fig. 10). AA structural
motives may be required, tolerated, or destructive for the binding
interaction. A mandatory binding site for the AA head comprises the
-amino group and the
-carboxyl group in the
L-conformation. An additional binding site serves as
detector of minimal side-chain length (absent in glycine-responsive
ORs). Some ORs possess another binding site that requires a terminal
amino group in the context of an
-AA side chain. Furthermore, larger
or smaller "tolerance regions" appear to be present that admit, but
do not require, a range of different side chains (length and functional
group differences). The
-hydrogen seems to lie also at a position of
limited tolerance (Hara, 1976
, 1977
). Thus, individual receptors of the
AA receptor family differ within at least one or two structural binding
motives beyond the AA configuration per se and differ also in the
degree of tolerance afforded by the binding pocket. These data suggest that ORs recognize a combination of molecular features (odotopes), not
single odotopes.

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Figure 10.
A model for the binding sites of AA
receptors. AA ligand/AA receptor interactions are shown according to
the categories found in the difference analysis. A selection of
receptors (rounded rectangles) is shown in the
top row. The bottom row lists a reduced
set of ligands (black) and non-ligands
(gray) below the corresponding receptor.
Representatives of the different AA odorant classes are shown
(short-chain neutral: alanine; long-chain neutral:
2-aha; basic: lysine; polar:
serine). The ligand depicted is
underlined. Mandatory binding sites are indicated by
horizontal dashes; facultative interactions (not
required but not destructive either) are indicated by
stippling. The binding site for the AA head
(black) is mandatory for all AA receptors. The amount of
required interaction with the carbon side chain (dark
gray) varies (compare OR1 with
OR2), but chain lengths beyond the requirements
are always tolerated (OR1). The terminal amino group
(light gray) binding site is mandatory in OR3 but
facultative in OR4 and OR6. The hydroxy side chain
(white) is never required, but is tolerated in OR5 and
OR6.
|
|
The combination of ORs activated by a particular odorant represents the
"finger print" of that odorant. In this finger print, the absence
of response of particular ORs is as meaningful and distinctive as the
presence of response of other ORs. Presumably, not the absolute levels
of receptor activation but their ratios determine the perception of
odor quality, analogous to the situation in color vision (Bartels and
Zeki, 2000
). The dissimilarity indices that we introduced normalize for
intensity; i.e., they measure differences in ratios of receptor
activation. Dissimilarity indices even for closely related stimuli
significantly above those observed for repeated stimulation with the
same odorant ascertain the high discriminatory power of the zebrafish
OR repertoire. Well above 10 differently tuned ORs (Table 1) appear to
generate the observed discriminating abilities. This estimate extends
earlier lower-bound estimates of at least four different ORs (Caprio
and Byrd, 1984
; Friedrich and Korsching, 1997
). Thus a considerable
proportion of all ORs [estimated to be ~100 (Ngai et al., 1993
; Weth
et al., 1996
)] seems devoted to processing AA odors.
Odor space is not restricted to naturally occurring stimuli.
"Unphysiological" AAs recruit more glomeruli than the proteinogenic AAs tested. Thus, ORs do not seem to be selected for odorants encountered in the normal environment. On the other hand, ORs have not
evolved for all potential odorants. AA-related compounds such as fatty
acids and amines do not elicit responses in the fish olfactory system,
although both are potent odorants for mammals. Such restrictions of the
fish odor space may reflect the behavioral relevance of the
corresponding chemical groups of stimuli. AAs indicate food sources,
and many AAs can be distinguished by catfish, some by goldfish, a close
relative of zebrafish, in behavioral studies (Zippel et al., 1993
;
Valentincic et al., 2000
). However, further investigation will be
necessary to determine whether the astonishingly high resolving power
for minutely different chemical structures and even different
concentrations of the same stimulus (measured at the glomerular level
and inferred for the underlying ORs) may be present at all later stages
of olfactory information processing and, ultimately, at the behavioral level.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 11, 2001; revised July 19, 2001; accepted July 20, 2001.
This work was supported by a grant from Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft, Schwerpunkt Programm Molekulare
Sinnesphysiologie to S.I.K.
Correspondence should be addressed to Sigrun I. Korsching,
Universität zu Köln, Institut für Genetik,
Zülpicher Strasse 47, 50674 Köln, Germany. E-mail:
Sigrun.Korsching{at}uni-koeln.de.
 |
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