Nature Communications (Jun 2023)

Combinatorial encoding of odors in the mosquito antennal lobe

  • Pranjul Singh,
  • Shefali Goyal,
  • Smith Gupta,
  • Sanket Garg,
  • Abhinav Tiwari,
  • Varad Rajput,
  • Alexander Shakeel Bates,
  • Arjit Kant Gupta,
  • Nitin Gupta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-39303-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

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Abstract Among the cues that a mosquito uses to find a host for blood-feeding, the smell of the host plays an important role. Previous studies have shown that host odors contain hundreds of chemical odorants, which are detected by different receptors on the peripheral sensory organs of mosquitoes. But how individual odorants are encoded by downstream neurons in the mosquito brain is not known. We developed an in vivo preparation for patch-clamp electrophysiology to record from projection neurons and local neurons in the antennal lobe of Aedes aegypti. Combining intracellular recordings with dye-fills, morphological reconstructions, and immunohistochemistry, we identify different sub-classes of antennal lobe neurons and their putative interactions. Our recordings show that an odorant can activate multiple neurons innervating different glomeruli, and that the stimulus identity and its behavioral preference are represented in the population activity of the projection neurons. Our results provide a detailed description of the second-order olfactory neurons in the central nervous system of mosquitoes and lay a foundation for understanding the neural basis of their olfactory behaviors.