eLife (Apr 2017)

Variation in olfactory neuron repertoires is genetically controlled and environmentally modulated

  • Ximena Ibarra-Soria,
  • Thiago S Nakahara,
  • Jingtao Lilue,
  • Yue Jiang,
  • Casey Trimmer,
  • Mateus AA Souza,
  • Paulo HM Netto,
  • Kentaro Ikegami,
  • Nicolle R Murphy,
  • Mairi Kusma,
  • Andrea Kirton,
  • Luis R Saraiva,
  • Thomas M Keane,
  • Hiroaki Matsunami,
  • Joel Mainland,
  • Fabio Papes,
  • Darren W Logan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.21476
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

Read online

The mouse olfactory sensory neuron (OSN) repertoire is composed of 10 million cells and each expresses one olfactory receptor (OR) gene from a pool of over 1000. Thus, the nose is sub-stratified into more than a thousand OSN subtypes. Here, we employ and validate an RNA-sequencing-based method to quantify the abundance of all OSN subtypes in parallel, and investigate the genetic and environmental factors that contribute to neuronal diversity. We find that the OSN subtype distribution is stereotyped in genetically identical mice, but varies extensively between different strains. Further, we identify cis-acting genetic variation as the greatest component influencing OSN composition and demonstrate independence from OR function. However, we show that olfactory stimulation with particular odorants results in modulation of dozens of OSN subtypes in a subtle but reproducible, specific and time-dependent manner. Together, these mechanisms generate a highly individualized olfactory sensory system by promoting neuronal diversity.

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