Cell Reports (Oct 2017)

Functional Plasticity of Odor Representations during Motherhood

  • Amit Vinograd,
  • Yael Fuchs-Shlomai,
  • Merav Stern,
  • Diptendu Mukherjee,
  • Yuan Gao,
  • Ami Citri,
  • Ian Davison,
  • Adi Mizrahi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 2
pp. 351 – 365

Abstract

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Summary: Motherhood is accompanied by new behaviors aimed at ensuring the wellbeing of the offspring. Olfaction plays a key role in guiding maternal behaviors during this transition. We studied functional changes in the main olfactory bulb (OB) of mothers in mice. Using in vivo two-photon calcium imaging, we studied the sensory representation of odors by mitral cells (MCs). We show that MC responses to monomolecular odors become sparser and weaker in mothers. In contrast, responses to biologically relevant odors are spared from sparsening or strengthen. MC responses to mixtures and to a range of concentrations suggest that these differences between odor responses cannot be accounted for by mixture suppressive effects or gain control mechanisms. In vitro whole-cell recordings show an increase in inhibitory synaptic drive onto MCs. The increase of inhibitory tone may contribute to the general decrease in responsiveness and concomitant enhanced representation of specific odors. : Motherhood is associated with changes in neural circuits that affect how the mother senses her surroundings. Vinograd et al. show that the olfactory bulb is a locus of plasticity. Output neurons of the bulb have elevated inhibition, and odor coding of natural odors is improved. Keywords: olfaction, plasticity, mitral cells, motherhood, two-photon, calcium imaging, inhibition