Researchers identify a genomic mechanism by which genes help distinguish a good number of scents
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Researchers have pinpointed a genomic mechanism by which a finite number of genes can ultimately help distinguish a seemingly near-infinite number of scents.
But precisely how these genes and neurons work in concert to pick out a particular scent has long puzzled scientists.
This is in large part because the gene activity inside each neuron where each of these 10 million neurons only chooses to activate one of these hundreds of dedicated genes seemed far too simple to account for the sheer number of scents that the nose must parse.
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The findings were published today in Nature.
said Stavros Lomvardas, PhD, a principal investigator at Columbia’s Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute and the paper’s senior author.
And though each neuron contains the full suite of the 400 dedicated olfactory receptor genes, only one of these genes is active in each neuron.
Adding to the confusion: the gene that is active appears randomly chosen, and differs from neuron to neuron.
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“In mice, olfactory receptor genes are scattered across the genome at about 60 different locations on different chromosomes that are quite far apart from each other,”
said Kevin Monahan, PhD, a postdoctoral research scientist in the Lomvardas lab and the paper’s co-first author.
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Mice have about 1,000 olfactory receptor genes, more than twice that of humans, potentially indicative of a superior sense of smell.
By employing a new genomic sequencing technique called in situ Hi-C, Dr. Lomvardas and his team recently revealed that the chromosomes interacted much more frequently than expected.
said Adan Horta, PhD, a recently graduated doctoral candidate in the Lomvardas lab and the paper’s co-first author.
“This gives us a snapshot of the genome at a particular point in time.”
Soon after these genes huddled together, another type of genetic element known as enhancers clustered in a separate 3D compartment.
Enhancers are not themselves genes but regulate the activity of genes.
said Dr. Horta.
“This work showed that these enhancers create hotspots of activity to regulate the “chosen” olfactory receptor gene.
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It holds the Greek Islands together, allowing them to switch on a specific olfactory receptor gene that then as a team interpret the particular scent at hand.
said Dr. Monahan.
“The flexibility of this process could help to explain how we easily learn and remember new smells.”
“Interactions between chromosomes may be the culprit for shifts in the genome called genomic translocations that are known to cause cancer,”
said Dr. Lomvardas, who is also a member of the Kavli Institute for Brain Science at Columbia University as well as professor of biology and molecular biophysics and of neuroscience at Columbia University Irving Medical Center.
“Could the activities of other cells be shaped by the three-dimensional changes we see in olfactory receptor neurons? This is an open question that we hope to explore.”