Abstract
Salt, known as taste quality, is generally neglected in olfaction, although the olfactory sensory neurons stretch into the salty nasal mucus covering the olfactory epithelium (OE). Using a psychophysical approach, we directly and functionally demonstrate in the awake rat for a variety of structurally diverse odorants that sodium is a critical factor for olfactory perception and sensitivity, both very important components of mammalian communication and sexual behavior. Bathing the olfactory mucus with an iso-osmotic sodium-free buffer solution results in severe deficits in odorant detection. However, sensitivity returns fully within a few hours, indicating continuous mucus production. In the presence of sodium in the mucus covering the OE, all odorants induce odorant-specific c-Fos expression in the olfactory bulb. Yet, if sodium is absent in the mucus, no c-Fos expression is induced as demonstrated for n-octanal. Our noninvasive approach to induce anosmia in mammals here presented - which is fully reversible within hours - opens new possibilities to study the functions of olfactory communication in awake animals. © 2006 Oxford University Press.
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Weiler, E., Deutsch, S., & Apfelbach, R. (2006). Combined behavioral and c-Fos studies elucidate the vital role of sodium for odor detection. Chemical Senses, 31(7), 641–647. https://doi.org/10.1093/chemse/bjl004
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