An important challenge in developmental neurobiology is to unravel
mechanisms responsible for the influences exerted by afferent innervation
on the development of its targets. Good examples of such phenomena are
found in the olfactory system. In the brains of all species studied to
date, development of the primary olfactory center with its characteristic
array of synaptic glomeruli depends dramatically on innervation by primary-
afferent axons of olfactory receptor cells. How sensory axons control the
formation of glomeruli, and how odotopy -- the orderly spatial
representation of attributes of odor molecules -- arises in the glomerular
array, are pressing problems.
This project will focus on the development of individual glomeruli and
their uniglomerular projection neurons, endowed with characteristic
"molecular receptive range" properties and will take advantage of a
remarkable model system, the sexually dimorphic olfactors lobe in the brain
of Manduca sexta. In particular, we will investigate the postembryonic
development of the prominent macroglomerular complex in the male's
olfactory lobes. This unique complex receives primary-afferent inputs
solely from male-specific olfactory receptor cells, which induce the
formation of the macroglomerular complex and are specialized to detect
individual components of the female's sex-pheromone blend. The complex
comprises two glomerular substructures, each of which receives and
processes primary-afferent input about a different one of the two key
components of the blend. These identified, odotopically defined glomeruli
also contain neurites of male-specific central neurons, most notably
uniglomerular projection neurons, which participate in specialized synaptic
circuitry for processing sensory input about pheromone.
As specific aims, the proposed studies ask: (1) how the macroglomerular
complex develops, (2) what role(s) glial cells play in its development, (30
whether there are quantitative and temporal requirements for male-afferent
control of its development, and (4) whether male-specific sensory axons
have molecular specializations that might be responsible for induction of
the macroglomerular complex. The ultimate goals of the line of research
represented by this proposal are; (a) to ascertain the cellular and
molecular mechanisms underlying the decisive role of sensory axons in the
development of glomeruli, (b) to discover how primary-afferent and central
elements ultimately destined to have similar, distinctive molecular
receptive ranges come to associate with each other, and (c) to determine
whether glial cells participate in the development of all of the glomeruli
in a particular species.
This is the first effort, in any species, to ascertain developmental
processes and mechanisms underlying morphogenesis of anatomically
identified olfactory glomeruli with known functional specificity. This
research promises to add significantly to understanding of cell-cell
interactions in the development of functionally specialized, modular
neuropil in the central nervous system and thus to fuel progress toward
improved understanding and treatment of developmental disorders of sensory
systems.
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
CFDA Code
DUNS Number
806345617
UEI
ED44Y3W6P7B9
Project Start Date
01-July-1998
Project End Date
30-June-1999
Budget Start Date
01-October-1997
Budget End Date
30-September-1998
Project Funding Information for 1998
Total Funding
$114,871
Direct Costs
Indirect Costs
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
1998
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
$114,871
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5P01NS028495-09 0001
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Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
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