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Wiring Specificity of Molecularly Distinct Interneurons in the Mouse Olfactory Bulb

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Abstract:
In the mouse olfactory bulb glomerular layer, computations are largely mediated by a set of interneurons, known as the periglomerular cells (PGCs). I hypothesized that PGC subtypes exhibit differences in synaptic connectivity with mitral (MCs) and tufted cells (TCs), and therefore, have functionally-distinct roles in odor processing. Through a correlative electron microscopy (EM) reconstruction of a genetically-identified glomerulus, I investigated the differences in synaptic connectivity between neurochemically-distinct PGC subtypes and projection neurons. My aim was to explain functional differences of olfactory projection neurons by the intraglomerular connectivity. I combined cellular-resolution protein expression of neuronal cell types with synaptic connectivity and physiology in order to generate network-level computational models. By preserving extracellular space in acutely fixed sections, I developed a permeabilization-free immunohistochemistry protocol compatible with EM, which permits deep antibody penetration and preserves ultrastructure. This approach allows for the correlation of morphological and physiological properties of neurons through a dense reconstruction of the synaptic connectivity. To investigate the PGC-subtype specific involvement in olfactory bulb computations, I generated a rate-based computational model using the measured synaptic connectivity. I have demonstrated that a subset of PGCs selectively inhibits MCs and allows for differences in projection neuron phase preference. The connectivity-based model also predicts the mechanism underlying MC odor concentration encoding. This correlative glomerular layer reconstruction and the subsequent computational modeling reveals previously unidentified wiring specificity underlying OB computations.
Notes:
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Brown University, 2020

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Citation

Fulton, Kara Ann, "Wiring Specificity of Molecularly Distinct Interneurons in the Mouse Olfactory Bulb" (2020). Neuroscience Theses and Dissertations. Brown Digital Repository. Brown University Library. https://repository.library.brown.edu/studio/item/bdr:8fr9f6ru/

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