| Literature DB >> 24137552 |
Markus Knaden1, Bill S Hansson.
Abstract
Computational techniques developed to predict if odorants will interact with receptors in the olfactory system have achieved a success rate of 70%.Entities:
Keywords: D. melanogaster; Odorant receptors; antenna; cheminformatics; electrophysiology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24137552 PMCID: PMC3796312 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.01605
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140
Figure 1.Predicting odorant-receptor interactions.
Boyle et al. performed a meta-analysis of 250 odorants and 51 receptors and developed an algorithm (based on some 3,224 physical and chemical properties of the odorants) to predict whether a given odorant will interact with a given receptor. This algorithm was then used to ‘mine’ a library of 240,000 compounds and identify ligands (blue line) and non-ligands (red line) for nine receptors. Experiments were performed with 141 compounds (11–23 per receptor): 71% of the compounds that were predicted to be ligands were found to interact with the relevant receptor, and less than 10% of the compounds that were predicted to be non-ligands were found to interact. The illustration shows an insect sensillum housing two olfactory receptor neurons (one pale green, the other dark green), each with a cell body and a nucleus, and a dendrite that extends into the tip of the sensillum. The tip is filled with a fluid called the sensillum lymph (pale brown) that is excreted by trichogen cells (dark brown). The expanded detail shows the neuronal response to a ligand as measured in the single sensillum recordings performed by Boyle et al.