| Literature DB >> 25505388 |
Anabel Pérez-Gómez1, Benjamin Stein1, Trese Leinders-Zufall1, Pablo Chamero1.
Abstract
The vomeronasal organ (VNO) is a sensory organ that is found in most terrestrial vertebrates and that is principally implicated in the detection of pheromones. The VNO contains specialized sensory neurons organized in a pseudostratified neuroepithelium that recognize chemical signals involved in initiating innate behavioral responses. In rodents, the VNO neuroepithelium is segregated into two distinct zones, apical and basal. The molecular mechanisms involved in ligand detection by apical and basal VNO sensory neurons differ extensively. These two VNO subsystems express different subfamilies of vomeronasal receptors and signaling molecules, detect distinct chemosignals, and project to separate regions of the accessory olfactory bulb (AOB). The roles that these olfactory subdivisions play in the control of specific olfactory-mediated behaviors are largely unclear. However, analysis of mutant mouse lines for signal transduction components together with identification of defined chemosensory ligands has revealed a fundamental role of the basal part of the mouse VNO in mediating a wide range of instinctive behaviors, such as aggression, predator avoidance, and sexual attraction. Here we will compare the divergent functions and synergies between the olfactory subsystems and consider new insights in how higher neural circuits are defined for the initiation of instinctive behaviors.Entities:
Keywords: Gαo signaling; V2R; behavior; olfaction; peptides; pheromone; vomeronasal organ
Year: 2014 PMID: 25505388 PMCID: PMC4244706 DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2014.00135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroanat ISSN: 1662-5129 Impact factor: 3.856
Figure 1The mouse vomeronasal organ (VNO) and established receptors located in the epithelium. (A) Schematic coronal section of the VNO. AL, apical layer of the sensory epithelium (blue); BL, basal layer (yellow/orange); BV, blood vessel; CT, cavernous tissue; H2Mv+, sensory epithelium cells lacking one of the nine known H2-Mv genes; H2Mv−, sensory neurons not expressing any of the nine H2-Mv genes; L, lumen. (B) Schematic drawing of sensory neurons showing their location in the basal sensory epithelium with their proposed ligands. (C) Schematic picture of the proposed receptors expressed in the basal part of the VNO sensory epithelium.
List of signaling molecules with proposed receptors located in the basal sensory epithelium.
| Chemosignal | Source | Receptor | Gαo need | Behavioral effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ESP1 | Male mouse tears | V2Rp5 (Vmn2r116) | ✔ | -Lordosis | Kimoto et al. ( |
| ESP5 | Mouse tears | V2Rp1 (Vmn2r112), V2Rp2 (Vmn2r111) | ? | ? | Kimoto et al. ( |
| ESP6 | Mouse tears | V2Rp1 (Vmn2r112) | ? | ? | Kimoto et al. ( |
| ESP22 | Juvenile mouse tears | ? | ? | -Inhibition of male sexual behavior | Ferrero et al. ( |
| HMW/MUPs | Mouse urine | ? | ✔ | -Male-male aggression | Chamero et al. ( |
| -Maternal aggression | Martín-Sánchez et al. ( | ||||
| ? | ✔ | -Preference in females | Hurst et al. ( | ||
| -Urine countermarking behavior | Kaur et al. ( | ||||
| -Puberty acceleration | Mucignat-Caretta et al. ( | ||||
| -Ovulation | Morè ( | ||||
| MUP3 | ? | ✔ | -Male-male aggression | Kaur et al. ( | |
| MUP20 | ? | ✔ | -Attraction in females | Roberts et al. ( | |
| LMW | Mouse urine | ? | * | -Male-male aggression | Chamero et al. ( |
| MHC class I peptides | Mouse urine | V2R1b (Vmn2r26) V2Rf2 (Vmn2r81) | ✔ | -Bruce effect | Leinders-Zufall et al. ( |
| N-formylated peptides | Bacteria or mitochondria | Fpr-rs1, V2Rf2 (Vmn2r81) | ✔ | ? | Liberles et al. ( |
✔: Gαo expression needed to detect the chemosignal; *: partial detection by both apical and basal layers; ?: not determined; Brackets: alternative receptor names.