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1.
To confirm the discrete character of projections of telencephalic olfactory and non-olfactory structures to the amygdaloid complex (AC) in the terrestrial turtle Testudo horsfieldi, a study was performed by the method of anterograde axonal transport of tracers (HRP, BDA). After a massive injection of the tracers into the main and accessory olfactory bulb, a dense accumulation of labeled fibers and terminals was found in ventral part of AC in the neuropil zones of nbam (J) and ncoam and very scanty—in nmam and ncam. After a massive injection of the tracers into non-olfactory telencephalic structures including dorsal cortex, pallidal enlargement, and ADVR, a very dense terminal field was observed in the dorsal AC part and a less dense one, with predominance of labeled fibers, in its ventral part. Local administration of the tracers separately into the dorsolateral (visual area) and the ventromedial (auditory-somatic area) parts of the ADVR allowed revealing discrete projections, respectively, to the laterocentral and mediocentral areas of the dorsal AC part with a relative overlapping in the central AC area. In all experiments, retrogradely labeled neurons in AC were also observed in zones of the corresponding bulbar and rostrotelencephalic projections. Thus, it has been shown that in the turtle AC there exist not only separation of direct olfactory and non-olfactory projections, but also discrete projections of different sensory areas of ADVR. Reciprocity of these connections is also confirmed. Organization of afferent olfactory and non-olfactory telencephalic connections in AC is similar in reptiles and in mammals.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Central projections of the nervus terminalis (n.t.) in the goldfish were investigated using cobalt- and horseradish peroxidase-tracing techniques. Single n.t. fibers were identified after unilateral application of cobalt chloride-lysine to the rostral olfactory bulb. The central course and branching patterns of individual n.t. fibers were studied in serial sections. Eight types of n.t. fibers are differentiated according to pathways and projection patterns. Projection areas of the n.t. include the contralateral olfactory bulb, the ipsilateral periventricular preoptic nucleus, both retinae, the caudal zone of the periventricular hypothalamus bilaterally, and the rostral optic tectum bilaterally. N.t. fibers cross to contralateral targets in the anterior commissure, the optic chiasma, the horizontal commissure, the posterior commissure, and possibly the habenular commissure. We propose criteria that differentiate central n.t. fibers from those of the classical secondary olfactory projections. Branching patterns of eight n.t. fiber types are described. Mesencephalic projections of the n.t. and of secondary olfactory fibers are compared and discussed with regard to prior reports on the olfactory system of teleosts. Further fiber types for which the association with the n.t. could not be established with certainty were traced to the torus longitudinalis, the torus semicircularis, and to the superior reticular nucleus on the ipsilateral side.  相似文献   

3.
The distribution of proopiomelanocortin (POMC)-immunoreactive neurons was examined in the forebrains of nine sexually mature female pigs by indirect biotin-avidin horseradish peroxidase immunocytochemistry. Primary antiserum against ovine beta-endorphin (Bioflex #BF-EP-3-1) yielded positive staining of neuronal perikarya and processes. Adjacent control sections treated either with primary antiserum preabsorbed with beta-endorphin or substituted with normal rabbit serum lacked specific staining. POMC-immunoreactive cells were located in the anterior and intermediate lobe of the pituitary gland. POMC-immunoreactive perikarya were located in the arcuate nucleus and periarcuate area. The pituitary stalk/median eminence contained sparsely distributed POMC-immunoreactive fibers, which were confined to the zona interna. POMC-immunoreactive fibers were located in the arcuate nucleus and extended rostrally from the arcuate nucleus into the telencephalon coursing adjacent to the wall of the third ventricle as well as through the anterior hypothalamus, suprachiasmatic, supraoptic nuclei and preoptic areas to the nucleus accumbens, diagonal band of Broca, olfactory tubercle, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis and the ventro-lateral aspect of the septum. Caudal projections extended along the wall of the third ventricle to the level of the mammillary bodies and also coursed dorsally, passing through the periventricular, paraventricular, and dorsal medial nuclei of the hypothalamus to the midline thalamic nuclei and habenular nucleus. Lateral projections extended from the arcuate nucleus along the dorsal aspect of the optic tract and terminated in the amygdaloid complex. The distribution of POMC-immunoreactive perikarya and fibers is similar to that of the luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) fiber network. Therefore the opportunities exist, anatomically, for interactions between the POMC and the LHRH systems.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Subsequent to the injection of horseradish peroxidase into the parietal eye of adult Lacerta sicula, the course of the parietal nerve and its projections were determined.The parietal nerve enters the left habenular ganglion where it branches into a medial and a lateral route. Some nerve fibers decussate within the habenular commissure. Whereas this pathway exhibits a striking asymmetry at the level of the habenular ganglia, its projections to the dorsolateral nucleus of the thalamus, the periventricular hypothalamic area, the preoptic hypothalamic and telencephalic regions, and the pretectal area are arranged in a strictly symmetric manner. A possible innervation of tegmental areas could not be proven due to the presence of endogenous peroxidase within these regions. No parietal nerve fibers were observed in the optic tectum.In a few animals investigated, scattered labeled perikarya were located in the periventricular hypothalamic gray indicating a parietopetal innervation in Lacerta sicula. The injection of horseradish peroxidase into one of the lateral eyes revealed terminal areas of the optic nerve within the preoptic region, and the thalamic and pretectal nuclei, displaying partial overlapping with the projections of the parietal nerve to these areas.From the present investigation further evidence is obtained that the pineal complex of lower vertebrates is a component of the photoneuroendocrine system. Particular emphasis is placed upon the nervous connections between the parietal eye and the hypothalamus, described for the first time in the present study.Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Grant Ko 758/1)In partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Dr. med., Faculty of Medicine, Justus Liebig University of Giessen  相似文献   

5.
Summary Central connections of the olfactory bulb of Polypterus palmas were studied with the use of horseradish peroxidase and cobalt-tracing techniques. The olfactory bulb projects to subpallial and palliai areas in the ipsilateral telencephalon; a projection to the contralateral subpallium is noted via the habenular commissure. A further target of secondary olfactory fibers is a caudal olfactory projection area in the ipsilateral hypothalamus. No labeling was seen in the anterior commissure and in the contralateral olfactory bulb. The medial and the lateral pallium receive secondary olfactory fibers in distinct areas. Neurons projecting to the bulb are found in the ipsilateral subpallium, mainly in one dorsal longitudinal nucleus. The main connection with the tel- and diencephalon is mediated via the medial olfactory tract. This tract also contains fibers to the contralateral telencephalon, and to the hypothalamus. The smaller lateral olfactory tract mediates fibers to the lateral pallium. The organization of pathways of secondary olfactory fibers in the telencephalon is described. The present findings are compared to those obtained in species possessing an inverted forebrain.This investigation was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft to DLM  相似文献   

6.
Summary Central pathways of the nervus terminalis (n.t.) in the bichir, Polypterus palmas, were studied with the use of tracing techniques. After application of horseradish peroxidase to the unilateral olfactory mucosa labeled n.t. fibers were traced in seven distinct bundles through the subpallium. Projection areas are found in the precommissural ventral nucleus of the area ventralis telencephali ipsilaterally, the anterior commissure and commissural parts of the periventricular preoptic nucleus bilaterally; few n.t.-fibers cross via the anterior commissure to the contralateral side; no fibers were observed to turn rostrally to the contralateral olfactory bulb. Major targets of the n.t. include a restricted ventral part of the periventricular preoptic nucleus at the level of the optic chiasma bilaterally, and the periventricular nuclei located between the thalamic nuclei and the hypothalamus bilaterally. N.t. fibers continue their course through the ipsilateral hypothalamus and are traced as far as the mesencephalic tegmentum ipsilaterally. N.t. terminations are found consistently within the boundaries of periventricular cell nuclei, suggesting axosomatic synaptic contacts. We propose a differentiation of the n.t. ganglion cells into a distal (mucosal) and proximal (bulbar) type regarding the peripheral cell processes. Our findings are compared with those of other reports on the n.t. system.  相似文献   

7.
The olfactory mucosa of the zebrafish consists of 3 morphological types of olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs): ciliated, microvillous, and crypt cells. Previous studies in the zebrafish have revealed differential projections of ciliated and microvillous ORNs, which project to different glomerular fields. However, the bulbar targets of zebrafish crypt cells were not identified. Here, we analyze the relationship between crypt cells of the olfactory epithelium and dorsal glomerular fields of the zebrafish olfactory bulbs, as wells as the connections between these bulbar regions and forebrain regions. For this purpose, a lipophilic carbocyanine tracer (DiI) was used in fixed tissue. Application of DiI to the dorsomedial glomerular field mainly labeled crypt cells in the zebrafish olfactory epithelium. By contrast, application of DiI to the dorsolateral glomerular fields mainly labeled bipolar ORNs and only occasionally crypt cells. Bulbar efferent cells (mitral cells) contacting these dorsal glomerular fields project to different telencephalic areas, with the posterior zone of the dorsal telencephalic area (Dp) as the common target. However, dorsomedial and dorsolateral glomerular fields projected differentially to the ventral telencephalon, the former projecting to the ventrolateral supracommissural region. Retrograde labeling from the ventrolateral supracommissural region revealed mitral cells associated with 2 large glomeruli in the bulbar dorsomedial region, which putatively receives inputs from the crypt cells, indicating the existence of a crypt cell olfactory subsystem with separate projections, in the zebrafish. The comparative significance of the secondary olfactory pathways of zebrafish that convey information from crypt cells is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The cytoarchitectonics of the telencephalon of the channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus, are described as a basis for experimental analysis of telencephalic afferents and efferents. The olfactory bulb comprises: (1) an outer layer of olfactory nerve fibers, (2) a glomerular layer, (3) an external cell layer, (4) an inner fiber layer, and (5) an internal cell layer. The telencephalic hemispheres comprise the areas ventralis and dorsalis telencephali. The area ventralis consists of: (1) a precommissural, periventricular zone including nucleus 'nother (Vn), the ventral nucleus (Vv), and the dorsal nucleus (Vd); (2) a precommissural, migrated zone of central (Vc) and lateral (VI) nuclei; (3) a supracommissural nucleus (Vs); (4) a caudal commissural zone of postcommissural (Vp) and intermediate (Vi) nuclei; and (5) a preoptic area (PP). The area dorsalis comprises: (1) medial (DM), (2) dorsal (Dd), (3) lateral [DL, containing dorsal (DLd), ventral (DLv), and posterior (DLp) regions], (4) posterior (DP), and (5) central (DC-1, -2, -3) areas. Nucleus taeniae (NT) is transitional between areas dorsalis and ventralis.  相似文献   

9.
The distribution of immunoreactivity for histamine was studied in the brain of the urodele Triturus carnifex using the indirect immunofluorescence method. Histamine-immunoreactive cell bodies were localized in the caudal hypothalamus within the dorsolateral walls of the infundibular recesses. These immunoreactive cell bodies were pear-shaped, bipolar and frequently of the cerebrospinal-fluid-contacting type. Histaminergic nerve fibers were detected in almost all parts of the brain. Dense innervation was seen in the telencephalic medial pallium and ventral striatum, the neuropil of the preoptic area, the septum, the paraventricular organ, the posterior commissure, the caudal hypothalamus, the ventral and lateral mesencephalic tegmentum. Medium density innervation was observed in the lateral mesencephalic tegmentum and optic tectum. Poor innervation was present in the telencephalic dorsal pallium and in the central gray of the medulla oblongata. Few fibers occurred in the olfactory bulbs and in the telencephalic lateral pallium. Double immunofluorescence staining, using an antibody against tyrosine hydroxylase, showed that histamine-immunostained somata and those containing tyrosine-hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity were co-distributed in the tuberal hypothalamus. No co-occurrence of histamine-like and tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunostaining was seen in the same neuron. The pattern of histamine-immunoreactive neurons in the newt was similar to that described in other vertebrates. Our observations, carried out on the apparently simplified brain of the newt confirm that the basic histaminergic system is well conserved throughout vertebrates.  相似文献   

10.
Price  Joseph L. 《Chemical senses》1985,10(2):239-258
The extrinsic projections from the primary olfactory cortexto other areas of the forebrain in the rat are described, onthe basis of experiments using anterograde and retrograde axonaltracers, as well as electrophysiological recording of unit activity.The areas shown to receive olfactory inputs are (i) in the neocortex:the lateral and ventrolateral orbital areas, and the ventralagranular insular area, all of which are in the dorsal bankof the rhinal sulcus; (ii) in the thalamus: the central segmentof the mediodorsal nucleus and the ventral part of the submedicalnucleus; (iii) in the hypothalamus: the lateral hypothalamicarea, especially its caudal half, and probably the nucleus gemiru,with some input also to more medial hypothalamic structures;(iv) the hippocampus and dentate gyrus; and (v) the deep nucleiof the amygdala. Anterograde and retrograde axonal tracing experimentshave shown that all of these areas receive fibers from cellsin or closely related to the primary olfactory cortex, and cellsin all of them except the nucleus gemini and the deep nucleiof the amygdala have been shown to be driven by electrical stimulationof the olfactory bulb.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The terminals of centrifugal fibers to the olfactory bulbs of goldfish were studied by electron microscopy after transection of the medial, lateral or entire olfactory tract. The centrifugal fibers originate in the telencephalic hemisphere, pass through both the medial and the lateral olfactory tract, and form synaptic contacts with dendrites in the granule cell layer.  相似文献   

12.
Extra-bulbar primary olfactory projection in teleost fishes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Immunohistochemical investigations with anti-substance P antiserum demonstrate the existence of an extensive extrabulbar primary olfactory projection in several gymnotid teleost fish. This projection, never described before, originates in particular primary olfactory bundles which enter with the olfactory nerve into the olfactory bulb. While the bulk of the olfactory fibers end with glomeruli in the glomerular layer of the olfactory bulb, two particular bundles penetrate into the telencephalon and end, without forming glomeruli, in several telencephalic and diencephalic regions. A few fibers run as far as to the hypothalamus. In the light of these findings, the general notion that the primary olfactory projection is limited to the olfactory bulb and forms only glomeruli-like terminals, should be reconsidered.  相似文献   

13.
The distribution of neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive (NPY-IR) perikarya, fibers, and terminals was investigated in the brain of two species of hibernatory ground squirrels, Spermophilus tridecemlineatus and S. richardsonii, by means of immunohistochemistry. In the telencephalic and diencephalic structures studied, distinct patterns of NPY-IR were observed which were essentially identical in male and female animals of both species. No differences in amount or distribution of NPY-IR structures were observed between animals which had been in induced hibernation for several months before sacrifice in March/April and those sacrificed one week after their capture in May. In some brain structures (e.g., the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus), IR cell bodies were observed only after pretreatment with colchicine. NPY-IR perikarya and fibers were found in the cerebral cortex, caudate nucleus-putamen, and dorsal part of the lateral septal nucleus. Dense fiber plexuses were seen in the lateral and medial parts of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. The numbers of IR perikarya observed in the medial part of the nucleus increased following intraventricular colchicine injections. The accumbens nucleus exhibited few IR cells and many fibers. Claustrum and endopiriform nuclei showed a considerable number of stained cells and fibers that increased in number and staining intensity in colchicine-treated ground squirrels. The induseum griseum showed a small band of IR cell bodies and varicose fibers. Bipolar of multipolar IR cells and varicose fibers were found in the basal nucleus of the amygdala. Dense fiber plexuses as well as IR terminals were seen in the median, medial, and lateral preoptic areas of the hypothalamus. Terminals and relatively few fibers were located in the periventricular, paraventricular, and supraoptic nuclei. The anterior, lateral, dorsomedial, and ventromedial hypothalamic nuclei contained relatively large numbers of terminals and fibers. In the suprachiasmatic nuclei, dense terminals were distributed mainly in the ventromedial subdivision. In the median eminence, immunoreactive terminals were concentrated in the external layer, with fibers predominant in the internal layer. NPY-IR perikarya were observed only in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus and only following colchicine treatment. In the epithalamus (superficial part of the pineal gland and habenular nuclei), varicose fibers appeared mainly in perivascular locations (pineal) or as a dense plexus (habenular nuclei). These results from ground squirrels are discussed in comparison to those obtained in other species and with regard to considerations of the physiological role of NPY.  相似文献   

14.
分别注射辣根过氧化物酶(HRP)入大鼠的PVN和BNST,用组织化学的方法在确定注射部位准确的情况下,在PVN、BNST及PFC观察被标记的神经元或轴突末梢,探讨大鼠下丘脑室旁核(PVN)与终纹床核(BNST)及前额叶皮质间(PFC)之间是否存在投射通路;将HRP注射到PVN后,在同侧的BNST见标记的细胞体,在PFC未见标记的细胞体或轴突末梢;将HRP注射到BNST后,在同侧的PVN见标记的轴突末梢,在PFC未见标记的细胞体或轴突末梢。大鼠BNST有神经纤维投射到PVN,PFC与PVN及BNST之间没有直接的或只有极少量的纤维联系,在机体面临威胁性情境时,BNST可能激活HPA轴引发生理和行为反应,PFC是否通过与PVN或BNST的直接或间接的纤维投射实现其调节功能值得关注。  相似文献   

15.
Summary We have investigated the central connections of the classical olfactory system in the weakly electric fish Gnathonemus petersii using HRP and cobalt labelling techniques. The olfactory bulb projects bilaterally via the medial and lateral olfactory tracts to restricted areas of the telencephalon, namely to its rostromedial, lateral and posterior medial parts. The most extensive telencephalic target is the posterior terminal field, which arcs around the lateral forebrain bundle at levels posterior to the anterior commissure. Projections to the contralateral hemisphere cross in the ventral telencephalon rostral to the anterior commissure and via the posterior dorsal part of the anterior commissure; endings are also present within the anterior commissure. Bilateral projections to the preoptic area, to the nucleus posterior tuberis and to an area in the thalamus are apparent. In all cases, contralateral projections are less extensive than those on the side ipsilateral to the injected bulb. A projection via the medial olfactory tract can be followed to the contralateral bulb. Following injections into the olfactory bulb, retrogradely labelled neurons are found in the contralateral bulb and in six telencephalic areas; they are also present in the periventricular diencephalon and in an area lateral to the nucleus posterior tuberis. The present results support the suggestion that a reduction in olfactory input to the telencephalon occurs together with increased telencephalic differentiation in actinopterygian fishes.  相似文献   

16.
A cytoarchitectonic analysis of the telencephalon of the sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax, based on cresyl violet-stained serial transverse sections, is presented. Rostrally, the brain of the sea bass is occupied by sessile olfactory bulbs coupled to telencephalic hemispheres. The olfactory bulbs comprise an olfactory nerve fiber layer, a glomerular layer, an external cellular layer, a secondary olfactory fiber layer, and an internal cellular layer. Large terminal nerve ganglion cells are evident in the caudomedial olfactory bulbs. We recognized 22 distinct telencephalic nuclei which were classified in two main areas, the ventral telencephalon and the dorsal telencephalon. The ventral telencephalon displays four periventricular cell masses: the dorsal, ventral, supracommissural, and postcommissural nuclei; and four migrated populations: the lateral, central, intermediate, and entopeduncular nuclei. In addition, a periventricular cell population resembling the lateral septal organ reported in birds is observed in the ventral telencephalon of the sea bass. The dorsal telencephalon contains 13 nuclei, which can be organized into five major zones: the medial part, dorsal part, lateral part and its ventral, dorsal, and posterior divisions, the central part, and posterior part. Based on histological criteria, two cell masses are recognized in the ventral division of the lateral part of the dorsal telencephalon. The nucleus taenia is found in the caudal area of the dorsal telencephalon, close to the ventral area. This study represents a useful tool for the precise localization of the neuroendocrine territories and for the tracing of the neuronal systems participating in the regulation of reproduction and metabolism in this species.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The distributional pattern of serotonin-containing nerve fibers in the hypothalamus of the monkey (Macaca fuscata) was analyzed with the use of the peroxidaseantiperoxidase method in conjunction with a highly sensitive and specific anti-serotonin serum. The highest concentrations of serotonin-immunoreactive varicose fibers were found in the nucleus praeopticus medialis, nucleus ventromedialis hypothalami, and the complex of mammillary nuclei (nucleus praemamillaris, supramamillaris, mamillaris medialis et lateralis). However, the nucleus suprachiasmaticus, where numerous serotoninergic fibers have been reported to occur in the rat, appeared to be almost devoid of these fibers. The infundibular stalk, and the intermediate and posterior lobes of the pituitary contained considerable numbers of immunoreactive fibers. The present study provides a morphological basis for possible clarification of the influence of serotoninergic projections on various neuroendocrine mechanisms in primates. Furthermore, an attempt was made to clarify the differences and similarities concerning the distributional patterns of serotoninergic nerve fibers within the monkey hypothalamus in contrast to the rat hypothalamus.Supported by grants (No. 56440022, 57214028) from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, Japan  相似文献   

18.
Efferent projections of the lateral septal nucleus (LS) to the preoptic area and the hypothalamus were identified in 20 female guinea pigs after iontophoretic injection of the anterograde axonal tracer Fluoro-Ruby. Tubero-infundibular (TI) neurons of the preoptic area and the hypothalamus were retrogradely labeled after intracardiac injection of Granular Blue or Fluoro-Gold. Magnocellular neurons of the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei were also labeled. The double labeling procedure allowed an estimation of the extent of the direct relationship between LS efferents and TI neurons. Contacts between lateral septal fibers and TI cell bodies were mainly observed at the light-microscopical level in the preoptic area. A group of labeled fibers coursing along the third ventricle established sparse connections with hypothalamic periventricular TI neurons. A few appositions was observed in the infundibular (arcuate) nucleus, suggestive of a monosynaptic regulation of TI neurons by a septo-arcuate tract. Close association with labeled magnocellular neurons was also noted at the edge of the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei. The sparse but direct connections between LS and TI neurons may be involved in the neuroendocrine functions of the LS.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The projections of horseradish peroxidase-filled axons from each quadrant of the retina were studied to determine whether retinal projections of goldfish are topographically organized in diencephalic target nuclei. A distinct topography of the dorsal, nasal, ventral and temporal retina exists in the lateral geniculate nucleus and in the dorsolateral optic nucleus of the thalamus. The projections of retinal quadrants show minimal spatial overlap in each of these nuclei. The suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus is extensively innervated by ventral retinal fibers, whereas the nucleus is sparsely innervated by fibers from the other three retinal quadrants. A rudimentary topography also exists in the pretectum where the dorsal pretectal area receives projections primarily from the ventral retina and the ventral pretectal area receives projections mostly from the dorsal retina. These data show that retinal projections to some diencephalic nuclei are topographically organized.This work was supported by Research Grant EY-01426 to S.C.S.  相似文献   

20.
The OR37 subfamily of odorant receptors (ORs) exists exclusively in mammals. In contrast to ORs in general, they are highly conserved within and across species. These unique features raise the question, whether olfactory information gathered by the OR37 sensory cells is processed in specially designated brain areas. To elucidate the wiring of projection neurons from OR37 glomeruli into higher brain areas, tracing experiments were performed. The application of DiI onto the ventral area of the olfactory bulb, which harbors the OR37 glomeruli, led to the labeling of fibers not only in the typical olfactory cortical regions, but also in the medial amygdala and the hypothalamus. To visualize the projections from a defined OR37 glomerulus more precisely, transgenic mice were studied in which olfactory sensory neurons co-express the receptor subtype OR37C and the transsynaptic tracer wheat germ agglutinin (WGA). WGA became visible not only in the OR37C sensory neurons and the corresponding OR37C glomerulus, but also in cell somata located in the mitral/tufted cell layer adjacent to the OR37C glomerulus, indicating a transfer of WGA onto projection neurons. In the brain, WGA immunoreactivity was not detectable in typical olfactory cortical areas, but instead in distinct areas of the medial amygdala. Detailed mapping revealed that the WGA immunoreactivity was restricted to the posterior-dorsal subnucleus of the medial amygdala. In addition, WGA immunoreactivity was visible in some well-circumscribed areas of the hypothalamus. These results are indicative for a unique connectivity from OR37C sensory cells into higher brain centers.  相似文献   

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