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The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

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The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems. I. Gustatory and Visceral Afferent Systems. Overview of the systems. Cranial nerve branches and sensory organs for taste and visceral afferent system. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory

Systems

Page 2: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

I. Gustatory and Visceral Afferent Systems

A. Overview of the systems.

B. Cranial nerve branches and sensory organs for taste and visceral afferent system.

C. Solitary nuclear complex and its projections for gustatory system and visceral afferents.

D. Thalamic projections for gustatory system: parvocellular portion of the VPM.

E. 1° cortical gustatory areas: Frontal operculum and the anterior insular cortex.

Page 3: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

II. Olfactory System

A. Overview and special features of this system – direct projection with thalamic relay; - 1° cortex = allocortex.

B. 1° olfactory neurons in nasal mucosa.

C. Olfactory bulb.

D. 1° olfactory cortex constitutes 5 different brain areas:1. Anterior olfactory nucleus.

2. Amygdala.

3. Olfactory tubercle.

4. Piriform/periamygdaloid cortices.

5. Entorhinal cortex.

Page 4: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Olfaction

• Specialized neurons present in the olfactory epithelium in the nose.

• They project cilia into a mucus layer. The cilia are able to bind to odorant molecules the binding triggers an AP which is transmitted to the olfactory area of the olfactory bulb olfactory cortex (lower frontal area and limbic system of the brain

• Each olfactory receptor is specialized for 1 odorant molecule

Page 5: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

I. Gustatory and Visceral Afferent Systems

A. Overview of the systems.

Taste is mediated by 3 different cranial nerves: facial (VII), glossapharyngeal (IX), and vagus (X).

Visceral afferent system uses largely IX and X.

Page 6: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

In the gustatory system, receptorcells (“taste buds”) are separatefrom the 1° afferent fibres.

This is an e.g. where the job of transducing the info and transmitting it are done by separatecells.

1° afferent fibres from both systemscollect in the solitary tract in therostral medulla, and then terminatein the solitary nucleus.

The gustatory portion of this nucleusis more rostral than the cardiorespiratoryportion.

Page 7: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Taste

• Receptors for taste are modified epithelial cell present in taste buds located on the tongue, roof of the mouth and pharynx

Page 8: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Ascending Gustatory Pathway•Gustatory fibres ascend ipsilaterally in the centraltegmental tract

Medial portion of VPN

1° cortex (frontal operculumand anterior insular cortex) – Mediates the discriminativeaspects of taste.

Page 9: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

• Four primary types of taste receptors : sour, salt, sweet and bitter (and a new one: umami)

• The binding of the receptor to a taste molecule triggers the entry of calcium in the cell release of neurotransmitter in a synapse with a neuron

Page 10: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Taste receptors

Page 11: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Neural pathway

• Taste impulses travel through nerves VII, IX and X to a gustatory nucleus in the medulla oblongata (cross over) thalamus gustatory cortex located in the parietal lobe in the mouth area.

Page 12: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Ascending VisceralAfferent System

Ascending projections synapsein the parabrachial nucleus of the pons

VPM

Amygdala and hypothalamus –For regulating visceral and foodintake.

Page 13: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

I. Gustatory and Visceral Afferent Systems

B. Cranial nerve branches and sensory organs.

1. Taste (gustatory system)

Taste buds contain the receptor cells which transduce soluble chemical stimuli into a neural signal.

These have synaptic contact with 1° afferent fibres.

On tongue: clustered in papillae (Fig. 9-2B):

anterior 2/3 branch of VII (facial)

posterior 1/3 IX (glossopharyngeal)

Also

palate VII

epiglottis, larynx X

pharynx IX

Page 14: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Papillae

Page 15: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

I. Gustatory and Visceral Afferent Systems

B. Cranial nerve branches and sensory organs.

2. Visceral afferents

IX, X also have branches which serve arterial bp receptors in carotid sinus, aortic arch.

X respiratory structures, GIT (rostral to splenic flexture) – pseudounipolar neurons, much like 1° afferents for somatic sensory system.

Both systems come together in the ganglion located just outside the brainstem (Fig. 9-3).

Page 16: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Fig. 9-3:VII geniculateganglion;IX, X inferior ganglion(or petrosal, nodose) rostral medulla

Page 17: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

C. Solitary Nuclear Complex1.Gustatory separation within

bs solitary tract surrounding solitary nucleus(anterior portion) ipsilateralcentral tegmented tract thalamus.2. Cardiorespiratory nucleus (caudal portion of solitary complex.Receives a variety of inputs fromCV, respiratory, and GIT systems“internal state”

descending (controls HR, bp, gut motility, secretions, etc.)

Ascending parabrachialn. within pons amy,hypo {integrates visceralinfo with autonomic functions}

Page 18: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

D. Ventral medial (parvocellular) nucleus of thalamus

Page 19: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

E. Primary Gustatory Cortex (Fig. 9-6)

Frontal operculum and anterior insular cortex:Modalities of touch andtaste from the tongueare represented separately

Page 20: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

II. Olfactory System

A. Overview + special features of nerve = cranial nerve I:

1. Info goes to 1° cortex with thalamic relay.

2. 1° olfactory cortex = phylogenetically older allocortex.

3. Projections to 5 separate cortical regions, rather than to just 1 (all allocortex) (Fig. 9-7, below):

- less developed in humans, compared to some other species.

- less precise topographic organization than other systems we have reviewed.

Page 21: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

II. Olfactory System

B. 1° olfactory neurons in nasal mucosa (olfactory mucosa) in superior nasal concha contains bipolar neurons which are chemosensitive small fasciculus cribiform plate of ethmoid bone olfactory nerve)

-Note risk of anosmia with head trauma (shearing of these fibres.

Receptor cells have olfactory cilia (like many other sensory systems), containing the machinery for receiving chemical stimuli (multiple types of transmembrane receptors recognize molecular characteristics of oderants).

Page 22: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Fig. 9-9

Page 23: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

II. Olfactory System

C. Olfactory bulb – 1st CNS relay for olfactory input: - on ventral surface of brain

- neurons organized into discrete layers

Fig. 9-7

Page 24: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Fig. 9-8. Input to neurons with discrete morphological units, calledGlomeruli (surrounded by glial sheath) – limits the spread of neurotransmitters, neurons, mitral and tufted cells (olfactory tract)

Other neurons receiving inputs: periglomular cells (input directly fromolfactory nerve) and granule cells (receives excitatory input frommitral cells). Both of these cells are inhibitory interneurons, providingfeedback.

Page 25: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

II. Olfactory System

Projections (Fig. 9-9):

Olfactory tract bifurcates into lateral and medial olfactory striae.

Axons from other brain regions projecting to olfactory bulb synapse with the medial.

Axons from the olfactory bulb itself lateral.

One 1° projection (cortical region) is seen directly caudal to these on basal forebrain: olfactory tubercle (location in a region called the anterior perforated substance)

Page 26: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

D. Primary olfactory cortical areas(Fig. 9-7)

Most areas are alocortex (more specifically, 3-layered paleocortex – archicortex associated with hippocampus)

Page 27: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

D. Primary olfactory cortical areas

1. Anterior olfactory nucleus – modulates info processing in the olfactory bulb.

2. Amygdala – in ant temporal lobe for self-regulation of various behaviors (e.g., feeding (endocrine), reproductive behaviors), via projection to hypothalamus.

3. Olfactory tubercle – part of basal forebrain projections to and from olfactory bulb – play a role in regulating emotion.

4. Piriform + periamygdaloid cortices – ant temporal lobe (shaped like a pear): olfactory perception as in:

- input in internal processing of odors.

- projects to frontal neocortical areas for olfactory discrimination (in part, through thalamus).

5. Rostral entorhinal cortex – on parahippocampal gyrus.

- projects to hippocampus

- modulates the association of odors with long-term memories.

Page 28: The Chemical Senses: Gustatory, Visceral Afferents and Olfactory Systems

Fig. 9-11