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      Sensing odorants and pheromones with chemosensory receptors.

      1 ,
      Annual review of physiology
      Annual Reviews

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          Abstract

          Olfaction is a critical sensory modality that allows living things to acquire chemical information from the external world. The olfactory system processes two major classes of stimuli: (a) general odorants, small molecules derived from food or the environment that signal the presence of food, fire, or predators, and (b) pheromones, molecules released from individuals of the same species that convey social or sexual cues. Chemosensory receptors are broadly classified, by the ligands that activate them, into odorant or pheromone receptors. Peripheral sensory neurons expressing either odorant or pheromone receptors send signals to separate odor- and pheromone-processing centers in the brain to elicit distinct behavioral and neuroendocrinological outputs. General odorants activate receptors in a combinatorial fashion, whereas pheromones activate narrowly tuned receptors that activate sexually dimorphic neural circuits in the brain. We review recent progress on chemosensory receptor structure, function, and circuitry in vertebrates and invertebrates from the point of view of the molecular biology and physiology of these sensory systems.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Annu Rev Physiol
          Annual review of physiology
          Annual Reviews
          1545-1585
          0066-4278
          2009
          : 71
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Integrated Biosciences, The University of Tokyo, Chiba, 277-8562 Japan. touhara@k.u-tokyo.ac.jp
          Article
          10.1146/annurev.physiol.010908.163209
          19575682
          40931022-8265-4e05-9127-9b7331996074
          History

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