Abstract

Sensory systems are often tasked to analyse complex signals from the environment, separating relevant from irrelevant parts. This process of decomposing signals is challenging when a mixture of signals does not equal the sum of its parts, leading to an unpredictable corruption of signal patterns. In olfaction, nonlinear summation is prevalent at various stages of sensory processing. Here, we investigate how the olfactory system deals with binary mixtures of odours under different brain states by two-photon imaging of olfactory bulb (OB) output neurons. Unlike previous studies using anaesthetised animals, we found that mixture summation is more linear in the early phase of evoked responses in awake, head-fixed mice performing an odour detection task, due to dampened responses. Despite smaller and more variable responses, decoding analyses indicated that the data from behaving mice was well discriminable. Curiously, the time course of decoding accuracy did not correlate strictly with the linearity of summation. Further, a comparison with naïve mice indicated that learning to accurately perform the mixture detection task is not accompanied by more linear mixture summation. Finally, using a simulation, we demonstrate that, while saturating sublinearity tends to degrade the discriminability, the extent of the impairment may depend on other factors, including pattern decorrelation. Altogether, our results demonstrate that the mixture representation in the primary olfactory area is state-dependent, but the analytical perception may not strictly correlate with linearity in summation.

Highlights

  • As animals in nature navigate through their environment in order to find food, mates, and to avoid dangers, their sensory systems are tasked to detect and recognise signals of interest despite a background of interfering signals

  • Using a two-photon microscope, we imaged from the glomerular layer of the olfactory bulb in Tbx21Cre::Ai95D mice, which express the calcium indicator GCaMP6f (Dana et al, 2019) in mitral and tufted (M/T) cells (Haddad et al, 2013)

  • Our result indicates that mixture responses in the olfactory bulb are highly state-dependent and evolve over time (Fig. 6F)

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Summary

Introduction

As animals in nature navigate through their environment in order to find food, mates, and to avoid dangers, their sensory systems are tasked to detect and recognise signals of interest despite a background of interfering signals. This figure-ground segregation is a ubiquitous task for many, if not all, sensory systems. Due to a broad ligand-receptor binding (Araneda et al, 2000; del Mármol et al, 2021; Malnic et al, 1999), each odour molecule may activate a number of olfactory receptor types, leading to combinatorial representations (Malnic et al, 1999). Widespread suppressive interactions are observed in downstream areas, including the piriform cortex (Penker et al., 2020; Stettler and Axel, 2009)

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