Abstract

A large variety of behaviors that are essential for animal survival depend on the perception and processing of surrounding smells present in the natural environment. In particular, food-search behavior, which is conditioned by hunger, is directly driven by the perception of odors associated with food, and feeding status modulates olfactory sensitivity. The orexinergic hypothalamic peptide orexin A (OXA), one of the central and peripheral hormones that triggers food intake, has been shown to increase olfactory sensitivity in various experimental conditions including the conditioned odor aversion learning paradigm (COA). COA is an associative task that corresponds to the association between an olfactory conditioned stimulus (CS) and a delayed gastric malaise. Previous studies have shown that this association is formed only if the delay separating the CS presentation from the malaise is short, suggesting that the memory trace of the odor is relatively unstable. To test the selectivity of the OXA system in olfactory sensitivity, a recent study compared the effects of fasting and of central infusion of OXA during the acquisition of COA. Results showed that the increased olfactory sensitivity induced by fasting and by OXA infusion was accompanied by enhanced COA learning performances. In reference to the duration of action of OXA, the present work details the results obtained during the successive COA extinction tests and suggests a hypothesis concerning the role of the OXA component of fasting on the memory processes underlying CS-malaise association during COA. Moreover, referring to previous data in the literature we suggest a functional circuit model where fasting modulates olfactory memory processes through direct and/or indirect activation of particular OXA brain targets including the olfactory bulb, the locus coeruleus (LC) and the amygdala.

Highlights

  • A large variety of behaviors that are essential for animal survival depend on the sensory perception and processing of odors present in the natural environment

  • Groups orexin A (OXA) and artificial CSF were constituted by animals implanted in the lateral ventricle that were microinfused with OXA (10 μg dissolved in 3 μl of sterile CSF, Sigma) or aCSF (3 μl, Harvard Apparatus) 20 min before the acquisition of the conditioned odor aversion learning paradigm (COA) task

  • Between-group analysis confirmed that the OXA and Fasted groups developed a stronger COA that extinguished more slowly than the aCSF group

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Summary

Introduction

A large variety of behaviors that are essential for animal survival depend on the sensory perception and processing of odors present in the natural environment. Food-search behavior, which is conditioned by hunger, is directly driven by the perception of odors associated with food (Le Magnen, 1959) and several studies have demonstrated that odor processing is influenced by the nutritional status of the animal. The crucial role of the basal hypothalamus, and in particular of orexigenic (appetite-stimulating) and anorexigenic (appetiteinhibiting) neurochemicals, in appetite regulation and energy balance has long been established (see Rodgers et al, 2002 for review). Among the multitude of neurochemicals found in the hypothalamus, the most recently discovered orexigenic peptides (orexin A, OXA and orexin B, OXB) have been shown to be strongly involved in the regulation of feeding and energy metabolism (see Willie et al, 2001 for review) and the OXA has been involved in olfactory sensitivity. Our team showed that intracerebroventricular (icv) infusion of OXA in rat increased olfactory detection performance in the same way as Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience www.frontiersin.org

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