Imaging techniques such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) have previously revealed which regions of the human brain are involved in olfactory perception. However, these methods do not allow the sense of smell to be investigated at the fundamental level of individual nerve cells. "Therefore, our understanding of odor processing at the cellular level is mainly based on animal studies, and it has not been clear to what extent these results can be transferred to humans," says co-corresponding author Prof. Florian Mormann from the Department of Epileptology at the UKB, who is also a member of the Transdisciplinary Research Area (TRA) "Life & Health" at the University of Bonn.
Nerve cells in the brain identify odors
Prof. Mormann's research group has now succeeded for the first time in recording the activity of individual nerve cells during smelling. This was only possible because the researchers worked together with patients from the Clinic for Epileptology at the UKB, one of the largest epilepsy centers in Europe, who had electrodes implanted in their brains for diagnostic purposes. They were presented with both pleasant and unpleasant scents, such as old fish. "We discovered that individual nerve cells in the human brain react to odors. Based on their activity, we were able to precisely predict which scent was being smelled," says first author Marcel Kehl, a doctoral student at the University of Bonn in Prof. Mormann's working group at the UKB. The measurements showed that different brain regions such as the primary olfactory cortex, anatomically known as the piriform cortex, and also certain areas of the medial temporal lobe, specifically the amygdala, the hippocampus and the entorhinal cortex, are involved in specific tasks. While the activity of nerve cells in the olfactory cortex most accurately predicted which scent was smelled, neuronal activity in the hippocampus was able to predict whether scents were correctly identified. Only nerve cells in the amygdala, a region involved in emotional processing, reacted differently depending on whether a scent was perceived as pleasant or unpleasant.
Nerve cells react to the smell, image and name of the banana
In a next step, the researchers investigated the connection between the perception of scents and images. To do this, they presented the participants in the Bonn study with the matching images for each odor, for example the scent and later a photo of a banana, and examined the reaction of the neurons. Surprisingly, nerve cells in the primary olfactory cortex responded not only to scents, but also to images. "This suggests that the task of the human olfactory cortex goes far beyond the pure perception of odors," says co-corresponding author Prof. Marc Spehr from the Institute of Biology II at RWTH Aachen University.
The researchers discovered individual nerve cells that reacted specifically to the smell, the image and the written word of - for example - the banana. This discovery indicates that semantic information are processed early on in human olfactory processing. The results not only confirm decades of animal studies, but also show how different brain regions are involved in specific human odor processing functions. "This is an important contribution on the way to decoding the human olfactory code," says Prof. Mormann. "Further research in this area is necessary in order to one day develop olfactory aids that we can use in everyday life as naturally as glasses or hearing aids."