Chemical Senses Vol. 30 No. suppl 1 © Oxford University
Press 2005; all rights reserved
Functional Expression of Mammalian Odorant Receptors
Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Duke University Medical Center, Research Dr., Durham, NC 27710, USA
Correspondence to be sent to: Hiroaki Matsunami, e-mail: matsu004{at}mc.duke.edu
Key words: odorant, olfactory, reception
The olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) in the olfactory epithelium of the nose
detect and discriminate a large number of volatile environmental chemicals. This ability
is essential for animals to find prey, food, mates, predators and toxic compounds. In
OSNs, odorant receptor (OR) proteins, members of the G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR)
superfamily, are concentrated at the membrane of the cilia at the tip of the dendrite. OR
proteins are also present at axon terminals, where they may have roles in target
recognition of developing olfactory axons (Mombaerts et al., 1996
;
Wang et al., 1998
;
Barnea et al., 2004
;
Feinstein et al., 2004
). The
great diversity of existing odorant molecules demands a large number of different ORs to
allow differential discrimination. Accordingly, rodents have >1000 different ORs and
humans have ~350 (Buck and Axel,
1991
;
Axel, 1995
;
Mombaerts, 1999
;
Firestein, 2001
;
Young et al., 2002
;
Zhang and Firestein, 2002
).
Interestingly, expression of an OR is restricted to that of only one allele per olfactory
neuron (Malnic et al.,
1999
;
Serizawa et al., 2003
;
Lewcock and Reed, 2004
).
Although mammalian ORs were identified over 13 years ago, the chemical selectivity of
individual ORs is largely unknown, mainly because it has been difficult to express ORs on
the surface of heterologous cells to assay their ligand-binding specificity. It is
thought that OR proteins are retained in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (McClintock et al., 1997
;
Lu et al., 2003
). Despite
these difficulties, various methods to match ORs with odorants have been proposed and
tested (reviewed in
Mombaerts, 2004
).
One method to aid in heterologous cell surface targeting is to add the N-terminal
amino acids of rhodopsin or a foreign signal peptide to the N-terminus of the OR
(Krautwurst et al., 1998
;
Hatt et al., 1999
). ODR-4,
which is required for proper localization of chemosensory receptors in Caenorhabditis
elegans, has a small effect on facilitating cell-surface expression of one rat OR,
but not another OR (Gimelbrant et al.,
2001
). Thus, for most ORs, this and other modifications do not seem to
promote cell-surface expression.
Accordingly, methods using homologous cells were developed by various groups, in
which OSNs or a cell line derived from OSNs were used (Murrell and Hunter, 1999
;
Touhara et al., 1999
;
Zhao et al., 1998
;
Gimelbrant et al., 2001
).
Zhao et al. (1998
) used
adenovirus as a vector to express ORs in OSNs in the nose. Screening of putative ligands
and subsequent activation of foreign ORs was measured either by electroolfactogram or
calcium imaging of single cells. They found that a rat receptor, I7, was activated by a
few chemicals including octanal. In a different homologous assay system, a gene targeting
protocol was used to create mice in which OSNs that express a specific OR are labeled by
green fluorescent protein (GFP). Dissociated GFP-labeled OSNs were loaded with calcium
indicator so that calcium imaging could be used to measure the activation of OSNs upon
ligand exposure (Bozza et al.,
2002
). Two groups used a combination of calcium imaging in dissociated OSNs
and single-cell RT-PCR to identify the OR gene expressed by the odorant-activated OSNs
(Malnic et al., 1999
;
Touhara et al., 1999
;
Kajiya et al., 2001
), as
each OSN expresses only one OR gene. Using this method,
Malnic et al. (1999
)
identified 13 different ORs that responded to various aliphatic alcohols and acids.
However, it is difficult to verify OR ligand specificity. Touharas group used
heterologous expression systems to verify activation for some of the ORs they cloned.
Finally, a new method using a combination of functional imaging of the olfactory bulb,
fluorescent dye injection and single-cell RT PCR was recently proposed (Mizrahi et al., 2004
). Success is
limited to a handful of ORs as it is extremely laborious to test each individual ORs
using these techniques compared to methods that involve heterologous expression
systems.
Further progress in understanding olfactory coding in mammals is likely to require a
development of new assay system(s) that enable functional expression of a large number of
ORs in heterologous cells in order to identify cognate ligands. OSNs may have unique
molecular machinery to promote proper targeting of OR proteins to the cell surface
(McClintock and Sammeta, 2003
),
explaining why OR expression in heterologous systems has been difficult. To overcome
this, identification of accessory protein(s) that are required for cell-surface
expression of ORs would be critical. There is precedence for this protein targeting
problem. Many GPCRs are known to require accessory proteins for correct targeting to the
cell surface membrane (for a review, see
Brady and Limbird, 2002
). Examples of
this include NinaA for Drosophila rhodopsin (Baker et al., 1994
), RanBP2 for cone opsin
(Ferreira et al., 1996
),
ODR-4 for Caenorhabditis elegans olfactory receptors (Dwyer et al., 1998
), RAMPs for the calcitonin
receptor-like receptor (CRLR) (McLatchie et
al., 1998
) and finally the M10 family of MHC class I proteins and ß2
microglobulin for V2Rs, the putative mammalian pheromone receptors (Loconto et al., 2003
). Importantly, with the
exception of NinaA and RanBP2, none of these accessory proteins share any sequence
homology to each other; their only common feature is their association with the
membrane.
The putative accessory proteins required for OR trafficking are likely to be expressed by OSNs, interact with OR proteins, and enhance responses to odorants when co-expressed with ORs in heterologous cells. How might putative accessory proteins aid OR trafficking? They might function as chaperones promoting correct folding of ORs in the ER. Alternatively, they could facilitate the transport of specific vesicles/cargos that includes ORs. Lastly, they might form a stable complex with ORs, potentially masking ER retention signals of ORs, and thereby functioning as co-receptors to the ORs. Establishment of functional OR expression system using heterologous cells, together with the annotation of virtually all the ORs in the mouse and human genomes, will provide a platform to investigate OR-odorant interaction in a comprehensive manner.
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