The mouse accessory olfactory bulb (AOB) has been difficult to study in the context of sensory coding. Here, we demonstrate a dissection that produces an ex vivo preparation in which AOB neurons remain functionally connected to their peripheral inputs, facilitating research into information processing of mouse pheromones and kairomones.
The mouse accessory olfactory system (AOS) is a specialized sensory pathway for detecting nonvolatile social odors, pheromones, and kairomones. The first neural circuit in the AOS pathway, called the accessory olfactory bulb (AOB), plays an important role in establishing sex-typical behaviors such as territorial aggression and mating. This small (<1 mm3) circuit possesses the capacity to distinguish unique behavioral states, such as sex, strain, and stress from chemosensory cues in the secretions and excretions of conspecifics. While the compact organization of this system presents unique opportunities for recording from large portions of the circuit simultaneously, investigation of sensory processing in the AOB remains challenging, largely due to its experimentally disadvantageous location in the brain. Here, we demonstrate a multi-stage dissection that removes the intact AOB inside a single hemisphere of the anterior mouse skull, leaving connections to both the peripheral vomeronasal sensory neurons (VSNs) and local neuronal circuitry intact. The procedure exposes the AOB surface to direct visual inspection, facilitating electrophysiological and optical recordings from AOB circuit elements in the absence of anesthetics. Upon inserting a thin cannula into the vomeronasal organ (VNO), which houses the VSNs, one can directly expose the periphery to social odors and pheromones while recording downstream activity in the AOB. This procedure enables controlled inquiries into AOS information processing, which can shed light on mechanisms linking pheromone exposure to changes in behavior.
Sensory processing in the mammalian brain typically spans multiple reciprocally-connected neuronal circuits, each of which extracts particular features from sensory input. In sensory pathways, early information processing is vital for normal perception and behavior. In the accessory olfactory system (AOS), the accessory olfactory bulb (AOB) is the principal neural circuit linking the sensory periphery to downstream structures that dictate hormonal balance1,2, aggression3, and arousal4. As such, information processing within this circuit is strongly linked to changes in animal behavior.
The accessory olfactory bulb is located in mice and rats at the dorsal/caudal/posterior aspect of the main olfactory bulb (MOB) beneath the dense, vascularized rhinal sinus. The AOB receives afferent innervation from axons of peripheral vomeronasal sensory neurons (VSNs) that reside in the vomeronasal organ (VNO), a small blind-ended tube in the anterior snout just above the soft palate. These axons traverse the delicate sheet of septal tissue at the medial boundary of the nasal passages. Several studies have probed AOB neural responses to sources of AOS odors (such as mouse urine) in vivo using anesthetized mice5-7 or freely-exploring animals8. The heroic anesthetized in vivo studies involved (a) tracheotomies to ensure deep anesthesia and prevent the aspiration of liquid stimuli5-7, (b) stimulation of the sympathetic cervical ganglion6 or direct cannulation of the vomeronasal organ5,7 to introduce nonvolatile odors and (c) craniotomies with or without frontal lobe ablations to allow electrode advancement into the AOB6. Awake/behaving studies8-10 involved surgical implantation of a microdrive. In sum, these experimental paradigms are powerful, but extremely difficult and often require anesthesia.
Interestingly, several studies attempted to maintain sensory structures and downstream neural circuits alive outside the body (ex vivo) with some success11-15. Because the connections between the VNO and AOB remain ipsilateral, and because the midline septal tissue can be exposed to oxygenated superfusate in a single hemisphere, we sought to develop such a single-hemisphere ex vivo approach to isolate these structures while maintaining their functional connectivity. We recently succeeded in achieving this goal16. This preparation keeps both the VNO and AOB alive and functionally connected for at least 4 – 6 hr because both the axons (along the midline soft septal tissue) and AOB are relatively shallow <600 µm features that are accessible to superfused oxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF). This VNO-AOB ex vivo preparation allows introduction of controlled stimuli into the VNO via a thin cannula, and direct visual access to the small AOB for targeted electrode placement and/or live fluorescence microscopy. This method is advantageous if one desires to study these circuits in the absence of anesthetics. Because this approach severs centrifugal connections, it is not well suited to inquiries into centrifugal modulation of AOB function. The VNO-AOB ex vivo preparation is difficult to learn, but once achieved produces a reliable platform upon which to investigate circuit organization, information processing, and neural plasticity in this powerful sensory circuit.
All experiments were carried out in accordance with protocols approved by the UT Southwestern Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee, and were chosen so as to minimize stress, discomfort, and pain experienced by the experimental animals.
1. Dissection Chamber
A custom dissection chamber and small, thin plastic plank are required for best results (Figure 1). Construct or obtain such a chamber in advance of attempting this protocol.
2. Dissection Solutions
3. Primary Dissection
4. Secondary Dissection
5. Evaluation
Achieving success with this preparation takes extensive practice, and has several steps at which it can fail. One should expect to require many attempts before achieving success. The custom dissection chamber is required for successful completion of this protocol, and should be obtained prior to starting the later stages of the dissection. The chamber design presented in Figure 1 is sufficient for this purpose, and can be made of relatively inexpensive plastics with minimal machining demands. If one lacks the capacity to produce such a chamber, local or online machining companies can be consulted and can construct the chamber for a fee.
A large source of variability across preparations is the density and brittleness of the bones of the skull and snout of the experimental animals. During the hemisection steps (Steps 3.14-3.20), the goal is to isolate both vomeronasal organs along with the ipsilateral septal tissue and ipsilateral accessory olfactory bulb. However, it is not uncommon for the septal tissue to remain attached to the contralateral hemisphere, especially near attachment points to the dorsal bones of the snout. Figure 2 shows an example of an effective and ineffective hemisection.
Other common dissection errors arise during the fine dissection, during which the axons of the vomeronasal nerve can be damaged in the septal tissue near the vomeronasal organ (Figures 3A and 3B) or near the AOB (Figures 3C and 3D). These and similar events will result in incomplete connectivity between VSNs and the AOB, rendering the preparations unusable.
The final obstacle to the preparation’s success is the VNO cannulation step (Step 4.11). Proper placement of the VNO cannula will result in pressurization of the VNO lumen, causing immediate expulsion of residual blood from the vomeronasal pump. The cannula should be clearly visible beneath the relatively transparent vomeronasal epithelium and the appearance of the cannula should be uniform along its length inside the VNO. Upon successful completion of the procedure, one can verify functional connectivity using a physiological assay such as single unit electrophysiological recordings of neural activity in response to VNO stimulation with a known source of VSN odorants (Figure 4).
Figure 1. A) Engineering drawings of the custom dissection chamber used in Steps 3.22-5.4. NOTE: Small holes may be drilled to accommodate solution and gassing inlets and outlets as desired. B) Example photograph of dissection chamber used in this protocol. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. A, B) Representative images of successful (A) and unsuccessful (B) preparations after the hemisection stage (Step 3.20). The VNO, septal tissues, and olfactory bulbs (OBs) must all be maintained from the ipsilateral hemisphere (in this case, the right (bottom) hemisphere. If nasal turbinates are visible on the ipsilateral hemisphere, the dissection has failed. Tick marks are 1 mm apart. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. A, B) Representative images of intact and damaged septal tissue between the VNO and AOB. In B, the dissecting forceps made inadvertent contact with the tissue, damaging the VN axon tracts. C, D) Intact and damaged AOBs. In D, removal of the dura surrounding the ipsilateral OB resulted in severing the vomeronasal nerve near the AOB, causing a visible blob of tissue near the medial AOB. Scale bars are 1 mm in length.
Figure 4. A) Example raster plot of action potentials recorded from an AOB neuron (extracellular single unit recording) in a successful preparation. Traces in black show no change in firing rate when control Ringer’s solution was delivered to the VNO for 5 sec (gray box). Traces in red show the response of the same neuron to VNO stimulation with BALB/c female mouse urine diluted 100-fold into Ringer’s saline. B) Peri-stimulus time histogram of the same responses in A. Error bars represent standard errors of the mean.
The VNO-AOB ex vivo preparation described in this protocol is a useful alternative to anesthetized in vivo5-7 and acute live slice17 experiments of AOB function. Unlike acute AOB slice experiments, which also expose circuit elements for electrophysiological and optical recordings, this preparation retains all sensory afferents and intra-AOB connections. Although this can also be said of anesthetized in vivo approaches, the presence of anesthetics necessarily alters neural function, namely excitatory/inhibitory balance, which is crucial for information processing in this and other olfactory circuits18. Because the preparation avoids the use of anesthetics, and because the AOB surface is completely exposed to the superfusate, it is amenable to pharmacological inquiries into local neural processing.
There are, of course, some limitations of this preparation. There is evidence for gradual degeneration of the deepest AOB layers, namely the deep portions of the internal cellular layer, which houses many inhibitory granule cells16. Additionally, centrifugal inputs are severed during the dissection, eliminating them from active participation in AOB function. Cannulation of the VNO bypasses the normal action of the vomeronasal pump, and flushes away the endogenous fluids present in the VNO lumen.
Critical steps to achieving success with this method are the delicate hemisection (Step 3.20) and VNO cannulation (Step 4.11). One can expect to require extensive practice to reliably produce functionally-connected ex vivo preparations. The secondary dissection chamber utilized here can be used to assess functional connectivity using single-electrode recordings during stimulation of the VNO with sources of mouse pheromones (such as dilute urine).13,15 Modifications of the secondary dissection chamber can be made that allow the preparation to rotated to angles suited for other purposes, such as multiphoton imaging.
The many technical hurdles to studying the living AOB have long posed a barrier to our understanding of social odor and pheromone sensory processing. By dissecting away the earliest neural components of this sensory pathway in this dissection protocol, one is able to gain experimental access to these hard-to-study circuits. We have utilized this preparation for detailed inquiries into vomeronasal sensory processing19 and sensory mapping (Hammen et al., unpublished). This technique will be useful for future studies into sensory processing in the AOB, especially those requiring optical access to the tissue (e.g., multiphoton imaging and optogenetics). The benefits of this approach complement those of in vivo approaches, and improve our toolkit for investigating the neural mechanisms of vomeronasal-mediated social and reproductive behaviors.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This research was supported by R00 DC011780 (JPM: NINDS, NIH), F30 DC011673 (GFH: NINDS, NIH) and UT Southwestern startup funds (JPM).
Straight Scissors | Fine Science Tools | 14002-14 | |
Fine Scissors-Straight | Fine Science Tools | 14060-10 | |
Fine Scissors-Curved | Fine Science Tools | 14061-10 | |
Adson Forceps | Fine Science Tools | 11006-12 | |
#3 Scalpel Handle | Fine Science Tools | 10003-12 | |
#11 Scalpel Blades | Fisher Scientific | 3120030 | |
Straight Carbon Steel Razor Blades | Fisher Scientific | 12-640 | |
35 mm Petri Dish | Fisher Scientific | 08-772-21 | |
Dissection Chamber | Custom | N/A | See Fig. 1 |
Delrin plastic plank 0.6 cm x 1.5 cm x 0.1 cm | Custom | N/A | |
Dow Corning Silicon Vacuum grease | Fisher Scientific | 146355D | |
#5 Forceps, Student | Fine Science Tools | 91150-20 | |
#5 Forceps, Biologie Tip | Fine Science Tools | 11295-10 | |
#5 Forceps, Student | Fine Science Tools | 91150-20 | |
Vannas Spring Scissors | Fine Science Tools | 15000-08 | |
0.0045" Polyimide Tubing | A-M Systems | 823400 | |
1/16" Male Luer | Cole-Parmer | EW-45505-00 | |
1/16" Tubing | Fisher Scientific | 14-171-129 | |
Two ton epoxy | Grainger | 5E157 | |
ValveBank Pressurized Perfusion Kit | AutoMate Scientific | 09-16 | |
ValveLink digital/manual controller | AutoMate Scientific | 01-18 | |
NaCl | Sigma-Aldrich | various | |
KCl | Sigma-Aldrich | various | |
CaCl2 dihydrate | Sigma-Aldrich | various | |
MgCl2 hexahydrate | Sigma-Aldrich | various | |
NaHCO3 | Sigma-Aldrich | various | |
NaH2PO4 | Sigma-Aldrich | various | |
myo-inositol | Sigma-Aldrich | various | |
Na-pyruvate | Sigma-Aldrich | various | |
Na-ascorbate | Sigma-Aldrich | various | |
HEPES buffer | Sigma-Aldrich | various | |
glucose | Sigma-Aldrich | various |