Hypothetical mechanism for the assembly of
the precise topological map of glomeruli. A gradient of molecular
affinities of olfactory receptors. Approximately, 1,000 molecularly
distinct glomeruli are arranged in a topologically precise map in the
olfactory bulb. This map is bilaterally symmetrical, but only one side
is illustrated here. There are four distinct zones of glomeruli in the
bulb (47–50), illustrated here in various shades of red, yellow,
green, and blue. Gradients of colors on glomeruli within each zone are
used to suggest an orderly gradient of molecular affinities of the
individual receptors. A stream of migrating neurons originates in a
specific fate-mapped region of the subventricular zone (22). Cells
migrate as streams with the growth cones of each contacting the cell
ahead (21). Colors and gradients are used again to suggest that
receptors on each cell differ in an orderly way so that neighboring
cells have receptors that bind with the highest affinity to each other.
After reaching the olfactory bulb, cells change their direction of
migration and move toward the surface of the bulb where they generate
periglomerular cells (22). The dendrites of these cells then form the
targets for incoming growth cones of olfactory nerve axons. Hundreds of
olfactory neurons bearing the same, specific, olfactory receptor
converge on a single pair of bilaterally symmetrical glomeruli
(10–12). Their growth cones synapse with the dendrites of the
periglomerular cells presumed to express the identical receptor. These
homophilic interactions occur with the highest affinity. According to
this hypothesis, receptors on neighboring glomeruli have closely
related but different structures, hence are bound with a slightly lower
affinity. Mitral/tufted cells also synapse with glomeruli but are not
illustrated here.