Changes in morphology and physiology of olfactory receptor cilia during development
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Cited by (49)
Ciliary Trafficking of Transduction Molecules
2016, Chemosensory Transduction: The Detection of Odors, Tastes, and Other ChemostimuliCyclic AMP Signaling in the Main Olfactory Epithelium
2016, Chemosensory Transduction: The Detection of Odors, Tastes, and Other ChemostimuliAnalysis of Cilia Structure and Function in Zebrafish
2011, Methods in Cell BiologyCitation Excerpt :Similar to photoreceptor outer segments as well as some invertebrate cilia, the tips of zebrafish olfactory cilia contain microtubule singlets (Ward et al., 1975; Wloga et al., 2009). Consistent with the 9 + 0 and 9 + 2 configurations, the olfactory systems of both frog and zebrafish contain motile and nonmotile cilia (Drummond, 2009; Mair et al., 1982). Both types are easily detectable using antibody staining of whole animals.
Chapter 12 Olfactory Cilia: Our Direct Neuronal Connection to the External World
2008, Current Topics in Developmental BiologyCitation Excerpt :Although olfactory cilia have the (9 + 2) microtubule configuration normally found in motile cilia, they lack the dynein arms and are thus rendered immotile (Menco, 1984). Interestingly, some nonmammalian vertebrates, such as goldfish and frogs (Lidow and Menco, 1984; Reese, 1965), display motile olfactory cilia, which have an axoneme resembling that of respiratory cilia in their proximal segments and are suggested to play a role in odorant clearance (Bronshtein and Minor, 1973; Mair et al., 1982). Much of what we currently know about the structure of olfactory cilia derives from early electron microscopy studies (Cuschieri and Bannister, 1975a,b; Menco, 1980a,c; Menco and Morrison, 2003; Reese, 1965).
Evolution of vertebrate olfactory subsystems
2007, Evolution of Nervous SystemsChapter III The olfactory system
1996, Handbook of Chemical Neuroanatomy
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