New preprint from the lab!
Most mammals have a secondary olfactory system (accessory olfactory system, a.k.a. vomeronasal system) that provides extra information about social cues that aren't airborne.
This system is especially sensitive to "messy things" (saliva🤤, tears😿, urine🚾, feces💩) (1/n)
The rodent accessory olfactory system (AOS) detects chemosignals emitted by conspecifics and other species to support beneficial behaviors. Peripheral vomeronasal sensory neurons (VSNs), the AOS' chemical sensors, detect fecal bile acids in patterns that have unknown significance to the animal. We used a combination of mass spectrometry and VSN calcium imaging to investigate the AOS' capacity to use bile acid information to discriminate between fecal samples from captive reptiles and mice with varying gut microbiome states. Mass spectrometry analysis revealed bile acid patterns that distinguished biologically relevant samples from one another, representing theoretical discrimination axes. We measured VSN response patterns to bile acid stimuli aligned with theoretical discrimination axes. We found that VSNs perform stimulus "whitening" via an inverse relationship between natural bile acid abundance and population response magnitude. VSNs showed maximum sensitivity to taurine-conjugated bile acids, which have high theoretical discriminatory value, but were found at low natural abundance levels. Individual taurine-conjugated bile acids drove threat assessment behavior when added to familiar mouse fecal extracts, suggesting high behavioral significance. Finally, we analyzed the degree to which the AOS utilizes the theoretical information about species, diet, and gut microbiome status from bile acids. We found that VSN tuning patterns align with theoretical axes for discriminating reptilian predators from vegetarians, and between mice with different gut microbiome states. VSN tuning was especially well-aligned with the information available about conspecific gut microbiome status. These results show that AOS bile acid chemosensation supports discrimination of multiple biologically relevant states. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest. National Institutes of Health, R01DC017985, R56DC015784, R01DC021213