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![]() [Cover Caption] Other Issues: |
Contents:
Volume 89, Issue 3; July, 2009.
[Index by Author] [Editorial Board]
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= article is free immediately upon publication
(all articles are free one year after publication)
Cover: Pheromone detection in mammals involves both the main olfactory and the vomeronasal systems. In the main olfactory system, olfactory sensory neurons expressing a given odorant receptor (represented by the same color at the bottom of the figure) send a single axon to the same glomerulus (circles) in the main olfactory bulb. Mitral cells (triangular bodies) have a single apical dendrite that enters a single glomerulus and several lateral dendrites that contact granule cell dendrites. See Tirindelli, Roberto, Michele Dibattista, Simone Pifferi, and Anna Menini. Physiol Rev 89: 921–956, 2009.
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