Genetics and Environment Combine to Give Everyone a Unique Sense of Smell

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Summary: Experience and genetics give us all our unique sense of smell, a new study reports.

Source: Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute.

Genetically identical mice develop different smell receptors in response to their environments.

Researchers from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and their collaborators have shown that receptors in the noses of mice exposed to certain smells during life are different to genetically similar mice that lived without those smells. Published today in eLife, the study found it is this combination of genetics and experience that gives each individual a unique sense of smell.

Our sense of smell comes from the olfactory organ in the nose, which is made up of sensory neurons containing receptors that can detect odours. There are about one thousand types of olfactory receptors in the nose, compared with only three types of visual receptors in the eye, and 49 types of taste receptors on the…

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