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1  for by passive electrical properties of the mitral cell.
2 strated a greater propensity to stutter than mitral cells.
3 olarization and afterhyperpolarizations than mitral cells.
4 s odor information relayed by olfactory bulb mitral cells.
5 ved stronger afferent-evoked excitation than mitral cells.
6 orm synapses with principal neurons known as mitral cells.
7 zed glomeruli and a significant reduction in mitral cells.
8 3-Na(+)K(+)-ATPase was strongly expressed in mitral cells.
9 cerebellar Purkinje cells and olfactory bulb mitral cells.
10 nstream synaptic partners - tufted cells and mitral cells.
11 ssed with whole-cell recording from pairs of mitral cells.
12 factory cortices in part by the birthdate of mitral cells.
13 gmine (20 mM) sharpened the ORF responses of mitral cells.
14 e how the cortex integrates inputs from bulb mitral cells.
15 nsmission between olfactory bulb granule and mitral cells.
16 r (GL) excision failed to increase mIPSCs in mitral cells.
17 s exert strong tonic GABAergic inhibition of mitral cells.
18 s and thereby modulate inhibitory drive onto mitral cells.
19 e absence of the detyrosinylated form in the mitral cells.
20 ses and gate dendrodendritic inhibition onto mitral cells.
21 scillations in populations of olfactory bulb mitral cells.
22 mediated synaptic inputs derived from output mitral cells.
23  resulting in phase-locked GABA release onto mitral cells.
24 nnervation pattern suggested for all teleost mitral cells.
25  evoke robust responses in a small subset of mitral cells.
26 tivity indicates functional coupling between mitral cells.
27  cells, reflecting the prolonged response in mitral cells.
28 ced responses in the gamma-glomerulus and in mitral cells.
29 layer 5 pyramidal neurons and olfactory bulb mitral cells.
30 ate and promotes spike timing variability in mitral cells.
31 te the timing, rather than the existence, of mitral cell action potentials and perform their computat
32 ary granule cell EPSPs evoked in response to mitral cell action potentials in rat (both sexes) brain
33 fting the balance of principal tufted versus mitral cell activity across large expanses of the MOB in
34 onic dose-response relationship, suppressing mitral cell activity at high and low, but not intermedia
35                  Most of our knowledge about mitral cell activity has been obtained from recordings i
36 f lateral inhibition causes decorrelation of mitral cell activity that is evoked by similar stimuli,
37 al cells) that could be capable of modifying mitral cell activity through the release of GLP-1.
38 milar inputs, while improving propagation of mitral cell activity to cortex.
39  generation of reliable temporal patterns of mitral cell activity.
40                Specifically, we measured how mitral cells adapt to continuous background odors and ho
41 tion potential ("spike") firing, wherein all mitral cells affiliated with a glomerulus either engaged
42  the degree of overlap in ORFs of individual mitral cells after exposure to odorant stimuli.
43 dly synchronized spikes (lag < or = 5 ms) in mitral cells, along with oscillatory activity at the gam
44      We suggest that persistent responses in mitral cells amplify the incoming sensory information an
45 t antennal lobe projection neurons (PNs)-the mitral cell analogs.
46 rth, slowed the morphological development of mitral cells and arrested the maturational changes in me
47 ot nonrewarded, odor representations in both mitral cells and associated granule cells of the olfacto
48 ther, distinct temporal response profiles in mitral cells and external tufted cells could be attribut
49  Evoked and spontaneous slow oscillations in mitral cells and external tufted cells were broader and
50   In the forebrain, Neurog1 lineages include mitral cells and glutamatergic interneurons in the olfac
51 ectivity at dendrodendritic synapses between mitral cells and interneurons.
52 ized odor-evoked responses of olfactory bulb mitral cells and interneurons.
53 increased the activity-dependent labeling of mitral cells and juxtaglomerular cells but not of tyrosi
54 al airflow, lateral inhibition was weaker in mitral cells and less modulated in tufted cells.
55 C) receives direct input from olfactory bulb mitral cells and piriform cortical pyramidal cells and i
56 merulus only, mechanosensitive modulation of mitral cells and their postsynaptic neuropils was found
57 channel, which is predominantly expressed in mitral cells and whose gene-targeted deletion causes a "
58 lfactory bulbs, in dot-like terminals around mitral cells, and in the fibers of the medial olfactory
59 at out of the hundreds of compounds present, mitral cells are activated by single compounds.
60 implications of these putative subclasses of mitral cells are discussed.
61                                              Mitral cells are major projection neurons of the olfacto
62 tory bulb, odor representations by principal mitral cells are modulated by local inhibitory circuits.
63         Here, we show that assemblies of AOB mitral cells are synchronized by lateral interactions th
64 aracter of their synapses with the principal mitral cells--are sufficient to restructure the network
65 that are 4x larger and contain twice as many mitral cells as those of the sympatric black vulture (Co
66 les showed that excitatory synaptic input to mitral cells as well as dendrodendritic inhibition was u
67 ributed to slow dendrodendritic responses in mitral cells, as blocking this slow current in mitral ce
68 aging in acute slices reveals that groups of mitral cells assemble into microcircuits that exhibit co
69 main form of lateral transmission within the mitral cell assembly.
70  Cav3.x-mediated Ca(2+) influx from even one mitral cell at membrane potentials between -65 and -50 m
71                                        While mitral cells at rest were also excited by raphe activati
72       The physiological mechanism underlying mitral cell autorhythmicity involves cyclic activation o
73 et of CR neurons, the loss of which prevents mitral cell axon innervation and LOT formation.
74                                Specifically, mitral cell axons form the lateral olfactory tract (LOT)
75                    Electrical stimulation of mitral cell axons in the lateral olfactory tract (LOT) r
76 Aergic interneurons were directly excited by mitral cell axons.
77 e found that early- and late-generated mouse mitral cells became differentially distributed in the do
78 otential and current (Ih) is stereotypic for mitral cells belonging to the same glomerular circuit.
79 ngle units recorded extracellularly from the mitral cell body layer were further identified as mitral
80 evoked fast GABAergic inhibitory currents in mitral cells but failed to activate D(2) receptor-mediat
81 or responsiveness and pairwise similarity of mitral cells but had little impact on tufted cells.
82  Additionally, GL excision reduced sIPSCs in mitral cells by 50%, suggesting that periglomerular cell
83 l cell body layer were further identified as mitral cells by antidromic activation of the lateral olf
84 ry bulb slices elicited the GABAergic LTP in mitral cells by enhancing postsynaptic GABA receptor res
85 the activation of a cohort of narrowly tuned mitral cells by odor mixtures is read out synaptically b
86 tivation within glomerular circuits sharpens mitral cell chemoreceptive fields, even in the absence o
87 nic cholinergic receptor activation sharpens mitral cell chemoreceptive fields, likely via intraglome
88                                         Some mitral cells closely followed the response time course o
89 e both combinatorially and temporally sparse mitral cell codes.
90                                        Since mitral cells commonly respond to odours by burst firing
91 re, we find that longer-latency responses in mitral cells, compared with tufted cells, are due to wea
92  olfactory processing that is dependent upon mitral cell convergence and integration onto cortical ce
93 tral cells, as blocking this slow current in mitral cells converted mitral cell responses to a transi
94 e role of connexin-mediated gap junctions in mitral cell coordinated activity.
95 activity showed that at least two classes of mitral cells could be distinguished.
96 e combination of large olfactory bulbs, high mitral cell counts and a greatly enlarged nasal cavity l
97 excitability and synaptic integration in AOB mitral cell dendrites, and we show that dendrites of acc
98 s, which measure electrical coupling between mitral cell dendrites, were high in young mice, but decr
99 We found overlapping clusters of CTB-labeled mitral cell dendritic branches (CTB(+) ) in TRPM5-GFP(+)
100                        Finally, we show that mitral cell dendritic refinement occurs just after the c
101 cate that the monosynaptic afferent input to mitral cells depends on the strength of odorant stimulat
102 evidence for excitatory interactions between mitral cells despite the lack of direct synaptic connect
103 ssory olfactory pathway, projection neurons (mitral cells) display infra-slow oscillatory discharge w
104                             We conclude that mitral cells do not have center-surround receptive field
105 citatory postsynaptic current (EPSC) between mitral cells emerged by P30.
106                    Here, we hypothesize that mitral cell ensembles form synchronized microcircuits th
107 n the apical dendritic compartments of large mitral cell ensembles in vivo We show that infra-slow pe
108 etween two dissimilar odorants, responses of mitral cell ensembles to the two odorants gradually beca
109           Trains of action potentials in one mitral cell evoked autoexcitation in the stimulated cell
110 cose concentrations showed glucose-dependent mitral cell excitability as evaluated by current-clamp e
111 buted to lateral excitation during concerted mitral cell excitation or by single-cell activity if glu
112 es emerge as a result of the balance between mitral cells' excitatory inputs and inhibition provided
113     It has been proposed that olfactory bulb mitral cells exhibit this functional circuitry, with exc
114                                              Mitral cells exhibited a more sharply tuned molecular re
115                                          The mitral cells exhibited two main types of morphologies wi
116                                              Mitral cells express low-voltage activated Cav3.3 channe
117 degree of colocalization, some amygdalopetal mitral cells extended dendrites to non-TRPM5-GFP glomeru
118              In addition, the late-generated mitral cells extended substantially stronger projections
119            In the olfactory bulb, individual mitral cells fired action potentials in response to ligh
120        We show that odor-elicited changes in mitral cell firing rate were larger and more frequently
121 er, increases UP state amplitude and impacts mitral cell firing rate.
122  within the EPL, but it has little effect on mitral cell firing rates and hence does not sharpen olfa
123                         Careful alignment of mitral cell firing with the phase of the respiration cyc
124 ling to investigate signal processing in the mitral cells, focusing on the glomerular dendritic tuft.
125   Here, we show that AOB projection neurons (mitral cells) form parallel synchronized ensembles both
126 re represented by a combination of activated mitral cells, forming reproducible activation maps in th
127  analysis of glomeruli confirmed that mitral-mitral cell gap junctions on distal apical dendrites con
128 t in connexin36(-/-) mice, which lack mitral-mitral cell gap junctions.
129 e nervus terminalis ganglion innervating the mitral cell/glomerular layer (MC/GL).
130           Compared to external tufted cells, mitral cells have a prolonged afferent-evoked EPSC, whic
131 ared odor-elicited changes in firing rate of mitral cells in awake behaving mice and in anesthetized
132                    The second order neurons, mitral cells in mammals and projection neurons in insect
133 urons) include Purkinje cells in cerebellum, mitral cells in olfactory bulb, and photoreceptors in re
134 ability and rates and shorter latencies than mitral cells in response to physiological afferent stimu
135                              Recordings from mitral cells in the absence of both subunits reveal a re
136  influenced the input-output relationship of mitral cells in the AOB and MOB differently showing a ne
137 in rodents have established that a subset of mitral cells in the main olfactory bulb (MOB) projects d
138 ession of vGluT1, which is also found in all mitral cells in the mature OB, was first detected in the
139 l odorants activate only a small fraction of mitral cells in the mouse main olfactory bulb (MOB).
140                  We recorded from individual mitral cells in the OB in anesthetized rats to determine
141 rebral cortex including pyramidal cells, and mitral cells in the olfactory bulb and is not expressed
142 ating that the readout of olfactory input by mitral cells in the olfactory bulb can be modified by be
143 racterize the morphology and distribution of mitral cells in the olfactory bulb of adult zebrafish, D
144    As a consequence of these changes, across mitral cells in the olfactory bulb, individual odors sho
145 t of dendrodendritic synapses of granule and mitral cells in the olfactory bulb.
146                         Spiking responses of mitral cells in the rat olfactory bulb adapt to, and rec
147 e synchronous oscillations in olfactory bulb mitral cells in vitro.
148                    Our findings suggest that mitral cells in zebrafish may be more similar to mammali
149 , olfactory circuits, in which glomeruli (or mitral cells) in the olfactory bulb synapse with neurons
150 on between olfactory bulb principal neurons (mitral cells) in vitro.
151 ocal connections with the majority of nearby mitral cells, in contrast to the sparse connectivity bet
152 b, gap junctions between apical dendrites of mitral cells increase excitability and synchronize firin
153 sic biophysical properties of olfactory bulb mitral cells influences population coding of fluctuating
154  cell excitatory postsynaptic potentials and mitral cell inhibition were also potentiated by theta-bu
155 y in the gamma-glomerulus is conveyed to the mitral cells innervating this specific neuropil.
156 at PCs respond faithfully and selectively to mitral cell inputs arriving as a synchronized gamma freq
157 ally integrate several functionally distinct mitral cell inputs.
158 The direct inhibitory synaptic input engages mitral cell intrinsic membrane properties to generate in
159                                          The mitral cell is the primary output neuron and central rel
160 embrane potential recorded in olfactory bulb mitral cells is an emergent, homotypic property of local
161 ound that the lateral inhibition received by mitral cells is gated by postsynaptic firing, such that
162 SE, the efficacy of glutamatergic LE between mitral cells is highly variable and mediated by calcium-
163  it has been suggested that sensory input to mitral cells is indirect through feedforward excitation
164 or brain size among birds, but the number of mitral cells is proportional to the size of their olfact
165 trong stimuli evoked sustained firing in AOB mitral cells lasting up to several minutes.
166 eration of 5T4-positive granule cells in the mitral cell layer does not change significantly over tim
167 s study shows that the majority of zebrafish mitral cells likely innervate a single glomerulus rather
168 ; able to modulate the firing pattern of the mitral cells (M/TCs).
169 ion of GCaMP6 reporters allowed us to access mitral cell (MC) and superficial tufted cell (sTC) subpo
170 ctory bulb and its neuromodulatory effect on mitral cell (MC) first-order neurons.
171 tions in a cell-type-specific manner between mitral cells (MCs) and GCs or between MCs and EPL intern
172 ivity, population-level interactions between mitral cells (MCs) and granule cells (GCs) can generate
173 ence-dependent plasticity between excitatory mitral cells (MCs) and inhibitory internal granule cells
174 nd inhibition at reciprocal synapses between mitral cells (MCs) and local interneurons.
175 e mapped the functional connectivity between mitral cells (MCs) and OB interneurons in a cell-type-sp
176             Responses of olfactory (OB) bulb mitral cells (MCs) and tufted cells (TCs) are known to d
177               In the mouse olfactory system, mitral cells (MCs) and tufted cells (TCs) comprise paral
178 ibition between pairs of olfactory bulb (OB) mitral cells (MCs) and tufted cells (TCs) is linked to a
179 classes of the mammalian olfactory bulb, the mitral cells (MCs) and tufted cells (TCs), differ marked
180 hibitory interneurons and the output neurons mitral cells (MCs) and tufted cells (TCs).
181 illatory synchrony in the activity of output mitral cells (MCs) appears to result from interactions w
182 uppress stimulus-evoked excitation of output mitral cells (MCs) at another glomerulus for interstimul
183 e (NA) increases GABA inhibitory input on to mitral cells (MCs) by exciting GCs.
184                                    ABSTRACT: Mitral cells (MCs) contained in the main (MOB) and acces
185 oth dendrites of the principal glutamatergic mitral cells (MCs) form reciprocal dendrodendritic synap
186 onergic afferents are largely excitatory for mitral cells (MCs) in the MOB where 5-HT2A receptors med
187                       Synchronized firing of mitral cells (MCs) in the olfactory bulb (OB) has been h
188 e tested how background odors are encoded by mitral cells (MCs) in the olfactory bulb (OB) of male mi
189 ormation flow from the periphery onto output mitral cells (MCs) of the olfactory bulb (OB) has been t
190 evident in the spontaneous synaptic input in mitral cells (MCs) separated up to 220 mum (300 mum with
191                                              Mitral cells (MCs) showed more diverse changes in respon
192                   DA directly hyperpolarized mitral cells (MCs) via D(2)-like receptors and slightly
193 n of subthreshold oscillations (STOs) in the mitral cells (MCs) with inhibitory granule cells (GCs).
194 ectedly, AON axons also directly depolarized mitral cells (MCs), enough to elicit spikes reliably in
195 principal neurons of the olfactory bulb, the mitral cells (MCs), sparing the other principal neurons,
196 tors (nAChRs) in regulating the responses of mitral cells (MCs), the output neurons of the olfactory
197 , which are densely innervated by excitatory mitral cells (MCs), would show broad chemosensory tuning
198 ed to broadly inhibit activity in excitatory mitral cells (MCs).
199  Here we report that Nrp2-positive (Nrp2(+)) mitral cells (MCs, second-order neurons) play crucial ro
200 membrane excitability of projection neurons (mitral cells, MCs) that dramatically curtailed their res
201  lateral excitation (LE) provides a means of mitral cell-mitral cell communication.
202 anges last many minutes we suggest that such mitral cell-mitral cell interactions provide the glomeru
203 een fluorescent protein, we recorded from P2 mitral cells (MT cells) while selectively stimulating P2
204 flects differential expression between local mitral cell networks processing distinct odour-related i
205 ve been hypothesized to represent tufted and mitral cell networks, respectively.
206 ponses in a linear fashion while maintaining mitral cell odor preferences.
207 ur results demonstrate the dynamic nature of mitral cell odor representations in awake animals, which
208 adual and long-lasting (months) weakening of mitral cell odor representations.
209 inhibitory granule cells and makes principal mitral cell odor responses more sparse and temporally dy
210                                 This enabled mitral cell odor-evoked ensemble activity to be analyzed
211 f awake, head-fixed mice and found that some mitral cells' odor representations changed following the
212 particular has been hypothesized to regulate mitral cell odorants receptive fields (ORFs) and behavio
213                           Here, we show that mitral cells of the accessory olfactory bulb release glu
214  differently showing a net effect on gain in mitral cells of the MOB, but not in the AOB.
215  synchronous infra-slow bursting activity in mitral cells of the mouse accessory olfactory bulb (AOB)
216 he outputs from a single type of neuron, the mitral cells of the mouse olfactory bulb, to identical s
217 ium spiny neurons of the striatum and tufted-mitral cells of the olfactory bulb, has gone unnoticed a
218 ulation can be observed in the glomeruli and mitral cells of the olfactory bulb, using calcium imagin
219 sory neurons of the olfactory epithelium and mitral cells of the olfactory bulb.
220 0, the Ca(2+) sensor for IGF1 secretion from mitral cells, or deletion of IGF1 receptor in the olfact
221 ate that Cx36-mediated gap junctions between mitral cells orchestrate rapid coordinated signaling via
222 ated in a manner predicted by the changes in mitral cell ORFs by cholinergic drugs.
223 , we observed that the membrane potential of mitral cells oscillates between UP and DOWN states at a
224 used simultaneous whole-cell recordings from mitral cell pairs to show that a direct form of chemical
225                                Instead, each mitral cell performs a specific computation combining a
226                                         This mitral cell plasticity is odor specific, recovers gradua
227 m synapses onto distal tuft-like branches of mitral cell primary dendrites.
228 tic depression, dendrodendritic circuitry in mitral cells produces robust amplification of brief affe
229    In the olfactory bulb, principal neurons (mitral cells) project apical dendrites to a common glome
230 eral excitation in paired recordings between mitral cells projecting to the same glomerulus.
231 synchronized by their excitatory inputs from mitral cells, providing a means to coordinate GABA relea
232  glomerular stimulation, we demonstrate that mitral cells receive direct, monosynaptic input from olf
233 ering an individual glomerulus revealed that mitral cells receive monosynaptic afferent inputs.
234 nce, the AOB network topology, in which each mitral cell receives input from multiple glomeruli, enab
235 mpared the electrophysiological responses of mitral cells recorded from the accessory olfactory bulb
236 hat the synaptic charge was 5-fold larger in mitral cells, reflecting the prolonged response in mitra
237                       While it is known that mitral cells release vesicular glutamate from their apic
238                                 Responses of mitral cells represent the results of the first stage of
239 cortical neurons receive input from multiple mitral cells representing broadly distributed glomeruli.
240 ritic circuitry in external tufted cells and mitral cells, respectively, tunes the postsynaptic respo
241              Moreover, olfactory bulb output mitral cells respond to a single stimulation of the sens
242                                              Mitral cells responded to high frequency ORN stimulation
243                 In cell-attached recordings, mitral cells responded to high frequency stimulation wit
244          A quantitative model indicates that mitral cell responses can be explained by just a handful
245 ore, selective PV cell inactivation enhances mitral cell responses in a linear fashion while maintain
246 gly, calcium imaging experiments reveal that mitral cell responses in M71 transgenic mice are largely
247  this slow current in mitral cells converted mitral cell responses to a transient response profile, t
248 ls of the bulb by specifically decorrelating mitral cell responses to enable odor separation.
249                  Furthermore, tufted and not mitral cell responses to odor mixtures become more linea
250 merular inhibition could suppress excitatory mitral cell responses to odorants.
251  and mGluR1 receptor antagonists, converting mitral cell responses to transient response profiles.
252                    The sustained response in mitral cells resulted from dendrodendritic amplification
253 st, muscarinic receptor activation increases mitral cell spike synchronization and field oscillatory
254 ulb inhibition on the pairwise statistics of mitral cell spiking.
255 er responsiveness of AON neurons relative to mitral cells suggests that individual AON neurons synapt
256   Although the dendritic connectivity of AOB mitral cells suggests the capacity for broad integration
257 w that dendrites of accessory olfactory bulb mitral cells support action potential propagation and ca
258 ed with dendritic sectioning, indicated that mitral cell synchrony was mainly driven by inhibitory po
259 n zebrafish may be more similar to mammalian mitral cells than previously believed, despite variation
260  and in vivo, we identify a subpopulation of mitral cells that exhibit slow stereotypical rhythmic di
261            In the olfactory bulb the sets of mitral cells that project their apical dendrite to the s
262 s in the mammalian main olfactory bulb where mitral cells that project to the same glomerular unit di
263 sing OSNs is innervated by the population of mitral cells that projects to the MeA.
264                                  Only 27% of mitral cells that showed a response to odors in the anes
265 1 increases the firing frequency of neurons (mitral cells) that encode olfactory information by decre
266 l activity in mouse accessory olfactory bulb mitral cells, the direct neural link between vomeronasal
267                       One view suggests that mitral cells, the primary output neuron of the olfactory
268                                              Mitral cells, the principal cells of the accessory olfac
269      The input-output transform performed by mitral cells, the principal projection neurons of the ol
270  Electrophysiological recordings showed that mitral cells, the target cells of newly generated intern
271 me that some rodent accessory olfactory bulb mitral cells-the direct link between vomeronasal sensory
272 ulate the activity of principal neurons, the mitral cells, through dendrodendritic synapses, shaping
273 and compare responses of AON neurons and MOB mitral cells to a panel of structurally diverse odorants
274 ential away from spike threshold could adapt mitral cells to background input without compromising th
275                          The response of MOB mitral cells to brief (0.1 ms, 1-100 V) stimulation of t
276 imals have found that sustained responses of mitral cells to odorants are rare, suggesting sparse com
277  observed short-term plasticity could enable mitral cells to overcome autoinhibition and increase act
278                                  Compared to mitral cells, tufted cells exhibited twofold greater exc
279 assess the degree of shared activity between mitral cells under physiological conditions, we analysed
280                           The stimulation of mitral cells using a pattern that mimics activity of the
281 ally induce aftereffects, we photostimulated mitral cells using channelrhodopsin and recorded central
282 ask how effectively different populations of mitral cells, varying in their diversity, encode a commo
283       Moreover, the synchronized activity of mitral cells was decreased in the OB of adult TNR knock-
284 ed to phosphorylation, glucose modulation of mitral cells was rapid, less than one minute, and was re
285                  The spontaneous activity of mitral cells was recorded in vivo from the main olfactor
286               However, correlated spiking in mitral cells was significantly reduced, as was electrica
287 , recurrent inhibition of principal neurons (mitral cells) was completely eliminated by the mGluR1 an
288 sponsiveness of AON neurons, the majority of mitral cells were activated by only one or two component
289 gly, a substantial number of thermosensitive mitral cells were also chemosensitive.
290       Functionally, odor-evoked responses of mitral cells, which are normally inhibited by abGCs, wer
291 size of their olfactory bulbs and numbers of mitral cells, which provide the primary output of the ol
292 ansient activity in the larger population of mitral cells, which respond to odorants during a small f
293 sulted from dendrodendritic amplification in mitral cells, which was blocked by NMDA and mGluR1 recep
294  slow intracellular Na(+) dynamics endow AOB mitral cells with a weak tendency to burst, which is fur
295   We also observed feedforward excitation of mitral cells with weak stimulation of the olfactory nerv
296                                              Mitral cells within a glomerulus show highly synchronize
297 , whose axons contact the dendritic tufts of mitral cells within olfactory bulb glomeruli.
298 trocytes within the OB express NFIA, whereas mitral cells within the OB express NFIB.
299         Assuming a broad inhibitory field, a mitral cell would be influenced by >100 contiguous glome
300 ases GABAergic spontaneous IPSCs (sIPSCs) in mitral cells, yet the presynaptic mechanism(s) involved

 
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