Solving the mystery of the sense of smell

Linda Buck
Richard Axel
The sense of smell is a unique sense when compared to the others. The fact that we can sense and remember around 10,000 completely different aroma molecules is amazing, yet the underlying mechanism and reason for such was ambiguous until Richard Axel and Linda Buck came on the scene. In their investigation efforts, they uncovered about 1,000 genes that cause the expression of different olfactory receptors on the olfactory receptor cells in the nasal epithelium. Interestingly, each of these olfactory receptor cells holds a single type of odor receptor. After nasal inhalation of a scent, the receptor cells send the information to the brain and forms a pattern with information collected from other receptor cells. This is how we can recognize and remember scents that we've smelled as children, and recall fond (or awful) memories.

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