How the olfactory system makes sense of scents

S Firestein - Nature, 2001 - nature.com
S Firestein
Nature, 2001nature.com
The human nose is often considered something of a luxury, but in the rest of the animal
world, from bacteria to mammals, detecting chemicals in the environment has been critical to
the successful organism. An indication of the importance of olfactory systems is the
significant proportion—as much as 4%—of the genomes of many higher eukaryotes that is
devoted to encoding the proteins of smell. Growing interest in the detection of diverse
compounds at single-molecule levels has made the olfactory system an important system for …
Abstract
The human nose is often considered something of a luxury, but in the rest of the animal world, from bacteria to mammals, detecting chemicals in the environment has been critical to the successful organism. An indication of the importance of olfactory systems is the significant proportion — as much as 4% — of the genomes of many higher eukaryotes that is devoted to encoding the proteins of smell. Growing interest in the detection of diverse compounds at single-molecule levels has made the olfactory system an important system for biological modelling.
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