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HomeUncategorizedUnlocking New Smells – A Game-Changing Breakthrough in the World of Scents

Unlocking New Smells – A Game-Changing Breakthrough in the World of Scents

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The first molecular images of olfaction have opened the door to creating new smells.

Scientists from UC San Francisco (UCSF) have accomplished a significant breakthrough in our understanding of olfaction by producing the first 3D image at the molecular level of how an odor molecule activates a human odorant receptor. This achievement is a crucial advancement toward unraveling the intricacies of the sense of smell.

The findings, published in the journal Nature, are expected to rekindle interest in the science of smell, with far-reaching implications for fragrances, food science, and more. Odorant receptors, which are proteins situated on the surface of olfactory cells and bind to odor molecules, constitute half of the most diverse and extensive family of receptors in our bodies. A more comprehensive comprehension of them lays the groundwork for novel discoveries in a variety of biological processes.

“This has been a huge goal in the field for some time,” said Aashish Manglik, MD, Ph.D., an associate professor of pharmaceutical chemistry and a senior author of the study. The dream, he said, is to map the interactions of thousands of scent molecules with hundreds of odorant receptors, so that a chemist could design a molecule and predict what it would smell like.

“But we haven’t been able to make this map because, without a picture, we don’t know how odor molecules react with their corresponding odor receptors,” Manglik said.

A Picture Paints the Scent of Cheese

Smell involves about 400 unique receptors. Each of the hundreds of thousands of scents we can detect is made of a mixture of different odor molecules. Each type of molecule may be detected by an array of receptors, creating a puzzle for the brain to solve each time the nose catches a whiff of something new.

“It’s like hitting keys on a piano to produce a chord,” said Hiroaki Matsunami, Ph.D., professor of molecular genetics and microbiology at Duke University and a close collaborator of Manglik. Matsunami’s work over the past two decades has focused on decoding the sense of smell. “Seeing how an odorant receptor binds an odorant explains how this works at a fundamental level.”

To create that picture, Manglik’s lab used a type of imaging called cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), that allows researchers to see atomic structure and study the molecular shapes of proteins. But before Manglik’s team could visualize the odorant receptor binding a scent molecule, they first needed to purify a sufficient quantity of the receptor protein.

Odorant receptors are notoriously challenging, some say impossible, to make in the lab for such purposes.

The Manglik and Matsunami teams looked for an odorant receptor that was abundant in both the body and the nose, thinking it might be easier to make artificially, and one that also could detect water-soluble odorants. They settled on a receptor called OR51E2, which is known to respond to propionate – a molecule that contributes to the pungent smell of Swiss cheese.

But even OR51E2 proved hard to make in the lab. Typical cryo-EM experiments require a milligram of protein to produce atomic-level images, but co-first author Christian Billesbøelle, Ph.D., a senior scientist in the Manglik Lab, developed approaches to use only 1/100th of a milligram of OR51E2, putting the snapshot of receptor and odorant within reach.

“We made this happen by overcoming several technical impasses that have stifled the field for a long time,” said Billesbøelle. “Doing that allowed us to catch the first glimpse of an odorant connecting with a human odorant receptor at the very moment a scent is detected.”

This molecular snapshot showed that propionate sticks tightly to OR51E2 thanks to a very specific fit between odorant and receptor. The finding jibes with one of the duties of the olfactory system as a sentinel for danger.

While propionate contributes to the rich, nutty aroma of Swiss cheese, on its own, its scent is much less appetizing.

“This receptor is laser-focused on trying to sense propionate and may have evolved to help detect when food has gone bad,” said Manglik. Receptors for pleasing smells like menthol or caraway might instead interact more loosely with odorants, he speculated.

Just a Whiff

Along with employing a large number of receptors at a time, another interesting quality of the sense of smell is our ability to detect tiny amounts of odors that can come and go. To investigate how propionate activates this receptor, the collaboration enlisted quantitative biologist Nagarajan Vaidehi, Ph.D., at City of Hope, who used physics-based methods to simulate and make movies of how OR51E2 is turned on by propionate.

“We performed computer simulations to understand how propionate causes a shape change in the receptor at an atomic level,” said Vaidehi. “These shape changes play a critical role in how the odorant receptor initiates the cell signaling process leading to our sense of smell.”

The team is now developing more efficient techniques to study other odorant-receptor pairs and to understand the non-olfactory biology associated with the receptors, which have been implicated in prostate cancer and serotonin release in the gut.

Manglik envisions a future where novel smells can be designed based on an understanding of how a chemical’s shape leads to a perceptual experience, not unlike how pharmaceutical chemists today design drugs based on the atomic shapes of disease-causing proteins.

“We’ve dreamed of tackling this problem for years,” he said. “We now have our first toehold, the first glimpse of how the molecules of smell bind to our odorant receptors. For us, this is just the beginning.”

Reference: “Structural basis of odorant recognition by a human odorant receptor” by Christian B. Billesbølle, Claire A. de March, Wijnand J. C. van der Velden, Ning Ma, Jeevan Tewari, Claudia Llinas del Torrent, Linus Li, Bryan Faust, Nagarajan Vaidehi, Hiroaki Matsunami and Aashish Manglik, 15 March 2023, Nature.
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-05798-y

Funding: This work was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the UCSF Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research, funded in part by the Sandler Foundation. Cryo-EM equipment at UCSF is partially supported by NIH grants. For other funding, please see the paper.

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