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Richard axel biography

  • richard axel biography
  • In , he earned his A. Upon completion of his studies in Baltimore, Axel returned to Columbia and became a full professor there in In , Axel jointly worked with Linda Buck to publish a fundamental paper in which they described the very large family of about one thousand genes for odorant receptors.

    Richard axel nobel prize

    Axel and Buck have since worked independent of each other, and they have in several elegant, often parallel, studies clarified the olfactory system, from the molecular level to the organization of the cells. Independently, Axel and Buck showed that every single olfactory receptor cell expresses one and only one of the odorant receptor genes.

    Thus, there are as many types of olfactory receptor cells as there are odorant receptors. It was possible to show, by registering the electrical signals coming from single olfactory receptor cells, that each cell does not react only to one odorous substance, but to several related molecules — albeit with varying intensity. The finding that each olfactory receptor cell only expresses one single odorant receptor gene was highly unexpected.

    Axel and Buck continued by determining the organization of the first relay station in the brain. The olfactory receptor cell sends its nerve processes to the olfactory bulb, where there are some 2, well-defined microregions, glomeruli. There are thus about twice as many glomeruli as the types of olfactory receptor cells.