Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Marc Spehr is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Marc Spehr.


Nature | 2009

Formyl peptide receptor-like proteins are a novel family of vomeronasal chemosensors

Stéphane Rivière; Ludivine Challet; Daniela Fluegge; Marc Spehr; Ivan Rodriguez

Mammals rely heavily on olfaction to interact adequately with each other and with their environment. They make use of seven-transmembrane G-protein-coupled receptors to identify odorants and pheromones. These receptors are present on dendrites of olfactory sensory neurons located in the main olfactory or vomeronasal sensory epithelia, and pertain to the odorant, trace amine-associated receptor and vomeronasal type 1 (ref. 4) or 2 (refs 5–7) receptor superfamilies. Whether these four sensor classes represent the complete olfactory molecular repertoire used by mammals to make sense of the outside world is unknown. Here we report the expression of formyl peptide receptor-related genes by vomeronasal sensory neurons, in multiple mammalian species. Similar to the four known olfactory receptor gene classes, these genes encode seven-transmembrane proteins, and are characterized by monogenic transcription and a punctate expression pattern in the sensory neuroepithelium. In vitro expression of mouse formyl peptide receptor-like 1, 3, 4, 6 and 7 provides sensitivity to disease/inflammation-related ligands. Establishing an in situ approach that combines whole-mount vomeronasal preparations with dendritic calcium imaging in the intact neuroepithelium, we show neuronal responses to the same molecules, which therefore represent a new class of vomeronasal agonists. Taken together, these results suggest that formyl peptide receptor-like proteins have an olfactory function associated with the identification of pathogens, or of pathogenic states.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Essential Role of the Main Olfactory System in Social Recognition of Major Histocompatibility Complex Peptide Ligands

Marc Spehr; Kevin R. Kelliher; Xiao-Hong Li; Thomas Boehm; Trese Leinders-Zufall; Frank Zufall

Genes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), which play a critical role in immune recognition, influence mating preference and other social behaviors in fish, mice, and humans via chemical signals. The cellular and molecular mechanisms by which this occurs and the nature of these chemosignals remain unclear. In contrast to the widely held view that olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) in the main olfactory epithelium (MOE) are stimulated by volatile chemosignals only, we show here that nonvolatile immune system molecules function as olfactory cues in the mammalian MOE. Using mice with targeted deletions in selected signal transduction genes (CNGA2, CNGA4), we used a combination of dye tracing, electrophysiological, Ca2+ imaging, and behavioral approaches to demonstrate that nonvolatile MHC class I peptides activate subsets of OSNs at subnanomolar concentrations in vitro and affect social preference of male mice in vivo. Both effects depend on the cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNG) channel gene CNGA2, the function of which in the nose is unique to the main population of OSNs. Disruption of the modulatory CNGA4 channel subunit reveals a profound defect in adaptation of peptide-evoked potentials in the MOE. Because sensory neurons in the vomeronasal organ (VNO) also respond to MHC peptides but do not express CNGA2, distinct mechanisms are used by the mammalian main and accessory olfactory systems for the detection of MHC peptide ligands. These results suggest a general role for MHC peptides in chemical communication even in those vertebrates that lack a functional VNO.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Detection and avoidance of a carnivore odor by prey

David M. Ferrero; Jamie K. Lemon; Daniela Fluegge; Stan L. Pashkovski; Wayne J. Korzan; Sandeep Robert Datta; Marc Spehr; Markus Fendt; Stephen D. Liberles

Predator–prey relationships provide a classic paradigm for the study of innate animal behavior. Odors from carnivores elicit stereotyped fear and avoidance responses in rodents, although sensory mechanisms involved are largely unknown. Here, we identified a chemical produced by predators that activates a mouse olfactory receptor and produces an innate behavioral response. We purified this predator cue from bobcat urine and identified it to be a biogenic amine, 2-phenylethylamine. Quantitative HPLC analysis across 38 mammalian species indicates enriched 2-phenylethylamine production by numerous carnivores, with some producing >3,000-fold more than herbivores examined. Calcium imaging of neuronal responses in mouse olfactory tissue slices identified dispersed carnivore odor-selective sensory neurons that also responded to 2-phenylethylamine. Two prey species, rat and mouse, avoid a 2-phenylethylamine odor source, and loss-of-function studies involving enzymatic depletion of 2-phenylethylamine from a carnivore odor indicate it to be required for full avoidance behavior. Thus, rodent olfactory sensory neurons and chemosensory receptors have the capacity for recognizing interspecies odors. One such cue, carnivore-derived 2-phenylethylamine, is a key component of a predator odor blend that triggers hard-wired aversion circuits in the rodent brain. These data show how a single, volatile chemical detected in the environment can drive an elaborate danger-associated behavioral response in mammals.


Neuron | 2002

3-Phosphoinositides Modulate Cyclic Nucleotide Signaling in Olfactory Receptor Neurons

Marc Spehr; Christian H. Wetzel; Hanns Hatt; Barry W. Ache

Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-dependent phosphoinositide signaling has been implicated in diverse cellular systems coupled to receptors for many different ligands, but the extent to which it functions in sensory transduction is yet to be determined. We now report that blocking PI3K activity increases odorant-evoked, cyclic nucleotide-dependent elevation of [Ca(2+)](i) in acutely dissociated rat olfactory receptor neurons and does so in an odorant-specific manner. These findings imply that 3-phosphoinositide signaling acts in vertebrate olfactory transduction to inhibit cyclic nucleotide-dependent excitation of the cells and that the interaction of the two signaling pathways is important in odorant coding, indicating that 3-phosphoinositide signaling can play a role in sensory transduction.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2009

Olfactory receptors: G protein‐coupled receptors and beyond

Marc Spehr; Steven D. Munger

Sensing the chemical environment is critical for all organisms. Diverse animals from insects to mammals utilize highly organized olfactory system to detect, encode, and process chemostimuli that may carry important information critical for health, survival, social interactions and reproduction. Therefore, for animals to properly interpret and react to their environment it is imperative that the olfactory system recognizes chemical stimuli with appropriate selectivity and sensitivity. Because olfactory receptor proteins play such an essential role in the specific recognition of diverse stimuli, understanding how they interact with and transduce their cognate ligands is a high priority. In the nearly two decades since the discovery that the mammalian odorant receptor gene family constitutes the largest group of G protein‐coupled receptor (GPCR) genes, much attention has been focused on the roles of GPCRs in vertebrate and invertebrate olfaction. However, is has become clear that the ‘family’ of olfactory receptors is highly diverse, with roles for enzymes and ligand‐gated ion channels as well as GPCRs in the primary detection of olfactory stimuli.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Pheromonal recognition memory induced by TRPC2‐independent vomeronasal sensing

Kevin R. Kelliher; Marc Spehr; Xiao-Hong Li; Frank Zufall; Trese Leinders-Zufall

Detection and transduction of pheromonal signals by the mouse vomeronasal organ (VNO) is critical for the formation of a persistent memory required for mate recognition in the context of selective pregnancy failure (the Bruce effect). This pregnancy block can be mediated by peptide ligands of disparate major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules, but little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying this effect. Given the proposed key role of the transient receptor potential channel, TRPC2, in VNO signal transduction, we tested whether TRPC2 is essential for memory formation in the context of the Bruce effect. Surprisingly, the loss of the TRPC2 channel did not significantly influence memory formation, whereas surgical lesions of the VNO caused a profound deficit. Furthermore, field potential and single‐cell patch‐clamp recordings showed that TRPC2 is dispensable for the transduction of MHC peptide ligands by sensory neurons in the basal zone of the VNO. This indicates that a previously unrecognized TRPC2‐independent signal transduction mechanism in the VNO underlies the sensing of cues required for the formation of this pheromonal recognition memory.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2006

Odorant receptors and olfactory-like signaling mechanisms in mammalian sperm

Marc Spehr; Katlen Schwane; Jeffrey A. Riffell; Richard K. Zimmer; Hanns Hatt

Since their discovery in 1991, members of the odorant receptor (OR) family have been found in various ectopic tissues, including testis and sperm. It took, however, more than a decade for the first mammalian testicular ORs to be functionally characterized and implicated in a reproductively relevant scenario. Activation of hOR17-4 and mOR23 in human and mouse sperm, respectively, mediates distinct flagellar motion patterns and chemotactic behavior in various bioassays. For hOR17-4, receptor function and downstream signal transduction events are shown to be subject to pharmacological manipulation. Further insight into the basic principles that govern sperm OR operation as well as into the molecular logic that underlies OR-mediated signaling could set the stage for pioneering future applications in procreation and/or contraception.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2006

Parallel processing of social signals by the mammalian main and accessory olfactory systems

Marc Spehr; Jennifer Spehr; K. Ukhanov; Kevin R. Kelliher; Trese Leinders-Zufall; Frank Zufall

Abstract.The mammalian olfactory system has evolved complex mechanisms to detect a vast range of molecular cues. In rodents, the olfactory system comprises several distinct subsystems. Current interest has focused on the exact role that each of these subsystems plays in detecting molecular information and regulating chemosensorydependent behaviors. Here, we summarize recent results showing that the mouse main and accessory olfactory systems detect, at least in part, overlapping sets of social chemosignals. These findings give rise to a model that involves parallel processing of the same molecular cues in both systems. Together with previous work, this model will lead to a better understanding of the general organization of chemical communication in mammals and give a new direction for future experiments.


Nature | 2013

A juvenile mouse pheromone inhibits sexual behaviour through the vomeronasal system

David M. Ferrero; Lisa M. Moeller; Takuya Osakada; Nao Horio; Qian Li; Dheeraj S. Roy; Annika Cichy; Marc Spehr; Kazushige Touhara; Stephen D. Liberles

Animals display a repertoire of different social behaviours. Appropriate behavioural responses depend on sensory input received during social interactions. In mice, social behaviour is driven by pheromones, chemical signals that encode information related to age, sex and physiological state. However, although mice show different social behaviours towards adults, juveniles and neonates, sensory cues that enable specific recognition of juvenile mice are unknown. Here we describe a juvenile pheromone produced by young mice before puberty, termed exocrine-gland secreting peptide 22 (ESP22). ESP22 is secreted from the lacrimal gland and released into tears of 2- to 3-week-old mice. Upon detection, ESP22 activates high-affinity sensory neurons in the vomeronasal organ, and downstream limbic neurons in the medial amygdala. Recombinant ESP22, painted on mice, exerts a powerful inhibitory effect on adult male mating behaviour, which is abolished in knockout mice lacking TRPC2, a key signalling component of the vomeronasal organ. Furthermore, knockout of TRPC2 or loss of ESP22 production results in increased sexual behaviour of adult males towards juveniles, and sexual responses towards ESP22-deficient juveniles are suppressed by ESP22 painting. Thus, we describe a pheromone of sexually immature mice that controls an innate social behaviour, a response pathway through the accessory olfactory system and a new role for vomeronasal organ signalling in inhibiting sexual behaviour towards young. These findings provide a molecular framework for understanding how a sensory system can regulate behaviour.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

β-Arrestin2-Mediated Internalization of Mammalian Odorant Receptors

Anastasia Mashukova; Marc Spehr; Hanns Hatt; Eva M. Neuhaus

Odorant receptors comprise the biggest subfamily of G-protein-coupled receptors. Although the endocytic mechanisms of other G-protein-coupled receptors have been characterized extensively, almost nothing is known about the intracellular trafficking of odorant receptors. The present study describes the endocytic pathway of mammalian odorant receptors, which bind β-arrestin2 with high affinity and are internalized via a clathrin-dependent mechanism. After prolonged odorant exposure, receptors are not targeted to lysosomal degradation but accumulate in recycling endosomes. Odorant-induced odorant receptor desensitization is promoted by cAMP-dependent protein kinase A phosphorylation and is dependent on serine and threonine residues within the third intracellular loop of the receptor. Moreover, β-arrestin2 is redistributed into the dendritic knobs of mouse olfactory receptor neurons after treatment with a complex odorant mixture. Prolonged odorant exposure resulted in accumulation of β-arrestin2 in intracellular vesicles. Adaptation of olfactory receptor neurons to odorants can be abolished by the inhibition of clathrin-mediated endocytosis, showing the physiological relevance of the here described mechanism of odorant receptor desensitization. A better understanding of odorant receptor trafficking and additional insight into the molecular determinants underlying the interactions of odorant receptors with β-arrestin2 and other trafficking proteins will therefore be important to fully understand the mechanisms of adaptation and sensitization in the olfactory epithelium.

Collaboration


Dive into the Marc Spehr's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hanns Hatt

Ruhr University Bochum

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Fleck

RWTH Aachen University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge