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ACHEMS 2012 Annual Meeting PROGRAM Huntington Beach, California April 25-28, 2012 AChemS Association for Chemoreception Sciences

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Page 1: PROGRAM - Association for Chemoreception Sciences...ACHEMS 2012 Annual Meeting PROGRAM Huntington Beach, California April 25-28, 2012 AChemS Association for Chemoreception Sciences

ACHEMS2012 Annual Meeting

PROGRAMHuntington Beach, California

April 25-28, 2012

AChemSAssociation for Chemoreception Sciences

Program 2012_Layout 1 4/3/12 2:01 PM Page 1

Page 2: PROGRAM - Association for Chemoreception Sciences...ACHEMS 2012 Annual Meeting PROGRAM Huntington Beach, California April 25-28, 2012 AChemS Association for Chemoreception Sciences

www.pepsico.com

At PepsiCo, Performance with Purpose means delivering sustainable growth by investing in a healthier future for people and our planet. We will continue to build a portfolio of

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Because a healthier future for all people and our planet means a more successful future for PepsiCo.

PepsiCo is proud to support AChemS

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Page 3: PROGRAM - Association for Chemoreception Sciences...ACHEMS 2012 Annual Meeting PROGRAM Huntington Beach, California April 25-28, 2012 AChemS Association for Chemoreception Sciences

April 17-21, 2013Hyatt Huntington Beach, CA

AChemSAssociation for Chemoreception Sciences

35th Annual Meeting

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Science + TechnologyDelivering Flavour and Taste Technologies that Drive Sustainable Success

www.givaudan.com

Program 2012_Layout 1 4/3/12 2:01 PM Page 96

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4 | AChemS Program 2012

2012 AChemS Meeting Sponsors/Corporate Members . . . . . . . . . .5

2012 Annual Meeting Exhibitors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6

Awardees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8

Committees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10

Program at a Glance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11

Program in Detail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 Wednesday, April 25 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 Thursday, April 26 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 Friday, April 27 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37 Saturday, April 28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58 Author Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .77

Program at a Glance (Visual) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .86

Table of Contents

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Special Thanks | 5

The Association for Chemoreception Sciences extends

special thanks and appreciation for grant support from:

The National Institute on Deafness and

Other Communications Disorders

and the

National Institute on Aging, NIH

______________________________________________________________________

AChemS is also grateful for the generous

support of its corporate sponsors:

Diamond Level Sponsors

Platinum Level Sponsor

Silver Level Sponsors

______________________________________________________________________

A special thank you to Ghislaine Polak and the late Ernest Polak

for supporting the Polak Young Investigator Awards and the

Junior Scientist Travel Awards.

______________________________________________________________________

The Association for Chemoreception Sciences thanks our

Corporate Members for their support:

Special Thanks

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6 | AChemS Program 2012

Emerging Tech Trans, LLC Our Mission: Emerging Tech Trans, LLC is a fullservice concept, design, prototype, validation andquality-assured production company based inHummelstown, Pennsylvania. Our business is built on translation of academic research to businessdevelopment, which, in turn, serves research andtechnology development for university and industrialinvestigators. Please reach out to us to discuss howETT, LLC can assist in your science, healthcare orindustrial research needs. www.emergingtechtrans.com

Company representatives: Weidong Yang andSebastian Rupprecht

Noldus Information Technology, Inc.Noldus Information Technology (www.noldus.com)offers systems for the recording, tracking, coding, andanalysis of behavior and simultaneously recorded data. Our solutions include EthoVision XT, The ObserverXT, and DanioVision. Please visit our booth for a freedemonstration and information on how our solutionscan assist you in your research.

Company representatives: Wilant van Giessen and Marty Gillaman

2012 Annual Meeting Exhibitors

Exhibit Hours

Thursday, April 268:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. | 7:00 p.m. – 11:00 p.m.

Friday, April 278:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. | 7:00 p.m. – 11:00 p.m.

Saturday, April 288:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.

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Exhibitors | 7

Osmic Enterprises, IncOsmic Enterprises, Inc. produces and distributes theOLFACT™ Test Battery, a series of computerized teststo assess olfactory function. Tests include a thresholdtest, and identification test, a discrimination test, andan odor memory test. Stimuli are generated via aminiature olfactometer, with administration of the testsand recording of responses under computer control.

Company representatives: Lloyd Hastings and Bruce Johnson

Oxford University PressOxford University Press is a publisher of some of the most prestigious books and journals in theworld. They include Chemical Senses, the officialjournal of ACHEMS, ECRO and JASTS. Visit ourstand to pick up gratis copies of our journals, or go towww.oxfordjournals.org to read a free issue online.

Company representative: Jennifer Boyd

Sensonics, Inc.Sensonics, Inc. provides the medical, scientific andindustrial communities with the best smell and tastetests for assessing chemosensory function. Our SmellIdentification Test™ is the most widely usedquantitative olfactory test in the world.

Company representatives: Kyra Milnamow and Jerily Wissa

Tucker-Davis TechnologiesTDT provides integrated hardware/software solutionsfor sensory neuroscience, such as evoked responsesand single unit recording recordings. Stop by ourexhibit to preview the latest additions to the System 3platform, including our next generation multi I/Oprocessor, real-time data streamer, video tracker, andintegrated data acquisition with experiment control.

Company representatives: Victor Rush and Nafi Yasar

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8 | AChemS Program 2012

34th Annual Givaudan Lectureship — Givaudan CorporationDavid Anderson, PhD, California Institute of Technology

18th Annual Ajinomoto Award to Promising Young Researcher in the Field of GustationIchiro Matsumoto, PhD, Monell Chemical Senses Center

International Flavors and Fragrances Award for Outstanding Research on the Molecular Basis of TasteYuzo Ninomiya, PhD, Kyushu University

21st Annual Moskowitz Jacobs Award for Research in Psychophysics of Human Taste and Smell Juyun Lim, PhD, Oregon State University

Max Mozell Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Chemical SensesJohn Hildebrand, PhD, University of Arizona

The AChemS Young Investigator Award for Research in OlfactionRichard Benton, PhD, University of Lausanne

The Don Tucker Memorial Award (2011 Awardees)Rodrigo Pacifico, Northwestern UniversityMatthew Phillips, Yale University

The Polak awards are funded by the Elsje Werner-Polak Memorial Fund in memory of our niece gassed by the Nazis in 1944 at age 7: Ghislaine Polak and the late Ernest Polak

Polak Young Investigator Award RecipientsNing Cheng, NIH/NINDSTimothy Connelly, University of Pennyslvania School of MedicineDavid Gire, University of Colorado, Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell CenterDyan MacWilliam, University of California RiversideJeremy McIntyre, University of MichiganAnan Moran, Volen Center for Complex Systems

2012 Awardees

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Awardees | 9

We are pleased to announce that four 2012 Polak Junior Scientists Travel Fund Awards were given for this year’s Meeting.

AChemS Travel Fellowships for Diversity RecipientsFunded by a generous grant from the National Institute on Deafness and OtherCommunication Disorders and the National Institute on Aging, NIHMelissa Cervantez, San Diego State UniversityMavis Irwin, University of UtahAriell Joiner, University of MichiganVeronica Lopez, University of Maryland BaltimoreYasmin Marrero, Brandeis UniversityAlexia Nunez-Parra, University of MarylandBukola Oke, Tennessee State UniversityLisa Payton-Webber, Ball State University

AChemS Student Housing and Travel Award RecipientsFunded by the Polak Foundation: Ghislaine Polak and the late Ernest PolakDylan Barnes Elizabeth Gould Jennifer SaputraAnna-Luisa Bartmuss Wei He Gina SchlumbergerMuhammad Binyameen Luc Jaber Valentin SchrieverNadia Byrnes Yue Jiang Caroline SezilleRyan Carey Joseph Kam Ariana StickelTrevor Cessna Jessica Kyereme Antonia StrutzJennifer Chen Peter Lai Catherine SumidaJohn Corthell Yan Liu David WilsonEmmanuelle Courtiol Amanda McKenna Zev WisotskyLindsey Czarnecki Michael Miller Qi XiongRachel Dana Melissa Murphy Han XuJacquelyn Davis Valentina Perrotta Yiqun YuBrett DiBenedictis Matthew Phillips Sven ZielkeZachary Frenchek Shady RahayelTomomi Fujimaru Mark Sappington

2012 AChemS Annual Meeting logo created by Maartje Geraedts and Stephen Vigues

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10 | AChemS Program 2012

AChemS Executive Committee 2011-2012

President Timothy McClintock, PhD University of KentuckyPast President Don Wilson, PhD Nathan Kline Institute &

NYU School of MedicineSenior Advisor Scott Herness, PhD Ohio State UniversityPresident Elect Alan Spector, PhD Florida State UniversitySecretary Dana Small, PhD JB Pierce Laboratory/

Yale UniversityMembership Chair Steven Munger, PhD University of Maryland

School of MedicineProgram Chair Minghong Ma, PhD University of PennsylaniaTreasurer Carol Christensen, PhD Monell Chemical Senses CenterProgram Chair Elect Paul Breslin, PhD Monell Chemical Senses CenterSr. Councilor Kevin Daly, PhD West Virginia UniversityJr. Councilor Haiqing Zhao, PhD Johns Hopkins University

AChemS Program Committee 2011-2012

Minghong Ma, PhD (Chair) Don Katz, PhD Mark Stopfer, PhDMaik Behrens, PhD Frank Margolis, PhD Lisa Stowers, PhDPaul Breslin, PhD Hiro Matsunami, PhD Susan Travers, PhDNirupa Chaudhari, PhD Venky Murthy, PhD Matt Wachowiak, PhDDenise Chen, PhD Diego Rodriguez Gil, PhD Paul Wise, PhDJean-Francois Cloutier, PhD

MEETING EVALUATIONThe meeting evaluation is available online. Please visit www.achems.org to give us yourfeedback on the meeting. Your input helps AChemS’ leadership continue to offer qualityannual meetings and member services.

Committees

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Program at a Glance | 11

Program at a Glance

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

12:00 pm – 3:30 pm ACHEMS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETINGVista Ballroom

3:30 pm – 8:00 pm REGISTRATIONGrand Foyer

6:00 pm – 8:00 pm WELCOME BANQUET (Ticketed event)Partially sponsored by:Chair/Organizer: Lighthouse Courtyard*Inclement weather backup: Mariners Ballroom

8:00 pm – 9:00 pm WELCOME/AWARDS CEREMONYGrand Ballroom Salon D

9:00 pm – 10:00 pm GIVAUDAN LECTURE: NEURAL CONTROL OF AGGRESSION IN DROSOPHILAExclusively sponsored by: Chair/Organizer: Minghong MaDavid J. Anderson, Division of Biology, California Institute ofTechnology and Howard Hughes Medical InstituteGrand Ballroom Salon D

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12 | AChemS Program 2012

Thursday, April 26, 2012

7:00 am – 1:00 pm REGISTRATION6:30 pm – 7:30 pm Grand Foyer

7:30 am – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFASTGrand Foyer

8:00 am – 12:00 pm POSTER SESSION I: MULTIMODAL RECEPTION;CHEMOSENSATION & DISEASE; TASTE PERIPHERY;OLFACTION PERIPHERYHuntington Ballroom

9:00 am – 10:45 am SYMPOSIUM: THE FLAVOR OF THINGS TO COME:EXPECTATION & THE PROCESSING OFCHEMOSENSORY INFORMATIONExclusively sponsored by:Chair/Organizer: Alfredo FontaniniGrand Ballroom Salon D

10:45 am – 11:15 am BREAKGrand Foyer

12:00 pm – 1:00 pm LUNCHEON: ACHEMS TRAVEL FELLOWSHIPS FORDIVERSITY RECIPIENTS(Invitation Only)Vista Ballroom

1:00 pm – 4:05 pm INDUSTRY SYMPOSIUM: TASTE & SMELL INTRANSLATION: APPLICATIONS FROM BASICRESEARCHChair/Organizer: Mike MeredithGrand Ballroom Salon D

2:10 pm – 2:25 pm BREAKGrand Foyer

3:00 pm – 5:00 pm NIH WORKSHOP: FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES FOR THENEW INVESIGATORChair/Organizer: Barry DavisGrand Ballroom Salon C

4:15 pm – 6:00 pm INDUSTRY RECEPTION (Ticketed event)California Courtyard*Inclement weather backup: Vista Ballroom

Program at a Glance

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Program at a Glance | 13

7:00 pm – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION II: TRIGEMINAL SYSTEM; TASTECNS; NEUROIMAGING; OLFACTION CNSHuntington Ballroom

7:00 pm – 7:30 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

7:30 pm – 10:10 pm PRESIDENTIAL SYMPOSIUM: NEURAL EPIGENETICS & OLFACTIONChair/Organizer: Timothy McClintockGrand Ballroom Salon D

Friday, April 27, 2012

7:30 am – 12:00 pm REGISTRATION7:30 pm – 8:00 pm Grand Foyer

7:30 am – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFASTGrand Foyer

8:00 am – 9:45 am PLATFORM PRESENTATIONS: OLFACTIONChair/Organizer: Minghong MaGrand Ballroom Salon D

8:00 am – 12:00 pm POSTER SESSION III: OLFACTION DEVELOPMENT & CNS; HUMAN PSYCHOPHYSICS; TASTE PERIPHERYHuntington Ballroom

9:45 am – 10:00 am BREAKGrand Foyer

10:00 am – 12:25 pm SYMPOSIUM: CHEMICAL SENSES IN HEALTH & DISEASEChair/Organizers: Linda Bartoshuk and Hong WangGrand Ballroom Salon D

1:00 pm – 2:30 pm ACHEMS BUSINESS MEETINGGrand Ballroom Salon D

2:30 pm – 4:00 pm PLATFORM PRESENTATIONSPOLAK YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARD WINNERSChair/Organizer: Paul BreslinGrand Ballroom Salon D

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14 | AChemS Program 2012

3:30 pm – 4:00 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

4:00 pm – 5:00 pm WORKSHOP: CONSIDERING A CAREER IN INDUSTRY?THINGS YOUR MENTOR NEVER TOLD YOUChair/Organizers: Nancy Rawson and Linda FlammerGrand Ballroom Salon D

5:00 pm – 7:00 pm JOINT SOCIAL: CHEMOSENSORY ENTERPRISE &MENTORSHIP ALLIANCE (CHEMA) WITH INDUSTRYCAREERS WORKSHOPPartially sponsored by: Chair/Organizer: Suzanne SollarsLighthouse Courtyard*Inclement weather backup: Mariners Ballroom

7:00 pm – 8:00 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

7:00 pm – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION IV: CHEMICAL SIGNALING &BEHAVIOR; PSYCHOPHYSICS; CHEMOSENSATION &DISEASE; OLFACTION PERIPHERY; TASTE PERIPHERYHuntington Ballroom

8:00 pm – 9:45 pm SYMPOSIUM: WIRING NEURAL CIRCUITS IN OLFACTORY SYSTEMSChair/Organizers: Minghong Ma and Sandeep Robert DattaGrand Ballroom Salon D

Saturday, April 28, 2012

7:30 am – 12:00 pm REGISTRATION7:30 pm – 8:00 pm Grand Foyer

7:30 am – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFASTGrand Foyer

8:00 am – 9:45 am PLATFORM PRESENTATIONS: TASTEChair/Organizer: Nirupa ChaudhariGrand Ballroom Salon D

8:00 am – 12:00 pm POSTER SESSION V: TRIGEMINAL SYSTEM; BEHAVIORAND PSYCHOPHYSICS; ODORANT RECEPTORS &OLFACTION PERIPHERYHuntington Ballroom

9:45 am – 10:15 am REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

Program at a Glance, continued

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Program at a Glance | 15

10:00 am – 12:15 pm SYMPOSIUM: THE ROLE OF RESPIRATION INOLFACTORY & FLAVOR PROCESSINGChair/Organizers: Gordon Shepherd and Matthew PhillipsGrand Ballroom Salon D

12:30 pm – 2:30 pm CLINICAL LUNCHEON: BITTER TASTE, A MAJORDETERMINANT FOR FOOD PREFERENCES(Ticketed event)Chair/Organizer: Claire MurphyWolfgang Meyerhof, German Institute of Human NutritionVista Ballroom

3:00 pm – 3:30 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

3:00 pm – 5:10 pm SYMPOSIUM: MODULATION OF EARLY OLFACTORYPROCESSING BY INTERNAL PHYSIOLOGICAL STATESChair/Organizer: Jing WangGrand Ballroom Salon D

7:00 pm – 8:00 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

7:00 pm – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION VI: OLFACTION CNS; TASTEPERIPHERY & CNS; MULTIMODAL RECEPTIONHuntington Ballroom

8:00 pm – 9:00 pm IFF LECTURE — NEURAL AND MOLECULARMECHANISMS OF TASTE RECEPTION, TRANSMISSIONAND MODULATION: A SWEET (TASTE) STORY THATBEGAN WITH SIMPLE MENDEL’S LAWChair/Organizer: Alan SpectorExclusively sponsored by:Yuzo Ninomiya, Kyushu UniversityGrand Ballroom Salon D

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16 | AChemS Program 2012

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

12:00 pm – 3:30 pm ACHEMS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETINGVista Ballroom

3:30 pm – 8:00 pm REGISTRATIONGrand Foyer

6:00 pm – 8:00 pm WELCOME BANQUET (Ticketed event)Partially sponsored by: Huntington Ballroom

*Inclement weather backup: Mariners Ballroom

8:00 pm – 9:00 pm WELCOME/AWARDS CEREMONYGrand Ballroom Salon D

9:00 pm – 10:00 pm GIVAUDAN LECTURE: NEURAL CONTROL OFAGGRESSION IN DROSOPHILAChair/Organizer: Minghong MaExclusively sponsored by: David J. Anderson, Division of Biology, California Institute ofTechnology and Howard Hughes Medical InstituteGrand Ballroom Salon D

9:00 pm #1 Neural Control of Aggression in DrosophilaDavid J. Anderson1, Eric Hoopfer1, 2, Gerald M. Rubin2,Xiaoqing Han1, Liming Wang1. 1Division of Biology,California Institute of Technology and Howard HughesMedical Institute, Pasadena, CA, USA, 2Janelia FarmResearch Campus, Howard Hughes Medical Institute,Ashburn, VA, USA

Program in Detail

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Program in Detail | 17

WEDNESDAY

Thursday, April 26, 2012

7:00 am – 1:00 pm REGISTRATION6:30 pm – 7:30 pm Grand Foyer

7:30 am – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFASTGrand Foyer

9:00 am – 10:45 am SYMPOSIUM: THE FLAVOR OF THINGS TO COME:EXPECTATION & THE PROCESSING OFCHEMOSENSORY INFORMATIONExclusively sponsored by:Chair/Organizer: Alfredo FontaniniGrand Ballroom Salon D

Sensory perception is influenced by the state of the subject.Specific behavioral states are associated with different patterns ofcortical activity and, thus, with different responses to sensoryinputs. While a lot of work has focused on understanding howarousal and attention gate sensory information, little is known onthe effects of expectation. How does the anticipation of a specificstimulus prime the activity of sensory networks and biasresponses? Chemical senses are particularly suited for investigatingthis fundamental problem. Odors and tastes are seldom perceivedin isolation; they are often anticipated by cues and expected. In thespecific case of odors, they themselves can trigger expectationsabout imminent gustatory stimuli. This symposium will present thenewest results on the relationship between expectation and sensoryprocessing. It is intended as a cross-disciplinary forum, which willbridge rodent electrophysiology with human fMRI studies,olfaction with gustation. Noam Sobel will talk about expectationalinfluences on neural activity in the human olfactory epithelium, asmeasured with electrical recording, and in human olfactory cortex,as measured with fMRI. The presentation from Diego Restrepo will focus on electrophysiological experiments in alert rodentsexploring the functions of piriform cortex as both associative andolfactory cortex. Dana Small will present recent imaging results on top-down influences on central taste and flavor processing inhumans. Finally, Alfredo Fontanini will discuss how anticipatorycues influence the activity of gustatory cortex in rodents. The results presented will outline a new perspective on sensoryprocessing. Chemosensory areas will emerge as structures capable of performing complex integrations of sensory andanticipatory information.

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18 | AChemS Program 2012

9:00 am #2 Introduction

9:05 am #3 Context-dependent patterns of neural activity in the humanolfactory systemNoam Sobel1, Anat Arzi1, Anton Plotkin1, Sagit Shushan1, Tali Weiss1. 1Weizmann Institute of Science/Neurobiology, Rehovot, Israel

9:30 am #4 Rate and sniff-based odor coding in piriform cortex aredifferentially modulated by behavioral contextDiego Restrepo1, Jennifer Whitesell2, Wilder Doucette1, David Gire1. 1Department of Cell and Developmental Biology,Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell Center and NeuroscienceProgram, School of Medicine University of Colorado, Aurora, CO,USA, 2Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Rocky MountainTaste and Smell Center and Neuroscience Program, School ofMedicine University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA

9:55 am #5 Top-down modulation of central taste and flavorDana M Small1,2. 1The John B. Pierce Laboratory, New Haven, CT,USA, 2Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA

10:20 am #6 Effects of cue-triggered expectation on cortical processing of taste Alfredo Fontanini. Department of Neurobiology and Behavior,SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY, USA

10:45 am – 11:15 am BREAK Grand Foyer

12:00 pm – 1:00 pm LUNCHEON: ACHEMS TRAVEL FELLOWSHIPS FOR DIVERSITY RECIPIENTS (Invitation only)The Travel Fellowships for Diversity are funded by a generous grant from the NIDCD and NIAVista Ballroom

Program in Detail, continued

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Program in Detail | 19

THURSDAY

Poster Session I

8:00 am – 12:00 pm POSTER SESSION I: MULTIMODAL RECEPTION;CHEMOSENSATION & DISEASE; TASTE PERIPHERY;OLFACTION PERIPHERYHuntington Ballroom

1 AM #P1 Relationships between taste phenotypes and alcoholic beverageliking vary by beverage type – evidence of gene bymicroenvironment interaction? Alissa L. Allen, Nadia K. Byrnes, John E. Hayes. University ofPennsylvania/Food Science Department, University Park, PA, USA

2 AM #P2 Revisiting personality factors, capsaicin intensity, preferencefor spicy foods, and intakeNadia K Byrnes, Alissa L Allen, John E Hayes. Penn StateUniversity/Food Science Department, University Park, PA, USA

3 AM #P3 A Chemosensory Component in the 2012 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES): Adults Ages 40+ YearsValerie B Duffy1, Richard L Doty2, John E Hayes3, Shristi Rawal1,Howard J Hoffman4. 1University of Connecticut/Allied Health Sciences, Storrs, CT, USA, 2University of Pennsylvania School ofMedicine/Smell & Taste Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA, 3Pennsylvania State University/Food Science, University Park, PA,USA, 4NIH/NIDCD, Bethesda, MD, USA

4 AM #P4 The Effects of Infant Satiety and Mothers’ Feeding Style on Infants’ Food AcceptanceCatherine A Forestell, Engin Ege. The College of William &Mary/Psychology, Williamsburg, VA, USA

5 AM #P5 The Satiety Value of Sugar Free Orbit Bubblemint Chewing GumJack W Hirsch1, Michele O Soto2, Alan R Hirsch2. 1Adlai E. Stevenson High School, Lincolnshire, IL, USA, 2Smell & Taste Treatment and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL, USA

6 AM #P6 The Satiety Value of Flavored Ice in WomenHeng Chao Terry Wei, Alan R. Hirsch. The Smell & TasteTreatment and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL, USA

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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7 AM #P7 Does color modify the identification of associated flavors?Adam Y. Shavit1,2, Maria G. Veldhuizen1,3, Timothy G. Shepard1,Lawrence E. Marks1,2,4. 1John B. Pierce Laboratory, New Haven,CT, USA, 2Division of Environmental Health Sciences, YaleSchool of Public Health, New Haven, CT, USA, 3Department ofPsychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT,USA, 4Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven,CT, USA

8 AM #P8 Olfactory function in patients before and after temporal lobe resectionAntje Haehner1,3, Sophia Henkel1, Peter Hopp2, SusanneHallmeyer-Elgner3, Ulrike Reuner3, Thomas Hummel1. 1Smell & Taste Centre, Dept. of Otorhinolaryngology, Universityof Dresden Medical School, Dresden, Germany, 2SaxonianEpilepsy Center, Radeberg, Germany, 3Dept. of Neurology,University of Dresden Medical School, Dresden, Germany

9 AM #P9 Parosmia as symptom of lateralized posttraumatic olfactorydisorders - preliminary dataAntje Welge-Lüssen1, Caroline Bourgau1, Birgit Westermann2, Thomas Hummel3. 1Dept. of Otorhinolaryngology, UniversityHospital, Basel, Switzerland, 2Dept. of Neurosurgery, UniversityHospital, Basel, Switzerland, 3Dept. of ORL, Technical Universityof Dresden Medical School, Dresden, Germany

10 AM #P10 Affect Dependent Phantosmia Yuri L. Yakov, Alan R. Hirsch, Heng C.T. Wei, Svetlana Yakov. Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL, USA

11 AM #P11 A Quick, Non-Invasive, and Reliable Diagnostic Test forAlzheimer’s DiseaseJennifer J Stamps1, Linda M Bartoshuk1, Kenneth M Heilman2.1University of Florida Center for Smell and Taste, Gainesville,FL, USA, 2University of Florida Department of Neurology, Gainesville, FL, USA

12 AM #P12 Patterns of ERP Brain Activity During Odor IdentificationDiffer in Those at Risk for Alzheimer’s DiseaseCharlie D. Morgan1, Claire Murphy1,2. 1San Diego StateUniversity, Department of Psychology, San Diego, CA, USA, 2University of California Medical Center, San Diego, CA, USA

20 | AChemS Program 2012 Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s)

Poster Session I

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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THURSDAY

13 AM #P13 OERP differences as a function of age, the Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) ε4 allele, electrode site, and response type duringretrieval using odor labels in an odor-recognition memory taskLisa V. Graves1, Melissa R. Cervantez1, Amanda J. Green2, Charlie D. Morgan1, Claire Murphy1,2. 1San Diego State University,San Diego, CA, USA, 2University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA

14 AM #P14 Chemical intolerance in patients with rhinologic diseases Woo Yong Bae, Tae Kyung Koh. Dept. of Otorhinolaryngology, Dong-A University, Busan, Korea

15 AM #P15 Pain-relieving effect of olfactory exposure in patients with chronic back pain? Daniel Baum, Thomas Hummel, Antje Haehner. Smell & TasteClinic, Department of Othorhinolaryngology, University ofDresden Medical School, Dresden, Germany

16 AM #P16 Olfactory Dysfunction is Associated with Reduced Sexual AppetiteVolker Gudziol1, Silvia Wolff- Stefan2, Katja Aschenbrenner2,3,Peter Joraschky2, Thomas Hummel1. 1Smell and Taste Clinic, University of Dresden Medical School, Dresden,Germany, 2Department of Psychotherapy and Psychosomatic,University of Dresden Medical School, Dresden, Germany, 3The John B. Pierce Laboratory and Department of Psychiatry,Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA

17 AM #P17 Exercise is Associated with Lower Long-Term Risk of Olfactory ImpairmentCarla R. Schubert, Karen J. Cruickshanks, Mary E. Fischer,Barbara E.K. Klein, Ronald Klein, David M. Nondahl. University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health,Madison, WI, USA

18 AM #P18 Norepinephrine-responsive cells juxtaposed with the apical tips of taste buds Mani V. Kurian1, Nirupa Chaudhari1,2. 1Dept. of Physiology &Biophysics, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami,FL, USA, 2Program in Neurosciences, University of Miami MillerSchool of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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19 AM #P19 Dopamine-beta-hydroxylase and norepinephrine transporterimmunoreactivity in rat taste budsJenna A. Walton1,2, Ruibiao Yang1,2, John C. Kinnamon1,2. 1University of Denver/Department of Biological Sciences, Denver, CO, USA, 2Rocky Mountain Taste & Smell Center, Aurora, CO, USA

20 AM #P20 Serotonin’s modulatory effects in the rat taste bud facilitate the gustatory afferent neural responseLuc F. Jaber, Tamara Kolli, Fang-L. Zhao, Scott Herness. Division of Oral Biology, College of Dentistry, The Ohio State University,Columbus, OH, USA

21 AM #P21 Expression of NPY Family Genes in Lingual Cells: NovelAnatomical Domain and Physiological FunctionsMichael S. La Sala1, Maria D. Hurtado1, Andres Acosta1, Paola P. Riveros3, Bruce Baum3, Alicia Brown2, Cedrick D.Dotson2, Herbert Herzog4, Sergei Zolotukhin1. 1University ofFlorida Dept. of Pediatrics, Gainesville, FL, USA, 2University ofFlorida Depts. of Neuroscience and Psychiatry, Gainesville, FL,USA, 3Molecular Physiology and Therapeutics Branch, NationalInstitute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR), NationalInstitutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA, 4Garvan Institute ofMedical Research, Sydney, Australia

22 AM #P22 Analysis of Taste Information-coding Mechanisms in Gustatory NeuronsNaohiro Maeda1, Azusa Kurokawa1, Kurumi Yamamoto1, Chigusa Nagai1, Yoshiro Ishimaru1, Makoto Ohmoto1,2, Takumi Misaka1, Ichiro Matsumoto1,2, Keiko Abe1. 1Department of Applied Biological Chemistry, Graduate School of Agriculturaland Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, 2Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

23 AM #P23 Calcium-sensing Receptor Agonist Enhances Basic Taste Signaling in Mouse Taste BudsYutaka Maruyama1, Eriko Miura1, Stephen D. Roper2, Yuzuru Eto1.1Institute for Innovation, Ajinomoto Co., Inc., Kawasaki,Japan, 2Department of Physiology & Biophysics, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA

Poster Session I, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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Program in Detail | 23Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s)

THURSDAY

24 AM #P24 Sweet taste receptor ligand binding interactions andconformational studies by CD and NMR spectroscopy Ebru Selin Selen1, Marco Tonelli 2, James Radek1, Hongyu Rao1, Fariba Assadi-Porter1-2. 1University of Wisconsin, ComperativeBiomedical Sciences, Department of Biochemistry, Madison, WI,USA, 2University of Wisconsin, National Magnetic ResonanceFacility, Madison, Madison, WI, USA

25 AM #P25 The effects of the Itpr3 gene on taste-evoked responses in miceLisa A. Payton-Webber1, Rachel M. Dana1, Michael G. Tordoff2, Stuart A. McCaughey1. 1Ball State University, Muncie, IN,USA, 2Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

26 AM #P26 Taste-evoked chorda tympani responses in Fawn HoodedHypertensive and Brown Norway ratsRachel M. Dana1, Chandra M. Cherukuri1, Michael G. Tordoff2, Stuart A. McCaughey1. 1Ball State University, Muncie, IN,USA, 2Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

27 AM #P27 CD36 Contributes to, but is not Required for, Fatty AcidTransduction in the Taste SystemHan Xu, Douglas Holt, Timothy A. Gilbertson. Utah StateUniversity, Logan, UT, USA

28 AM #P28 Medium chain fatty acid transduction in mouse taste cells isTRPM5-independentYan Liu, Timothy A Gilbertson. Department of Biology, Utah State University, Logan, UT, USA

29 AM #P29 MUPP1 is a General Organizer for Olfactory SignalingSabrina Baumgart1, Fabian Jansen1, Ruth Dooley2, Marc Spehr3, Hanns Hatt1, Eva M Neuhaus4. 1Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum,Germany, 2Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland, 3RWTH-AachenUniversity, Aachen, Germany, 4NeuroScience Research CenterCharité, Berlin, Germany

30 AM #P30 Combinatorial and modular encoding of the mouse olfactorysignatures by major urinary proteins (MUPs): an overview of the past two decadesGennady A. Churakov1, Anatoly A. Philimonenko2, Elena M.Fedorova3, Irina I. Ermakova3, Sergey N. Novikov3. 1Institute ofExperimental Pathology/Molecular Neurobiology (ZMBE),University of Muenster, Muenster, Germany, 2Institute of MolecularGenetics, v.v.i., Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic,Prague, Czech Republic, 3I.P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology,Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint Petersburg, Russia

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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31 AM #P31 Unraveling the Mechanism Behind Scent-Marking in Male MiceAngeldeep Kaur, Lisa Stowers. The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA, USA

32 AM #P32 Morphological study on the glandular epithelium associatedwith the primordial vomeronasal organ in the lungfishShoko Nakamuta1,2, Nobuaki Nakamuta1,2, Kazumi Taniguchi3,Kazuyuki Taniguchi1,2. 1Iwate University/Laboratory of VeterinaryAnatomy, Morioka, Japan, 2Gifu University/United GraduateSchool of Veterinary Science, Gifu, Japan, 3KitasatoUniversity/Laboratory of Veterinary Anatomy, Towada, Japan

33 AM #P33 Characterization of the Domesticated Cat Vomeronasal 1 Receptor FamilyMichelle M Sandau, Nancy E Rawson. AFB International, Saint Charles, MO, USA

34 AM #P34 Evidence of singular response to round goby pheromoneswithin a sub-population sample of Perciformes species in theGreat Lakes regionCory L. Ochs, Alyson J. Laframboise, Warren W. Green, JenniferL. Smith, Barbara S. Zielinski. Dept. of Biological Sciences,University of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada

35 AM #P35 Deorphanization of human olfactory receptors by Luciferase and Ca-imaging methods: Differences & similaritiesKaveh Ashti Baghaei, Günter Gisselmann, Hanns Hatt. Ruhr-Universität Bochum/Cell Physiology Department, Bochum, Germany

36 AM #P36 Sequencing the olfactory receptor repertoireJoel D. Mainland1,2, Jason Willer2, Anna Lindstrand2, AndreasKeller3, Leslie Vosshall3,4, Nicholas Katsanis2, Hiroaki Matsunami2.1Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA, 2Duke University, Durham, NC, USA, 3The Rockefeller Univeristy,New York, NY, USA, 4Howard Hughes Medical Institute, New York, NY, USA

Poster Session I, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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THURSDAY

37 AM #P37 Exploring the variation in molecular receptive range amongmammalian olfactory receptorsSelvan Bavan, Jingyi Li, Vanessa Santos, Jakub Bartkowiak,Charles W. Luetje. Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology,University of Miami, Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA

38 AM #P38 First agonists of a human trace-amine associated receptor(TAAR) expressed in the human olfactory epitheliumIvonne Wallrabenstein, Sandra Zborala, Lea Weber, MarkusWerner, Günter Gisselmann, Hanns Hatt. Ruhr University Bochum/Cellphysiology, Bochum, Germany

39 AM #P39 Ectopic expression of human olfactory receptorsCaroline Flegel, Stavros Manteniotis, Sandra Ostholt, GuenterGisselmann, Hanns Hatt. Ruhr University Bochum/Cellphysiology,Bochum, Germany

40 AM #P40 Diffusion-based molecular dynamics of odorant binding inolfactory receptorsPeter C. Lai, Chiquito J. Crasto. University of Alabama atBirmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA

41 AM #P41 Ligand-Dependent Olfactory Receptor Selectivity for OlfactoryTransduction and ModulationYiqun Yu, Chunbo Zhang. Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, USA

42 AM #P42 drOlfCc1 is an Amino Acid Receptor with the HighestResponsiveness to IsoleucineChunbo Zhang1, Yiqun Yu1, Chen Tian1, Hiroaki Matsunami2. 1Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, USA, 2DukeUniversity Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

Program 2012_Layout 1 4/3/12 2:01 PM Page 25

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1:00 pm – 4:05 pm INDUSTRY SYMPOSIUM: TASTE & SMELL INTRANSLATION: APPLICATIONS FROM BASIC RESEARCHChair/Organizer: Mike MeredithGrand Ballroom Salon D

An exploration of recent key advances in the chemical senses of interest to industry scientists and also to basic scientists. The speakers will focus on two or a few recent advances in basicresearch that have potential applications. The speakers will takethe time to explain the basic science background behind theirexamples for an audience that cannot be expert in all relevantareas. The audience will include industry scientists and policymakers as well as basic scientists and students new to the field,interested in applications of basic research. The symposium willconclude with a round-table discussion with audienceparticipation. This year the focus is on oral and nasal trigeminalchemoreception, their interactions with taste and olfaction; andan unexpected overlap in chemesthetic and gustatorymechanisms. Our goal is to explore how collaborations betweenindustry and academic scientists can benefit both, butparticularly how basic-science expertise can contribute.

1:00 pm #7 Introduction: Taste and Smell in TranslationMichael Meredith, PhDFlorida State University, Tallahassee FL

1:03 pm Chemesthesis: The multisensory dimension of taste and flavorBarry Green, PhDJohn B. Pierce Foundation and Yale University, New Haven CT

1:36 pm Modulators of Salty and Umami Taste: Glycoconjugated Peptides and N-geranyl cyclopropylcarboximide Vijay Lyall, PhDVirginia Commonwealth University. Richmond VA USA

2:10 pm – 2:25 pm BREAKGrand Foyer

2:25 pm Feeling the burn: TRPA1 and the trigeminal detection of weak acidsEmily LimanUniversity of Southern California, Los Angeles CA

26 | AChemS Program 2012 Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s)

Program in Detail

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THURSDAY

2:58 pm Chemesthesis and the respiratory tract response. Pamela Dalton, PhDMonell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia PA

3:35 pm - 4:05 pm Round Table DiscussionThe symposium will be followed by the Industry Reception.

3:00 pm – 5:00 pm NIH WORKSHOP: FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES FOR THENEW INVESIGATORChair/Organizer: Barry DavisGrand Ballroom Salon CCome learn or get a refresher on how to compete for NIH funding.

4:15 pm – 6:00 pm INDUSTRY RECEPTION (Ticketed event)Chair/Organizer: Mike MeredithCalifornia Courtyard*Inclement weather backup: Vista Ballroom

An opportunity for industry participants to network with basic scientists including the distinguished speakers from the symposium.

7:00 pm – 7:30 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

7:30 pm – 10:10 pm PRESIDENTIAL SYMPOSIUM: NEURAL EPIGENETICS & OLFACTIONChair/Organizer: Timothy McClintockGrand Ballroom Salon D

The modification of chromatin is a general mechanism forregulating gene expression. The development of new tools hasexpanded the study of chromatin modification events to virtuallyall problems where changes in gene expression occur, providinginsight into heretofore unknown mechanisms. This symposiumfeatures four studies of famous developmental gene expressionproblems, involving odorant receptor gene choice in olfactoryneurons and the regulation of neurogenesis in neural stem cells,and one study of the equally famous problem of how fullydifferentiated neurons have adapted chromatin remodeling forcognitive functions that are susceptible to neurodegeneration.

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Program in Detail, continued

7:30 pm #8 Introduction

7:40 pm #9 Dnmt3a-dependent Non-promoter DNA Methylation FacilitatesTranscription of Neurogenic GenesHao Wu1, Volkan Coskun2, Jifang Tao2, Wei Xie3, Weihong Ge1, Kazuaki Yoshikawa4, En Li5, Yi Zhang6, Yi Eve Sun1,2. 1Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), Los Angeles, CA, USA,2Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, IntellectualDevelopment and Disabilities Research Center at Semel Institute forNeuroscience, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA, 3Molecular BiologyInstitute, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA, USA,4Laboratory of Regulation of Neuronal Development, Institute forProtein Research, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan, 5NovartisInstitutes for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA, USA, 6Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center,University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA

8:10 pm #10 Mechanisms of Odorant Receptor Gene SilencingJohn Ngai. Dept of MCB and Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute,University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA

8:40 pm #11 Epigenetic Regulation of Olfactory Receptor ExpressionStavros Lomvardas. UCSF/Anatomy, San Francisco, CA, USA

9:10 pm #12 Coding olfactionPeter Mombaerts. Max Planck Institute of Biophysics, Frankfurt,Germany

9:40 pm #13 Epigenetic Gene Regulation in Neurodegeneration and RepairJohannes Gräff, Li-Huei Tsai. Picower Institute for Learning andMemory, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, HowardHughes Medical Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,Cambridge, MA, USA

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Poster Session II

7:00 pm – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION II: TRIGEMINAL SYSTEM; TASTECNS; NEUROIMAGING; OLFACTION CNSHuntington Ballroom

1 PM #P43 Assessment of intranasal trigeminal chemosensitivity inpatients with olfactory dysfunctionYongxiang Wei1, Ling Yang2, Yuanyuan Ren1, Yichen Guo1, Kunyan Li1. 1Department of Otolaryngology Head & Neck Surgery,Beijing Chaoyang Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing,China, 2Center Laboratory, Beijing Tongren Hospital, CapitalMedical University, Beijing, China

2 PM #P44 Understanding the time course and quality of oral sensations from over-the-counter analgesicsSamantha M Bennett1,2, John E Hayes1,2. 1Pennsylvania StateUniversity/Department of Food Science, University Park, PA, USA,2Sensory Evaluation Center, University Park, PA, USA

3 PM #P45 Sucrose and Menthol Modulate Cough Reflex SensitivityJennifer A Louie1, Paul Breslin1, 2, Pamela Dalton1, Paul Wise1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA, 2RutgersUniversity, School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, New Brunswick, NJ, USA

4 PM #P46 The Effect of Smoking and Exposure to Tobacco Smoke on Cough ThresholdsJulie A. Mennella, Paul Wise, Susana Finkbeiner, Danielle R. Reed.Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

5 PM #P47 Solitary chemosensory cells in biopsies of human nasal mucosaHenry P Barham1,3,4, Marco Tizzano2,3,4, Catherine B Anderson1,3,4,Vijay R Ramakrishnan1,3,4, Todd T Kingdom1,3,4, Thomas EFinger2,3,4, Sue C Kinnamon1,3,4. 1Department of Otolaryngology,Aurora, CO, USA, 2Department of Cell & Developmental Biology,Aurora, CO, USA, 3Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell Center,Aurora, CO, USA, 4University of CO Denver School of Medicine,Aurora, CO, USA

6 PM #P48 Distribution of solitary chemosensory cells (SCCs) in the nasalmucosa of mice Mandy Scheibe1, Jessica Clark2, Adrian C. B. Meedeniya2, Alan Mackay-Sim2. 1Smell & Taste Clinic, Department ofOtorhinolaryngology, University of Dresden Medical School, Dresden, Germany, 2Eskitis Institute for Cellular & MolecularTherapies, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia

THURSDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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30 | AChemS Program 2012 Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s)

7 PM #P49 Nasal epithelium inflammation: involvement of solitarychemosensory cells after short term presentation of the irritating compound denatonium benzoateMarco Tizzano, Thomas E Finger. University of ColoradoDenver/Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell Center and Dept. Cell & Developmental Biology, Aurora, CO, USA

8 PM #P50 Chemosensory Brush Cells of the Trachea: Turnover, Proliferation and RegenerationCJ Saunders1, Thomas E Finger1, Susan D Reynolds2. 1Rocky MtnTaste & Smell Ctr, Neurosci Prog, Univ Colorado Anschutz MedCampus, Aurora, CO, USA, 2Dept of Pediatrics, National JewishMedical and Research Center, Denver, CO, USA

9 PM #P51 Biophysical Characterization of the Human Nociceptor Channel, hTRPA1Yuriy V. Bobkov1, Elizabeth A. Corey1, Kirill Y. Ukhanov1, Barry W. Ache1,2. 1Whitney Laboratory, Center for Smell and Taste, and McKnight Brain Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville,FL, USA, 2Depts. of Biology and Neuroscience, University ofFlorida, Gainesville, FL, USA

10 PM #P52 The involvement of TRP channels in trigeminal odour sensationJ. Kyereme1, M. Luebbert1,2, N. Schoebel3, H. Hatt1. 1Faculty of Biology and Biotechnology, Ruhr Universität Bochum,Universitätsstr. 150, 44780, Bochum, Germany, 2Ruhr UniversityResearch School, Bochum, Germany, 3Leibniz Reseach Center forWorking Environment and Human Factors, Ardeystr. 67, 44139,Dortmund, Germany

11 PM #P53 Microglial Responses After Injury of the Chorda Tympani NerveDianna L. Bartel, Thomas E. Finger. Rocky Mtn Taste & SmellCenter, Univ Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA

12 PM #P54 Biophysical, morphological, and synaptic properties ofintramedullary projection neurons in the rostral nucleus of the solitary tractJames A. Corson, Robert M. Bradley. University of Michigan,School of Dentistry, Biological and Material Sciences, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

Poster Session II, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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13 PM #P55 Morphology and Distribution of GFAP Labeled Elements in theDeveloping Solitary Tract and Nucleus of the Solitary TractSara L Corson1, Robert M Bradley1,2, Charlotte M Mistretta1.1Department of Biologic and Materials Sciences, School ofDentistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA,2Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, School ofMedicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

14 PM #P56 Neuropilin 1, Neuropilin 2 and calbindin expression in thedeveloping rat solitary tract and rostral nucleus of the solitary tractMiwon Kim1, Sara L Corson1, Charlotte M Mistretta1, Robert M Bradley1,2. 1Department of Biologic and MaterialsSciences, School of Dentistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor,MI, USA, 2Department of Physiology, School of Medicine,University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

15 PM #P57 Post-Oral Glucose Activates Central Taste Areas withDissociated Involvement of Parabrachial and AmygdalarProjections: Fos Immunohistochemistry in Rats WithAsymmetrical LesionsAndras Hajnal, Krisztian Toth, Han Li, Nelli Horvath, NikhilAcharya. Dept. of Neural & Behavioral Sciences, Penn StateUniversity, College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USA

16 PM #P58 Anorectic Signaling Pathway Mediated by Salivary PYYMaria D. Hurtado1, Andres Acosta1, Oleg Gorbatyuk2, Valeriy G.Sergeyev3, Cedrick D. Dotson4, Herbert Herzog5, SergeiZolotukhin1. 1Department of Pediatrics, University of Florida,Gainesville, FL, USA, 2Department of Molecular Genetics andMicrobiology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA,3Department of Medical Biotechnology, Udmurt State University,Izhevsk, Russia, 4Departments of Neuroscience & Psychiatry andCenter for Smell and Taste, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL,USA, 5Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Sydney, Australia

17 PM #P59 Anxiety- and depression-like behaviors with decreased braindopaminergic activity in rats with lingual nerve transectomyJ. W. Jahng, J. Y. Kim, E.Y. Park, J. Y. Lee, J. H. Lee. Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, Seoul National University School of Dentistry, Seoul, Korea

THURSDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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18 PM #P60 Mixture suppression of sweet and umami taste by quinine inthe mouse brain: Implications for taste codingJohn D Boughter, Kenichi Tokita. University of Tennessee HealthScience Center/Department of Anatomy & Neurobiology, Memphis, TN, USA

19 PM #P61 Taste responses of simultaneously recorded parabrachial andcortical neural ensembles in awake ratsMadelyn A. Baez-Santiago2,4, Emily Reid1, Anan Moran1, YasminMarrero1, Donald B. Katz1,2,3. 1Brandeis University/Psychology,Waltham, MA, USA, 2Brandeis University/Neuroscience Program,Waltham, MA, USA, 3Brandeis University/ Volen Center forComplex Systems, Waltham, MA, USA, 4BrandeisUniversity/Biology, Waltham, MA, USA

20 PM #P62 Characterization of gustatory event related potentials related to salt and sweet quality Anna-Luisa Bartmuss, Thomas Hummel, Neelima Gupta, Emilia Iannilli. Smell & Taste Clinic, Department ofOtorhinolaryngology, Technical University of Dresden, Dresden, Germany, Dresden, Germany

21 PM #P63 Brain correlates of mental imagery in “olfactorily” and“auditorily” creative thinkersMoustafa Bensafi, Pauline Joussain, Johan Poncelet, Lauranne Przybylski, Catherine Rouby, Barbara Tillmann. Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, Lyon, France

22 PM #P64 No effects of handedness on passive processing of olfactory stimuli: an fMRI studyMarie Gottschlich1, Katrin Lübke1,2, Johannes Gerber3, Bettina M.Pause2, Thomas Hummel1. 1Smell & Taste Clinic, Department ofOtorhinolaryngology, University of Dresden Medical School, Dresden, Germany, 2Institute for Experimental Psychology, Department for Biological Psychology and Social Psychology,Heinrich-Heine-University of Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany,3Department of Neuroradiology, University of Dresden Medical School, Dresden, Germany

Poster Session II, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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Program in Detail | 33Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s)

23 PM #P65 Dynamic Behavior of fMRI BOLD Signal in Olfaction: Curbing Habituation Effects and Identifying Associated Olfactory Neural Networks Prasanna R Karunanayaka1, Paul Eslinger2, Jian-Li Wang1, Chris Weitekamp1, Kathleen Gates3, Peter Molenaar3, Qing Yang1. 1Dept. of Radiology, Hershey, PA, USA, 2Dept. of Neurology,Hershey, PA, USA, 3Dept. of Human Development and FamilyStudies, State College, PA, USA

24 PM #P66 Olfactory habituation in the human brainJianli Wang1, Xiaoyu Sun1, Megha Patel1, Sarah Ryan1, Zachary Herse1, Qing X. Yang1,2. 1Penn State College ofMedicine/Radiology, Hershey, PA, USA, 2Penn State College of Medicine/Neurosurgery, Hershey, PA, USA

25 PM #P67 Complexity of odorant structure influences human olfactory cortex activity: an fMRI studyCaroline Sezille1, Amandine Chakirian1, Marc Thevenet1, Johannes Gerber2, Thomas Hummel2, Moustafa Bensafi1. 1Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, CNRS, Lyon, France,2University of Dresden Medical School, Dresden, Germany

26 PM #P68 Food craving studied by combined visual and olfactory stimulationMegha M Patel1, Susan K Lemieux2, Stephen J Wilson3, Rebecca L Corwin4, John E Hayes5, Joseph Stitt2, Anna S Engels2,3,Jianli Wang1, Jeff Vesek1, Qing X Yang1.6. 1Dept. of Radiology,Hershey, PA, USA, 2Social, Life, & Engineering Science Center,State College, PA, USA, 3Dept. of Psychology, State College, PA,USA, 4Dept. of Nutritional Sciences, State College, PA, USA, 5Dept. of Food Science, State College, PA, USA, 6Dept. ofNeurosurgery, Hershey, PA, USA

27 PM #P69 WITHDRAWN

28 PM #P70 Negative Olfactory Alliesthesia in Anxiety: An fMRI investigationElizabeth A Krusemark, Wen Li. University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA

THURSDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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29 PM #P71 Correlation between olfactory bulb volume and olfactoryfunction in children and adolescentsThomas Hummel1, Martin Smitka2, Stefan Puschmann1, Johannes Gerber3, Benoist Schaal4, Dorothee Buschhüter1. 1Univ of Dresden Med School, Dept of ORL, Smell & Taste Clinic,Dresden, Germany, 2Univ of Dresden Med School, Dept ofPediatrics, Dresden, Germany, 3Univ of Dresden Med School, Dept of Neuroradiology, Dresden, Germany, 4Centre de Gout,Dijon, France

30 PM #P72 Cholinergic modulation of olfactory bulb mitral/tufted cellglomerular odor responsesMax L. Fletcher. University of Tennessee Health Science Center,Memphis, TN, USA

31 PM #P73 Cholinergic modulation of sensory processing in the rodentolfactory bulbMarkus Rothermel1, Ryan M. Carey2, Matt Wachowiak1. 1Department of Physiology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, 2Department of Biomedical Engineering,Boston University, Boston, MA, USA

32 PM #P74 Expression of the Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Subtype α7 in Adult-Born Periglomerular CellsZachary T. Frenchek1, 5, Elizabeth Myers6, Mary T. Lucero1, 3, 4, Scott W. Rogers1, 2, 5. 1Interdepartmental Program in Neuroscience,University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, 2SLC-VA GRECC, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, 3 Department of Physiology, University ofUtah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, 4Brain Institute,University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, 5Department ofNeurobiology and Anatomy, University of Utah School ofMedicine, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, 6Division of Geriatrics,University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

33 PM #P75 α7-Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor: Role in Early Odor Learning Preference in Mice Jennifer L. Hellier1,2, Nicole L. Arevalo1,2, Lynelle Smith1,2, Ka-Na Xiong1,2, Diego Restrepo1,2,3. 1Cell & DevelopmentalBiology, Univ. of Colorado-AMC, Aurora, CO, USA, 2RockyMountain Taste & Smell Center, Univ. of Colorado-AMC, Aurora,CO, USA, 3Center for Neuroscience, Univ. of Colorado-AMC,Aurora, CO, USA

Poster Session II, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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34 PM #P76 Noradrenergic Modulation of Rhythmic Activity and SensoryProcessing in the Main Olfactory BulbQiang Nai1, Hongwei Dong1, Christiane Linster 2, Matthew Ennis1.1University of Tennessee, Memphis, TN, USA, 2Cornell University,Ithaca, NY, USA

35 PM #P77 Locus Coeruleus Activation Modulates Stimulus-Driven andSpontaneous Firing of MOB Granule Cells on Short and Long TimescalesHeike S. Demmer, Stephen D. Shea. Cold Spring HarborLaboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, USA

36 PM #P78 Anesthesia impacts the spontaneous and odor-inducedoscillatory activities in the mouse olfactory bulbClaire Martin, Hirac Gurden, Romain Chery. Imagerie etModélisation en Neurobiologie et Cancérologie (IMNC), UMR 8165, Universités Paris 7 et 11, Orsay, F-91405, France

37 PM #P79 WITHDRAWN

38 PM #P80 Short Axon cells provide both excitatory and inhibitory drive to the mitral/tufted cellsDinu F. Albeanu, Arkarup Banerjee, Fred Marbach, Matthew Koh. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, USA

39 PM #P81 Emergent spatially distributed synaptic clusters in a large-scalenetwork model of the olfactory bulbYuguo Yu1, Thomas S. McTavish1, Michael L. Hines2, Gordon M.Shepherd1, Michele Migliore3. 1Department of Neurobiology, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA, 2Department ofComputer Science, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA,3Institute of Biophysics, National Research Council, Palermo, Italy

40 PM #P82 Multiple memory traces after associative learning in the honey bee antennal lobeC Giovanni Galizia, Lisa Rath, Paul Szyszka. University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany

41 PM #P83 Periodic stimulation affects odor representations in antennal lobe of the moth Manduca sextaBenjamin Houot 1, Samuel Bradley1, Shreejoy Tripathy1,2, Erich M. Staudacher1, Kevin C. Daly1. 1Department of Biology,West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, USA, 2 Center for theNeural Basis of Cognition, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

THURSDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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42 PM #P84 Nitric Oxide Differentially Affects the Excitability of Subsets of Cultured Local Neurons from the Manduca Sexta Antennal LobeMichael A Miller, Mark R Higgins, Alan J Nighorn. Department of Neuroscience University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA

43 PM #P85 Mechanisms of calcium-mediated excitation and plasticity inprimary olfactory pathways of the honey beeDanielle T. Protas, Carsten Duch, Brian H. Smith. School of LifeSciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA

44 PM #P86 Pulse tracking of antennal lobe neurons is enhanced by input from the thoracic ganglia in Manduca sextaErich M. Staudacher1, Regina Tiede2, Joachim Schachtner2, Kevin C. Daly1. 1Dept. Biology, West Virginia University,Morgantown, WV, USA, 2FB Biologie, Philipps-Universität,Marburg, Germany

45 PM #P218 Inhibiting DNA methyltransferases during discriminationconditioning impairs recall of the conditioned olfactory associations in honey bees (Apis mellifera)Christina M. Burden1, Gro V. Amdam1,2, Brian H. Smith1. 1Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA, 2Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Aas, Norway

Poster Session II, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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Friday, April 27, 2012

7:30 am – 12:00 pm REGISTRATION7:30 pm – 8:00 pm Grand Foyer

7:30 am – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFASTGrand Foyer

8:00 am – 9:45 am PLATFORM PRESENTATIONS: OLFACTIONChair/Organizer: Minghong MaGrand Ballroom Salon D

8:00 am #13.5 Baleen Whales and Tubenose Seabirds — A Colossal Chemosensory Convergence?Julie C. Hagelin1, Janice M. Straley2, Lindsey B. Nielson3, Andy Szabo4. 1University of Alaska Fairbanks, Institute of ArcticBiology, Fairbanks, AK, USA, 2University of Alaska Southeast, Sitka, AK, USA, 3College of the Atlantic, Bar Harbor, ME,USA, 4University of Alaska Southeast, Juneau, AK, USA

8:15 am #14 Chemosensory Functions for Degenerin/Epithelial Sodium ChannelsYehuda Ben-Shahar, Xiaoling Gu. Washington University in St. Louis/ Biology, St. Louis, MO, USA

8:30 am #15 Computational Assessments of Olfactory Receptor Odorant InteractionsChiquito J Crasto, Peter C Lai. University of Alabama atBirmingham, Department of Genetics, Birmingham, AL, USA

8:45 am #16 Fasting induced-changes in the spatiotemporal representation of odors in the main olfactory bulbMounir Bendahmane1,2, Claire Martin1, Monique Caillol2, Christine Baly2, Hirac Gurden1. 1Imagerie et Modélisation enNeurobiologie et Cancérologie (IMNC), UMR 8165, UniversitésParis 7 et 11, Orsay, F-91405, France, 2Unité de Neurobiologie de l’Olfaction et Modélisation en Imagerie (NOeMI), Jouy en Josas, F-78350, France

9:00 am #17 Functional glomerular organization in the mouse accessoryolfactory bulbJulian P Meeks, Gary F Hammen, Diwakar Turaga, Timothy E Holy. Washington University School of Medicine Dept.of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Saint Louis, MO, USA

9:15 am #18 Chemosensory interactions in rat olfactory cortexJoost X Maier1,2, Donald B Katz1,2. 1Brandeis UniversityDepartment of Psychology, Waltham, MA, USA, 2BrandeisUniversity Volen National Center for Complex Systems, Waltham, MA, USA

FRIDAY

Program in Detail

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9:30 am #19 Lateral entorhinal cortex top-down modulation of odor coding in the piriform cortexDonald A Wilson1,2, WenJin J. Xu1,2, Benjamin A Sadrian1,2.1NKI/Emotional Brain Institute, Orangeburg, NY, USA, 2NYU School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA

9:45 am – 10:00 am BREAKGrand Foyer

10:00 am – 12:25 pm SYMPOSIUM: CHEMICAL SENSES IN HEALTH & DISEASEChair/Organizer: Linda Bartoshuk and Hong WangGrand Ballroom Salon D

The chemical senses are intertwined with our everyday life andintimately related to health and disease. Chemosensory dysfunctionoccurs in a variety of conditions, including diseases, aging, andrepeated hazardous environmental exposures. Yet, our knowledgeof the extent of chemosensory abnormalities, as well as theunderlying mechanisms for their development, is still limited. In this symposium, we bring together a group of investigators topresent their latest research on this topic. This symposium willcover recent clinical researches on taste and smell disorders. Dr. Valerie Duffy will present her latest research on taste genepolymorphism and its influence on food intake and nutrition. Dr. Derek Snyder will discuss the use of anesthesia to simulatenerve damage and Dr. Bartoshuk will discuss clinical damage to the chorda tympani nerve from otitis media and to theglossopharyngeal nerve from tonsillectomy. Dr. Wang will discuss the role of activation of inflammatory responses in tastebuds in taste dysfunction. Drs. Murphy and Doty will discussneurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’sdiseases and Dr. Pamela Dalton will talk about the impact ofhazardous environmental exposures on the chemical senses.

10:00 am #20 Introduction

10:05 am #21 Taste Gene Polymorphism, Dietary Behaviors and HealthValerie B Duffy. University of Connecticut/Allied Health Sciences,Storrs, CT, USA

10:25 am #22 Experimental Models of Compensation Following Regional Oral Sensory DamageDerek J. Snyder1, Frank A. Catalanotto2, Linda M. Bartoshuk2. 1San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA, 2University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA

Program in Detail, continued

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10:45 am #23 Clinical Examples of Damage to Taste Nerves: Chorda Tympani and Glossopharyngeal NervesLinda M. Bartoshuk1, Derek J. Snyder1,2, Frank A. Catalanotto1,Howard J. Hoffman3, Henrietta I. Logan1. 1University of FloridaCenter for Smell and Taste, Gainesville, FL, USA, 2San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA, 3NIDCD, NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA

11:05 am #24 Taste Alterations in Inflammatory Disease ModelsHong Wang. Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

11:25 am #25 Neuroimaging of Chemosensory DysfunctionClaire Murphy1,2, Lori Haase1,2, Charlie D Morgan2, Erin Green1,2, Joel Kowalewski2, Jessica Bartholow2, Roberto Zamora2, John P Hegarty II2, Aaron Jacobson1,2. 1San Diego State Universityand the University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA,2San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA

11:45 am #26 Sensory Alterations in Early Parkinson’s DiseaseRichard L. Doty1,2, Allen Osman1,2, Emma Harmon1,2, JacobDubroff1,3, Jennifer Rotz1,2, Michele Morris1,2, James Wilson1,4,Fidias E. Leon-Sarmiento1,2, Andrew Siderowf1,4, Laura Balcer1,4,Andrew Newberg1,3, Paul Moberg1,5, Bruce Turetsky1,5, James W.Hall1,6, Neil Shepard1,7, Gui-Shang Ying1,4. 1Smell & Taste Center,University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA, 2Department of Otorhinolarygnology: Head & Neck Surgery, University ofPennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA, 3Department of Radiology,University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA, 4Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA,5Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania,Philadelphia, PA, USA, 6Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA, 7Department of Otolaryngology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

12:05 am #27 Modulation Of Airway Defense Functions From Environmental Chemical ExposurePamela Dalton. Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

1:00 pm – 2:30 pm ACHEMS BUSINESS MEETINGGrand Ballroom Salon D

FRIDAY

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8:00 am – 12:00 pm POSTER SESSION III: OLFACTION DEVELOPMENT & CNS; HUMAN PSYCHOPHYSICS; TASTE PERIPHERYHuntington Ballroom

1 AM #P87 The Role of Primary Cilia in the Regenerative Properties ofOlfactory Basal Stem CellsAriell M. Joiner, Jeremy C. McIntyre, Jeffrey R. Martens.Department of Pharmacology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

2 AM #P88 Role of Neogenin in Olfactory Epithelium DevelopmentJoseph W.K. Kam1,2, David da Dilva1,2, Jean-Francois Cloutier1,2.1Montreal Neurological Institue, Department of Neurology andNeurosurgery, Montreal, QC, Canada, 2McGill University,Montreal, QC, Canada

3 AM #P89 Is Olfactory Neural Stem Activity Perturbed in Alzheimer’s Disease?Athena Chou, Connor Keller, Nicole Janzen, Jane A. Roskams.Department of Zoology, Life Sciences Centre, UBC, 2350 HealthSciences Mall, Vancouver, BC, Canada

4 AM #P90 Functional and Molecular Characterization of the CellTurnover in the Olfactory SystemIvan Manzini1,2, Josua Kuttler1, Thomas Hassenklöver1,2. 1Institute of Physiology, Neurophysiology and Cellular Biophysics,Göttingen, Germany, 2DFG Research Center for MolecularPhysiology of the Brain (CMPB), Göttingen, Germany

5 AM #P91 Effect of Vitamin A Deficiency on Olfactory Marker ProteinExpression in Postnatal Mouse Olfactory Neurons Bukola A Oke, Mary Ann Asson-Batres. Tennessee StateUniversity, Nashville, TN, USA

6 AM #P92 Naris Occlusion Effects Turbinate DevelopmentElke Weiler1, Johannes Seeger1, David Coppola2. 1University ofLeipzig, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Center of Pathology and Anatomy, Institute of Veterinary-Anatomy, Leipzig, Germany,2Randolph-Macon College/Department of Biology, Ashland, VA, USA

Poster Session III

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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7 AM #P93 Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Expression in the MainOlfactory Epithelium and Olfactory BulbMelissa C. Johnson, Carlos A. Cano, Tanielle L. Brew, KimLoberbaum, Heidi Lilley. Department of Biology, University of West Georgia, Carrollton, GA, USA

8 AM #P94 Defective Olfactory Sensory Neuron Targeting After NerveInjury in Proteolipid Protein Null MiceElizabeth Gould, Ernesto Salecedo, Wendy Macklin, Diego Restrepo. Universty of Colorado School of Medicine,Denver, CO, USA

9 AM #P95 High-fat diet or genetically-induced obesity reduces the number of olfactory sensory neurons and their axonal projectionsNicolas Thiebaud1, Melissa C. Johnson2, Alana M. Gale3, Debra A.Fadool1,4. 1The Florida State University, Department of BiologicalSciences, Tallahassee, FL, USA, 2University of West Georgia,Department of Biology, Carrolton, GA, USA, 3Larry A. Ryle HighSchool, Union, KY, USA, 4The Florida State University, Programsin Neuroscience and Molecular Biophysics, Tallahassee, FL, USA

10 AM #P96 Wnt5 and DRL Regulate Dendritic Targeting in DrosophilaOlfactory Map Formation Huey Hing1, Yuping Wu2, Jasprina Noordermeer3, Lee Fradkin3.1SUNY Brockportport/Biology, Brockport, NY, USA, 2StowersInstitute, Kansas City, KS, USA, 3Leiden University MedicalCenter, Leiden Netherlands

11 AM #P97 How many colors do you need to paint an olfactory map?Alexei Koulakov, Brian Kolterman, Toma Marinov. Cold SpringHarbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, USA

12 AM #P98 Composition of the Olfactory Bulb during Postnatal Development in Mink Willi Bennegger1, Elke Weiler2. 1Maria-von-Linden-Schule,Heckentalstraße 86, D-89518 Heidenheim, Germany, 2Faculty ofMedicine, Institute of Anatomy, Department of Neuroimmunology,University of Leipzig, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany

13 AM #P99 Postnatal requirement of Rac1 for mitral cell dendriticdevelopmentJason Estep, Matthew Mahavongtrakul, Christine Chaimanont, Qizhi Gong. University of California at Davis, School of Medicine,Department of Cell Biology and Human Anatomy, Davis, CA, USA

FRIDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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14 AM #P100 Using the mouse olfactory system as a new model to studyTraumatic Brain InjuryElizabeth L. Steuer1,2,3, Michele L. Schaefer1,2,3, LeonardoBelluscio1,2,3. 1NIH/NINDS, Bethesda, MD, USA, 2Henry M.Jackson Foundation, Bethesda, MD, USA, 3Center forNeuroscience and Regenerative Medicine, Bethesda, MD, USA

15 AM #P101 Increased sensitivity and decreased selectivity to odorants incontrolled cortical impact miceZhishang Zhou1,2, Elizabeth Steuer1,2, Leonardo Belluscio1,2. 1National Institute of Neurological Disorders andStroke/Developmental Neural Plasticity Section, Bethesda, MD,USA, 2Henry Jackson Foundation/Center for Neuroscience andRegenerative Medicine, Bethesda, MD, USA

16 AM #P102 Blocking the lateral olfactory tract in vivo alters spontaneousactivity in the main olfactory bulb of the ratNeil C. Ford, Edwin R. Griff. University of Cincinnati, Department of Biological Sciences, Cincinnati, OH, USA

17 AM #P103 WITHDRAWN

18 AM #P104 PAC1R is Present and Functional before the Maturation ofGranule Cells in Mouse Olfactory BulbMavis A Irwin, Lucero T Mary. Department of Physiology, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

19 AM #P105 Kv1.3 Channel Activity and GABAergic Signaling are likelyMediators of Glucosensing in Mitral CellsSuk-Hee Cho1,2, Kristal Tucker1,2, Michael Henderson2, Debra Ann Fadool1,2,3. 1The Florida State University, Program inNeuroscience, Tallahassee, FL, USA, 2The Florida StateUniversity, Department of Biological Science, Tallahassee, FL,USA, 3The Florida State University, Molecular Biophysics, Tallahassee, FL, USA

20 AM #P106 Role of Intraglomerular Inhibition in Shaping Responses toDynamic Olfactory InputRyan M Carey1, William Erik Sherwood2, Alla Borisyuk2, Matt Wachowiak1,3. 1Department of Biomedical Engineering,Boston University, Boston, MA, USA, 2Department of Mathematics,University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, 3Department of Physiology and Brain Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

Poster Session III, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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21 AM #P107 A novel array design that incorporates tetrode recordings with optogenetic stimulationQuang N Dang1,2, Jamie Costabile2,3, Elizabeth Stubblefield2,3, Saif Al-juboori4, Thomas Bozza5,6, Tim Lei4, Gidon Felsen2,3, Diego Restrepo 1,2, David Gire1,2. 1Department of Cell andDevelopmental Biology, School of Medicine University ofColorado, Aurora, CO, USA, 2Rocky Mountain Taste and SmellCenter and Neuroscience Program, School of Medicine Universityof Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA, 3Department of Physiology andBiophysics, School of Medicine University of Colorado, Aurora,CO, USA, 4Department of Electrical Engineering, University ofColorado Denver, Denver, CO, USA, 5Janelia Farm ResearchCampus, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Ashburn, VA,USA, 6Department of Neurobiology, Northwestern University,Evanston, IL, USA

22 AM #P108 Odor representations selectively imaged from inhibitoryinterneurons and output neurons of the mouse olfactory bulbMatt Wachowiak, Markus Rothermel, Marta Diaz-Qeusada,Daniela Brunert, Mike Economo. University of Utah Department of Physiology and Brain Institute, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

23 AM #P109 Modulation of the spatial representation of odors by anolfactory associative learning in the mouse olfactory bulbRomain Chery, Frédéric Pain, Hirac Gurden, Claire Martin.Imagerie et Modélisation en Neurobiologie et Cancérologie(IMNC), UMR 8165, Universités Paris 7 et 11, Orsay, F-91405, France

24 AM #P110 Odorant Exposure Can Decorrelate Primary OdorRepresentations and Improve Odor Discrimination in Adult MiceMarley D. Kass, Andrew H. Moberly, Stephanie A. Guang, Michelle C. Rosenthal, John P. McGann. RutgersUniversity/Psychology Department, New Brunswick, NJ, USA

25 AM #P111 Odour Specificity and Response Characteristics of BulbarNeurons Linking Olfaction to LocomotionWarren W. Green1, Cory L. Ochs1, Huiming Zhang1, Weiming Li2,Réjean Dubuc3,4, Barbara S. Zielinski1. 1Department of BiologicalSciences, University of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada,2Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State University,East Lansing, MI, USA, 3Groupe de Recherche sur le SystèmeNerveux Central, Département de Physiologie, Université deMontréal, Montréal, QC, Canada, 4Département de Kinésiologie,Université du Québec à Montréal, Montréal, QC, Canada

FRIDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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26 AM #P112 Inhibitory Inputs onto Granule Cells in the Accessory Olfactory BulbAlexia Nunez-Parra, Ricardo C Araneda. NACS Program &Biology Department, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA

27 AM #P113 Higher anxiety is associated with better odor recallperformance in apolipoprotein E ε4 negative adults, but not ε4 positive adultsEmily Bower1, Claire Murphy1,2. 1San Diego StateUniversity/Department of Psychology, San Diego, CA, USA, 2University of California San Diego/Department ofOtolaryngology, San Diego, CA, USA

28 AM #P114 The Influence of Fragrance on Salivary Alpha-Amylase andCortisol Reactivity to Acute Stress. A Pilot StudyAlba T. Cilia, Raphael K. L. Kang. Takasago Int’l Corp, Rockleigh, NJ, USA

29 AM #P115 The Influence of Verbal Processes on the Relationship Between Odor Naming and MemoryTrevor C. Cessna, Robert A. Frank. University of Cincinnati,Cincinnati, OH, USA

30 AM #P116 Swiss identity smells like chocolate: Accessible social identities shape olfactory perceptionGéraldine Coppin1,2, Sylvain Delplanque1,2, Bastiaan Oud1,3,Christian Margot4, David Sander1,2, Jay J. Van Bavel5. 1Swiss Center for Affective Sciences, Geneva, Switzerland,2University of Geneva, Department of Psychology, E3 Lab,Geneva, Switzerland, 3Department of Economics & Laboratory for Social and Neural Systems Research, University of Zürich,Zürich, Switzerland, 4Firmenich S.A., Geneva, Geneva,Switzerland, 5New York University, Department of Psychology, New York, NY, USA

31 AM #P117 Retronasal identifications of vapor-phase 18-carbon fatty acidsTariq Chukir1, Bruce P Halpern2. 1Weill Cornell Medical College, Doha, Qatar, 2Cornell University, Departments of Psychology andNeurobiology and Behavior, Ithaca, NY, USA

Poster Session III, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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32 AM #P118 Concentration at Detection as an Inappropriate Index ofChemosensory PotencyWilliam S Cain1, J Enrique Cometto-Muñiz1, Michael H Abraham2,Roland Schmidt1. 1UC San Diego/Surgery, La Jolla, CA, USA,2University College London/Chemistry, London, United Kingdom

33 AM #P119 Response time for odor localization and identificationJohannes Frasnelli1, Luc Keita1, Valérie LaBuissonnière-Ariza1,2, Franco Lepore1,2. 1CERNEC, Université de Montréal, Montréal, QC, Canada, 2CHU Ste. Justine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, QC, Canada

34 AM #P120 Olfactory Environment Influences Close Relationships through Multiple Methods of MeasurementRobin J Freyberg, Melissa G Bart. Stern College for Women, Department of Psychology, New York, NY, USA

35 AM #P121 The Effects of Aroma of Jasmine On Major League Baseball PlayersAlfred S Goldyne1, Jack W Hirsch2, Alan R Hirsch2, Scott BPalmer3. 1The Chicago Medical School at Rosalind FranklinUniversity of Medicine and Science, North Chicago, IL,USA, 2Smell and Taste Research Foundation, Chicago, IL,USA, 3Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA

36 AM #P122 Effect of Lavender Odor on Reaction Time of 7th and 8th GradersCamryn Hirsch, Alan R Hirsch. Smell & Taste Treatment andResearch Foundation, Chicago, IL, USA

37 AM #P123 K14+ progenitors yield Glial-like and Receptor cells, not neuron-like Presynaptic cells of taste buds Gennady Dvoryanchikov1, Isabel Perea-Martinez1, NirupaChaudhari1,2. 1Department of Physiology and Biophysics,University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL,USA, 2Program in Neurosciences, University of Miami MillerSchool of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA

FRIDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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38 AM #P124 Hedgehog-responding cells in taste papillae are progenitors of lingual taste bud cells Hong-Xiang Liu1, Alexandre Ermilov2, Andrzej Dlugosz2,3, Charlotte M Mistretta1. 1Department of Biologic and MaterialsSciences, School of Dentistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor,MI, USA, 2Department of Dermatology, Medical School, Universityof Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA, 3Department of Cell andDevelopmental Biology, Medical School, University of Michigan,Ann Arbor, MI, USA

39 AM #P125 Chemotherapy Drugs Induce Apoptosis and Decrease theNumber of Progenitor Cells in the Taste EpitheliumAmy Gowing, Pu Feng, Janice Chou, Jinghua Chai, Hong Wang.Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

40 AM #P126 Endogenous Gustatory Response and Properties of ImmortalizedHuman Taste Cell Lines from Lingual EpitheliumAndreas Hochheimer, Michael Krohn, Holger Zinke. B.R.A.I.N AG,Zwingenberg, Germany

41 AM #P127 β-defensin 1 expression in the peripheral taste systemDevaki Kumarhia, Lynnette McCluskey. Georgia Health SciencesUniversity/Institute of Molecular Medicine and Genetics, Augusta, GA, USA

42 AM #P128 Regulatory roles of the BMP receptor Acvr1 in lingual mesenchyme in the development of tongue and gustatory papillaeHong-Xiang Liu, Yoshihiro Komatsu, Yuji Mishina, Charlotte M.Mistretta. Department of Biologic and Materials Sciences, School ofDentistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

43 AM #P129 Characterization of Y Receptors Expression in Salivary Glands(SG) and Modulation of Feeding Behavior by SG Gene Delivery Maria D. Hurtado1, Andres Acosta1, Paola P. Riveros2, Bruice Baum2,Alicia Brown3, Cedrick D. Dotson3, Herbert Herzog4. 1University ofFlorida, Pediatrics, Gainesville, FL, USA, 2NIH/NIDCR, MolecularPhysiology and Therapeutics Branch, Bethesda, MD, USA,3University of Florida, Neuroscience, Gainesville, FL, USA, 4GarvanInstitute of Medical Research, Neuroscience, Sydney, Australia

44 AM #P130 Effect of Maternal Diet on the Fat Taste Transduction Pathway of Male Offspring Dane R. Hansen1, Malcolm Daniels2, Timothy A. Gilbertson1. 1Utah State University, Logan, UT, USA, 2Kalamazoo College,Kalamazoo, MI, USA

Poster Session III, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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2:30 pm – 4:00 pm PLATFORM PRESENTATIONS — POLAK YOUNGINVESTIGATOR AWARD WINNERSChair/Organizer: Paul BreslinGrand Ballroom Salon D

2:30 pm #28 Olfactory Behavior Correlates with APP-induced CircuitDisruption and RecoveryNing Cheng, Leonardo Belluscio. NIH/NINDS, Bethesda, MD, USA

2:45 pm #29 Therapeutic gene rescue of a mammalian ciliopathy induced anosmiaJeremy C McIntyre1, Ariell Joiner1, Corely L. Williams1, Paul M.Jenkins1, Dyke P. McEwen1, Bradley K. Yoders2, Randall R. Reed3,Jeffrey R. Martens1. 1University of Michigan, Deparmtent ofPharmacology, Ann Arbor, MI, USA, 2University of Alabama atBirmingham, Deparment of Cell Biology, Birmingham, AL, USA,3Johns Hopkins University, Department of Molecular Biology andGenetics, Baltimore, MD, USA

3:00 pm #30 G-protein-coupled Odorant Receptors Underlie Mechanosensitivity in Olfactory Sensory Neurons Timothy Connelly1, Xavier Grosmaitre1, Agnes Savigner1,Zhenshan Wang2, Daniel Storm2, Minghong Ma1. 1University ofPennyslvania School of Medicine, Department of Neuroscience,Philadelphia, PA, USA, 2University of Washington School ofMedicine, Department of Pharmacology, Seattle, WA, USA

3:15 pm #31 Precise optical control of olfactory sensory neuron inputelucidates olfactory bulb circuit function in awake, freelymoving miceDavid Gire1,3, Quang N Dang1,3, Jamie Costabile2,3, ThomasBozza4,5, Gidon Felsen2,3, Diego Restrepo1,3. 1Department of Celland Developmental Biology, School of Medicine University ofColorado, Aurora, CO, USA, 2Department of Physiology andBiophysics, School of Medicine University of Colorado, Aurora,CO, USA, 3Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell Center, NeuroscienceProgram, School of Medicine University of Colorado, Aurora, CO,USA, 4Janelia Farm Research Campus, Howard Hughes MedicalInstitute, Ashburn, VA, USA, 5Department of Neurobiology,Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA

3:30 pm #32 Neuronal population state dynamics changes in taste processing following emotional learningAnan Moran, Donald B Katz. Department of Psychology and the Volen Center for Complex Systems, Waltham, MA, USA

Program in Detail

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3:45 pm #33 Volatile Inhibitors and Activators of the Carbon Dioxide-Sensitive Neuron as a New Generation of Mosquito Control AgentsDyan MacWilliam1, Sean M Boyle2, Anandasankar Ray1,2.1University of California, Riverside/Entomology, Riverside, CA, USA, 2University of California, Riverside/Genetics, Genomics and Bioinformatics Program, Riverside, CA, USA

3:30 pm – 4:00 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

4:00 pm – 5:00 pm WORKSHOP: CONSIDERING A CAREER IN INDUSTRY?THINGS YOUR MENTOR NEVER TOLD YOUChair/Organizer: Nancy Rawson and Linda FlammerGrand Ballroom Salon DIn a highly interactive session, five scientists will relate theirexperiences as researchers in industry, focusing on the challenges in transitioning from the academic environment. The speakers will offer specific advice on developing skills in:

• Working in teams• Communicating science to diverse audiences• Working through the political landscape• Navigating the interview process

These skills would serve everyone well, whether in academia or industry! There will be ample time for discussion including a round-table Q&A at the end. If you have ever considered a career in industry or are merely curious, come hear what others have learned.

4:00 pm #34 Speakers:• Nancy Rawson, PhD, Director, Basic Research AFB International,

St. Charles MO • Linda Flammer, PhD, Director, Sensory & Behavioral Insights,

Pepsico, Hawthorne NY • Harish Radhakrishna, PhD, Director Project Management and

Exploratory Research, Chromocell Corporation, North Brunswick, NJ

• Monique Smeets, PhD, Senior Scientist, Unilever R&DVlaardingen, and Associate Professor of Psychology University of Utrecht, Netherlands

• Ping Zhong, Director, Technology Alliance, Givaudan Flavors Corp., Cincinnati OH

(Join Linkedin.com to find out more about the speakers and their companies)

Program in Detail, continued

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4:50 pm #35 Round-table Q&A session with all the speakers and audience.Workshop attendees are invited to attend the ChEMA Social withworkshop speakers and ChEMA members.

5:00 pm – 7:00 pm JOINT SOCIAL: CHEMOSENSORY ENTERPRISE &MENTORSHIP ALLIANCE (CHEMA) WITH INDUSTRYCAREERS WORKSHOPPartially sponsored by: Chair/Organizer: Suzanne SollarsLighthouse Courtyard*Inclement weather backup: Mariners Ballroom

Join us for this social event designed for junior and seniorAChemS members to network and talk about issues important tojunior scientists. Speakers from the preceding Workshop onCareers in Industry as well as other senior AChemS scientistswilling to mentor junior members will attend. All AChemSmembers who have achieved an advanced degree (PhD, MD,DVM, DDS) within the last 10 years are automatically members ofChEMA. Graduate students attending the Careers Workshop areencouraged to join in. It’s a relaxed way to talk one on one, or in agroup, with AChemS members in your field who know the ropes.ChEMA members can sign up with specific mentors before themeeting. Food and beverages available for ChEMA mentors andmentees and Workshop attendees.

7:00 pm – 8:00 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

8:00 pm – 9:45 pm SYMPOSIUM: WIRING NEURAL CIRCUITS INOLFACTORY SYSTEMSChair/Organizer: Minghong Ma and Sandeep Robert DattaGrand Ballroom Salon D

While the last twenty years have seen an explosion in ourunderstanding of peripheral mechanisms of odor detection andencoding, less is known about how neural circuits within the brainorganize olfactory information (from potentially hundreds tothousands of information channels in parallel) to facilitate odordiscrimination and the generation of percepts and behaviors.Relatively recent advances in genetics (including BACtransgenesis), in vivo imaging (especially multiphoton methods),and neural tracing techniques (in particular viral tracing methodsand photoconvertible fluors) are beginning to directly impact our ability to probe the structure and function of the neural wiringthat makes up the olfactory system. This symposium focuses on the application of new techniques to the problem of revealingcircuit architecture in both earlier (olfactory bulb, antennal lobe)and later (olfactory cortex, lateral horn) stages of central olfactory processing.

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8:00 pm #36 Introduction

8:05 pm #37 Developmental Regulation of Neural Circuit Formation in the Mouse Olfactory SystemHitoshi Sakano. Department of Biophysics & Biochemistry, Graduate School of Science, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

8:30 pm #38 Olfactory sensory axons target specific identifiedprotoglomeruli in the zebrafishJonathan A. Raper. University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine,Dept. of Neuroscience, Philadelphia, PA, USA

8:55 pm #39 Representations of Olfactory Information in Mammalian Olfactory CortexSandeep R Datta. Harvard Medical School Department ofNeurobiology, Boston, MA, USA

9:20 pm #40 Tracing Innate and Adaptive Olfactory Circuits in the Fly Brain Vanessa Ruta. The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA

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7:00 pm – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION IV: CHEMICAL SIGNALING &BEHAVIOR; PSYCHOPHYSICS; CHEMOSENSATION &DISEASE; OLFACTION PERIPHERY; TASTE PERIPHERYHuntington Ballroom

1 PM #P131 Changed to Friday Morning Platform Presentation (#13.5)

2 PM #P132 Resistance to Aversion Conditioning to a Semiochemical in the RatNicholas C. Barry1, Donald B. Katz1,2. 1Brandeis UniversityDepartment of Neuroscience, Waltham, MA, USA, 2Brandeis University Department of Psychology, Waltham, MA, USA

3 PM #P133 Could sniffing variations improve olfactory perception?Emmanuelle Courtiol, Belkacem Messaoudi, Marc Thevenet,Samuel Garcia, Nathalie Buonviso. CNRS 5292 UMR 1028 CRNLUCBL team Olfaction from coding to memory, Lyon, France

4 PM #P134 Diet-induced Obesity Differentially Disrupts Olfactory-basedLearning and Memory Paradigms in Wildtype and “Super-smeller” MiceDavid S. Gale1, Jessica Butler2, Jenah Aldridge2, Chelsea Kramish2,Andrew R. Fadool2, James C. Fadool4, Debra A. Fadool2,3. 1Larry A. Ryle High School, Union, KY, USA, 2Department ofBiological Science, The Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL,USA, 3Program in Neuroscience and Molecular Biophysics, The Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA, 4Mechanical Engineering Department, The Florida StateUniversity, Tallahassee, FL, USA

5 PM #P135 Olfactory sensitivity and odor structure-activity relationships for aliphatic carboxylic acids in CD-1 miceSelcuk Can Guven, Matthias Laska. Linkoping University, Linkoping, Sweden

Poster Session IV

FRIDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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6 PM #P136 Changes in odor-guided learning mirror changes in corticaldopamine functionChloe R. Lawyer, Anna K. Garske, Brittni M. Peterson, Kurt R. Illig. Department of Biology and Program in Neuroscience,University of St. Thomas, Saint Paul, MN, USA

7 PM #P137 Effects of Cholinergic Receptor Inhibition on Olfactory Fear Learning and Generalization in MiceEloisa Pavesi, Allison Gooch, Elizabeth Lee, Max L. Fletcher.University of Tennessee Health Science Center/Anatomy andNeurobiology, Memphis, TN, USA

8 PM #P138 The Role of Chemical Cues in Precopulatory ReproductiveIsolation in House Mouse Superspecies Complex Mus musculus s.lato: from Behavior to Receptors Vera V Voznessenskaya1, Alexander V Ambaryan1, Anna E Voznesenskaya2,3, Ilya G Kvasha1, Elena V Kotenkova1. 1A.N.Severtzov Institute of Ecology & Evolution, Moscow, Russia, 2Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA,3A.A.Kharkevich Institute for Information Transmition, Moscow, Russia

9 PM #P139 Reciprocal use of sniffing during rodent social interactionsDaniel W. Wesson, Colleen A. Payton. Case Western ReserveUniversity, Neurosciences, Cleveland, OH, USA

10 PM #P140 Modulations of Emotional Attention Processes byAndrostadienoneSylvain Delplanque1,2, Matthieu Ischer1,2, David Sander1,2. 1Swiss Center for Affective Sciences, University of Geneva, Geneva,Switzerland, 2Laboratory for the Study of Emotion Elicitation andExpression, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland

11 PM #P141 The smell of altruism: the putative human pheromone 4,16-androstadien-3-one makes people more generous in a gender dependent mannerValentina Perrotta1, Michele Graffeo1, Nicolao Bonini1, Jay A. Gottfried2. 1University of Trento, Department of CognitiveScience and Education, Rovereto TN, Italy, 2NorthwesternUniversity Feinberg School of Medicine, Department of Neurology,Chicago, IL, USA

12 PM #P142 The smell of disgust and fear: specific emotionalchemosignalling of fear and disgust in humansMonique A Smeets, Jasper H de Groot, Gun R Semin. Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands

Poster Session IV, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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13 PM #P143 Olfactory Cued-reactivity and Craving in Nicotine-dependent SmokersBernadette M. Cortese1,2, Karen J. Hartwell1,2, Sarah V. Stein1, W. Connor Freeman1, Steven D. LaRowe1,2, F. JosephMcClernon3,4, Thomas W. Uhde1, Qing X. Yang5, Kathleen T.Brady1,2. 1Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC,USA, 2Ralph H. Johnson VAMC, Charleston, SC, USA, 3DukeUniversity Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA, 4Durham VAMCMIRECC, Durham, NC, USA, 5Penn State College of Medicine,Hershey, PA, USA

14 PM #P144 Changes in 6-n-Propylthiouracil (PROP) Bitterness in SmokersDuring a Brief Smoking Abstinence Trial with NicotineReplacement Therapy (NRT)Beverly J Tepper1, Margaret Graham2, William Matcham2, Karen L Ahijevych2. 1Rutgers University, Department of FoodScience, New Brunswick, NJ, USA, 2Ohio State University, College of Nursing, Columbus, OH, USA

15 PM #P145 A Short Olfactory Identification Test Designed for In-HomeUse is Associated with Cognitive Function in Older AdultsDavid W. Kern1,2, Priya D. Sunkara3, L. Philip Schumm4, Kristen E. Wroblewski4, Jayant M. Pinto5, Martha K.McClintock1,2. 1Comparative Human Development, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA, 2Institute of Mind and Biology,University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA, 3Department ofMedicine, Section of Geriatrics, University of Chicago, Chicago,IL, USA, 4Department of Health Studies, University of Chicago,Chicago, IL, USA, 5Section of Otolaryngology-Head and NeckSurgery, Department of Surgery, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA

16 PM #P146 Racial Disparities in Olfactory Function in Older Adults in the United StatesJayant M, Pinto1, Phil Schumm2, Kristen Wroblewski2, David W. Kern3, Martha K. McClintock3. 1Section ofOtolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Department of Surgery,The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA, 2Department ofHealth Studies, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL,USA, 3Institute for Mind and Biology, Department of Comparative Human Development, The University of Chicago,Chicago, IL, USA

FRIDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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17 PM #P147 The Effect of Alzheimer’s Disease and Parkinson’s Disease on Olfaction: A Meta-AnalysisShady Rahayel1,2, Johannes Frasnelli3, Sven Joubert3,4. 1Department of Psychology, Université du Québec à Montréal,Montreal, Canada, 2Centre de Recherche de l’Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal, Montreal, Canada, 3Centre deRecherche en Neuropsychologie et Cognition (CERNEC),Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal, Montreal,Canada, 4Centre de Recherche de l’Institut Universitaire deGériatrie de Montréal (CRIUGM), Montreal, Canada

18 PM #P148 Brainstem autonomic dysfunction in neurodegenerative disorders Mussadiq Shah1,2, Jean Monro1, Elias Keter1, Daniel Goyal1, Chris Yeoh1, Peter O O Julu1,2. 1Breakspear Medical Group, HemelHempstead, Hertfordshire, London, United Kingdom, 2Barts andthe London NHS Trust, Whitechapel London, United Kingdom

19 PM #P149 Evidence of Hypergeusia in Burning Mouth Syndrome PatientsSusan E. Coldwell1,2, Mark T. Drangsholt1,2, Kimberly H.Huggins1,2, Mary K. Scott2, Mary K. Hagstrom3. 1University ofWashington Department of Oral Health Sciences, Seattle, WA,USA, 2University of Washington Department of Oral Medicine,Seattle, WA, USA, 3University of Washington Regional ClinicalDental Research Center, Seattle, WA, USA

20 PM #P150 Taste disorders in patients of a specialized Smell & Taste ClinicTherese Fark, Bettina Hauswald, Cornelia Hummel, ThomasHummel. Department of Otorhinolaryngology, University ofDresden Medical School, Dresden, Germany

21 PM #P151 Cerebral processing of gustatory stimuli in patients withdysgeusia, with and without burning sensationsGina B. Schlumberger1, Cornelia Hummel1, Han-Seok Seo1, Miriam Grushka2, Emilia Iannilli1, Johannes Gerber3, Thomas Hummel1. 1Smell&Taste Clinic, Department ofOtorhinolaryngology, Dresden, Germany, 2Department of Surgery, Wiliam Osler Health Center Etobicoke Campus, Toronto, ON, Canada, 3Department of Neuroradiology,Technical University of Dresden, Dresden, Germany

22 PM #P152 Guidelines for Quantifying Fungiform Papillae Densities in aCommunity-Based LaboratoryMeghan M Sloan, Tiffany M Derr, Nicole L Garneau, BridgetCoughlin. Denver Museum of Nature & Science, Denver, CO, USA

Poster Session IV, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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23 PM #P153 Differences in adaptation rate to sucrose and saccharin in themouth reflect differences in heat sensitivityBarry G. Green1,2, Danielle J. Nachtigal1. 1The John B. PierceLaboratory, New Haven, CT, USA, 2Yale University School ofMedicine, New Haven, CT, USA

24 PM #P154 The Effect of Solution Temperature on Adaptation andRecovery of Sucrose SweetnessDanielle J Nachtigal1, Barry G Green1,2. 1The John B. PierceLaboratory, New Haven, CT, USA, 2Yale University School ofMedicine, New Haven, CT, USA

25 PM #P155 Amifostine Alleviates Cyclophosphamide Induced Taste DisturbancesNabanita Mukherjee, Brittany L. Carroll, David C. Harris, Eugene R. Delay. University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, USA

26 PM #P156 Salt Taste Perception in Mice with a Tissue-Specific Conditional Targeted Mutation of the ENaCα GeneTheodore M. Nelson1, Natalia P. Bosak1, Edith Hummler2,Alexander A. Bachmanov1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center,Philadelphia, PA, USA, 2Pharmacology and ToxicologyDepartment, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University ofLausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland

27 PM #P157 Changes in preference for amino acids by addition of glycogen in C57BL/6 miceYuko Murata, Akemi Sakaguchi. National Research Inst. ofFisheries Science, Fisheries Research Agency, Yokohama, Japan

28 PM #P158 Pharmacological Modulation of Serotonin Reuptake and5HT1A Receptors Has No Effect on PsychophysicallyDetermined Detection Thresholds of Taste Compounds by RatsCM Mathes, AC Spector. Florida State University Deptartment ofPsychology and Program in Neuroscience, Tallahassee, FL, USA

29 PM #P159 Adding Sucrose to Increase Bitter Taste Palatability in HamstersEmily K. Lloyd, Bradley K. Formaker, Thomas P. Hettinger,Marion E. Frank. University of Connecticut Health Center,Farmington, CT, USA

FRIDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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30 PM #P160 Contribution of Taste to Carbohydrate-Induced Obesity inC57BL/6 MiceJohn I. Glendinning1, Jennifer Gilman1, Haley Zamer1, Robert F. Margolskee2, Anthony Sclafani3. 1Barnard College,Department of Biology, New York, NY, USA, 2Monell ChemicalSenses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA, 3Brooklyn College,Department of Psychology, Brooklyn, NY, USA

31 PM #P161 Proteomic analysis of ciliary membrane proteins Judith L Van Houten1, Bryan A Ballif1, Anbazhagan Rajendran2, Megan Valentine1. 1University of Vermont, Biology, Burlington, VT, USA, 2Harvard Medical School and Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA, USA

32 PM #P162 Direct measurement of electrical signals in a sensory primary ciliumSteven J. Kleene, Nancy K. Kleene. University of Cincinnati/ Cancer and Cell Biology, Cincinnati, OH, USA

33 PM #P163 Measuring Ca2+ Kinetics within Cilia of Olfactory Sensory Neurons Baris Ozbay1, Diego Restrepo2, Emily Gibson1. 1Bioengineering,Denver, CO, USA, 2Cell & Developmental Biology, Aurora, CO, USA

34 PM #P164 Off-Flavors in Foods and Beverages Cause a Potent Blockage of the Olfactory Signal TransductionHiroko Takeuchi 1, Hiroyuki Kato2, Takashi Kurahashi1. 1Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan, 2Daiwa Can Company, Tokyo, Japan

35 PM #P165 PI3K-dependent Antagonism as a Basis for Broad OpponentCoding in Mammalian Olfactory Receptor NeuronsKirill Ukhanov1,2, Barry W. Ache1,2,3. 1University of Florida,McKnight Brain Institute, Gainesville, FL, USA, 2University ofFlorida, Whitney Lab, St. Augustine, FL, USA, 3University ofFlorida, Depts of Biology/Neuroscience, Gainesville, FL, USA

36 PM #P166 Comparison of the intrinsic odor response and response imposed by aerodynamics in the rat olfactory epitheliumJohn W Scott, Lisa Sherrill. Emory University, Department of Cell Biology, Atlanta, GA, USA

37 PM #P167 Electroolfactorgram recording from the human olfactoryepithelium during natural nasal respirationAnton Plotkin, Anat Arzi, Sagit Shushan, Noam Sobel. WeizmannInstitute of Science/Department of Neurobiology, Rehovot, Israel

Poster Session IV, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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38 PM #P168 HMGB-1 expression in the normal and injured peripheral taste systemCaitlin M Madigan, Lynnette P McCluskey. Georgia HealthSciences University, Augusta, GA, USA

39 PM #P169 Taste on steroids: estrogen receptors are expressed in type 2 taste cellsM. Rockwell Parker, Robert F. Margolskee. Monell ChemicalSenses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

40 PM #P170 Angiotensin II modulates taste sensitivities in miceNoriatsu Shigemura, Tadahiro Ohkuri, Nao Horio, Shusuke Iwata,Keiko Yasumatsu, Yuzo Ninomiya. Oral Neurosci., Grad. Sch. Dent. Sci., Kyushu Univ., Fukuoka, Japan

41 PM #P171 Comparative Analysis of Taste-related Gene Expression inTaste Papillae, Gut and Cell LinesJie Cao1, James Way2, Tymissha Jackson2, Jiang Xu1, Dana Danger2, Chari Smith2, William Benson3, Steve Sparks2,Thomas Rimele4, Channa Jayawickreme4, Liquan Huang1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA,2GlaxoSmithKline/Enteroendocrine Discovery Performance Unit,Research Triangle Park, NC, USA, 3GlaxoSmithKline/DiscoveryTechnology, Platform Technology & Science, Research TrianglePark, NC, SA, 4GlaxoSmithKline/Screening & Compound Profiling,Platform Technology & Science, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA

42 PM #P172 Differential Expression of TNF Receptors in Subtypes of Taste CellsPu Feng, Jinghua Chai, Hong Wang. Monell Chemical SensesCenter, Philadelphia, PA, USA

43 PM #P173 Connexin-30 and Connexin-32 Immunoreactivity in Rodent Taste BudsAmanda Bond1,2, Ruibiao Yang1,2, John C. Kinnamon1,2. 1University of Denver/Department of Biological Sciences, Denver, CO, USA, 2Rocky Mountain Taste & Smell Center, Aurora, CO, USA

44 PM #P174 Glutamate Elicits Inhibition in Mouse Taste BudsYijen A. Huang1, Jeff Grant1, Stephen D. Roper1,2. 1Department of Physiology & Biophysics, Miller School ofMedicine, University of Miami, Miami, FL, USA, 2Program inNeuroscience, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami,Miami, FL, USA

FRIDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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Saturday, April 28, 2012

7:30 am – 12:00 pm REGISTRATION7:30 pm – 8:00 pm Grand Foyer

7:30 am – 9:00 pm CONTINENTAL BREAKFASTGrand Foyer

8:00 am – 9:45 am PLATFORM PRESENTATIONS: TASTEChair/Organizer: Nirupa ChaudhariGrand Ballroom Salon D

8:00 am #41 Shh-expressing basal cells are immediate precursors of tastereceptor cellsLinda A. Barlow1, Jennifer K. Scott1, Hirohito Miura2. 1Department of Cell & Developmental Biology-Rocky MountainTaste & Smell Center, University of Colorado Denver, School ofMedicine, Aurora, CO, USA, 2Dept of Oral Physiology, KagoshimaUniversity Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences,Kagoshima, Japan

8:15 am #42 Sweet taste responses are enhanced by adenosine acting throughA2B receptorsRobin Dando1, Gennady Dvoryanchikov1, Elizabeth Pereira1,Nirupa Chaudhari1,2, Stephen D Roper1,2. 1University of MiamiMiller School of Medicine, Department of Physiology andBiophysics, Miami, FL, USA, 2University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Program in Neuroscience, Miami, FL, USA

8:30 am #43 Genetic deletion of ectoATPase reduces specific taste responsesAurelie Vandenbeuch1,3, Catherine B Anderson1,3, MatthewStreritz1,3, Jason A Parnes2,3, Simon C Robson4, Thomas E Finger2,3,Sue C Kinnamon1,3. 1Department of Otolaryngology, University ofColorado Denver, Aurora, CO, USA, 2Department of Cell andDevelopment Biology, University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, CO,USA, 3Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell Center, Aurora, CO, USA,4Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA

8:45 am #44 Bitter taste stimuli induce differential neural codes in the mouse brainChristian H Lemon1, David M Wilson1, John D Boughter, Jr.2. 1St. Louis University School of Medicine, Saint Louis, MO, USA,2University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN, USA

9:00 am #45 Deletion or Inhibition of Trpm5 Decreases the Gain in Body Weight and Fat Mass in MiceSami Damak, Johannes le Coutre, Carole Bezençon. NestléResearch Center, Lausanne, Switzerland

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9:15 am #46 The effect of the CALHM1 gene on behavior and taste nerve responsesGöran Hellekant1, Philippe Marambaud2, Sze Leung1, MariaAbernathy1. 1Biomedical Sciences, Medical School, University ofMinnesota, United States, Duluth, MN, USA, 2Pathology, The Feinstein Institute, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx Duluth, NY, USA, 3Biomedical Sciences, Medical School,University of Minnesota, Duluth, MN, USA, 4Biomedical Sciences,Medical School, University of Minnesota, Duluth, MN, USA

9:30 am #47 Regulation of Artificial Sweetener Acceptance by GlucoseMetabolic RateXueying Ren1,2, Jozelia G Ferreira1,2, Luis A Tellez1,2, Ivan E deAraujo1,2. 1The J.B. Pierce Laboratory, New Haven, CT, USA,2Department of Psychiatry, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA

9:45 am – 10:15 am BREAKGrand Foyer

10:00 am – 12:15 pm SYMPOSIUM: THE ROLE OF RESPIRATION INOLFACTORY & FLAVOR PROCESSINGChair/Organizer: Gordon Shepherd and Matthew PhillipsGrand Ballroom Salon D

The respiration cycle is emerging as a key context for functionalprocessing in vertebrate olfactory and flavor systems. Respirationand sniffing are actively modulated during the sampling of odorsand flavors, where each breath alters the physical contact betweenthe chemicals and receptors. Respiration also establishes anorganizational framework for processing chemosensoryinformation. Orthonasal and retronasal processing are known tooccur during the inspiration and expiration phases of the respirationcycle, respectively. These temporal (phasic) windows within therespiration cycle may be a critical component of encoding,relaying, and processing sensory information. Thus, by modulatingthe activity of olfactory and flavor circuits, respiration mayenhance odor detection, discrimination, and perception, andselectively promote the synchrony of distinct functional circuits ina context-dependent manner. In this symposium, investigators willpresent their latest findings on respiration and its roles in functionalprocessing in the chemical senses. Topics will cover multiple levelsof organization, including synaptic transmission, single neurons,neural circuits, coding, information processing, and behavior.

10:00 am #48 Introduction

SATURDAY

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10:10 am #49 Dissecting the effects of sniff variations on olfactory bulb (OB) activityNathalie Buonviso. Centre de Recherche en Neurosciences de Lyon, CNRS UMR5292, Inserm U1028, Université Lyon1, Lyon, France

10:35 am #50 Active sampling and gain control in olfaction: how sniffing does and does not shape odor representations in the early olfactory pathwayMatt Wachowiak1, 2, Tristan Cenier1, 2, John McGann2, Yusuke Tsuno2. 1University of Utah Department of Physiology andBrain Institute, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, 2Boston UniversityDepartment of Biology, Boston, MA, USA

11:00 am #51 Respiration drives network activity and modulates synapticand circuit processing of lateral inhibition in the olfactory bulbMatthew E Phillips1,2, Robert NS Sachdev3, David C Willhite2, Gordon M Shepherd2. 1Yale University, Department of Physics, New Haven, CT, USA, 2Yale University School of Medicine,Department of Neurobiology, New Haven, CT, USA, 3YaleUniversity School of Medicine, Department of Neurobiology, Kavli Institute for Neuroscience, New Haven, CT, USA

11:25 am #52 Sniff-locking of mitral and tufted cells: Two distinct temporalchannels of olfactory bulb outputAndreas T. Schaefer, Manuel Berning, Mihaly Kollo, Anja Schmaltz, Izumi Fukunaga. MPI f. med. research/Behavioural Neurophysiology, Heidelberg, Germany

11:50 am #53 Phase coding in OlfactionDmitry Rinberg1, Roman Shusterman1, Matt Smear1, ThomasBozza2. 1Janelia Farm Research Campus, HHMI, Ashburn, VA,USA, 2Northwestern University/Neurobiology Department,Evanston, IL, USA

12:30 pm – 2:30 pm CLINICAL LUNCHEON: BITTER TASTE, A MAJOR #54.5 DETERMINANT FOR FOOD PREFERENCES

(Ticketed event)Chair/Organizer: Claire MurphyWolfgang Meyerhof, German Institute of Human NutritionVista Ballroom

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8:00 am – 12:00 pm POSTER SESSION V: TRIGEMINAL SYSTEM; BEHAVIOR& PSYCHOPHYSICS; ODORANT RECEPTORS &OLFACTION PERIPHERYHuntington Ballroom

1 AM #P175 Activation of the trigeminal system by different odorantsMatthias Luebbert1,2, Jessica Kyereme1, Markus Rothermel3, Klaus Peter Hoffmann1, Hanns Hatt1. 1Ruhr Universitaet Bochum,Bochum, Germany, 2Ruhr University Research School, Bochum,Germany, 3The Brain Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City,UT, USA

2 AM #P176 Gustatory modulation of the responses of trigeminalsubnucleus caudalis (Vc) neurons to noxious stimulation of the tongue in ratsYves Boucher1, Mirela Iodi Carstens2, Earl Carstens2. 1UFR Odontologie Universite Diderot, Paris France, 2NPB, UC Davis, Davis, CA, USA

3 AM #P177 Eugenol and carvacrol increase lingual heat responses intrigeminal subnucleus caudalis (Vc) neurons and activatecapsaicin-sensitive trigeminal ganglion neurons in rats Amanda H Klein, Christopher L Joe, Auva Davoodi, KenichiTakechi, Mirela Iodi Carstens, Earl Carstens. University ofCalifornia Davis/Neurobiology Physiology and Behavior, Davis, CA, USA

4 AM #P178 Methyl syringate, a low-molecular-weight phenolic ester, activates the chemosensory cation channel TRPA1Mee-Ra Rhyu1, Hee-Jin Son1, Yong-Ho Kim2, Seok-Bae Oh2, Sho Ishii3, Takumi Misaka3. 1Korea Food Research Institute, Seoul, Korea, 2Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea, 3The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

5 AM #P179 Comparison of functional characteristics between the TRPM8ionchannel of Mus musculus and Gallus gallusSven Zielke1,2, Jonas Petersen1, Christian H. Wetzel1. 1Ruhr-University Bochum/Department of Cellphysiology, Bochum, Germany, 2International Max Planck Research School in Chemical Biology (IMPRS-CB), Dortmund, Germany

6 AM #P180 Genetic Variation in Bitter Receptor Genes is Associated with Cough Threshold in Human SubjectsPaul M Wise, Danielle R Reed, Julie A Mennella, Liang-DarHwang, Susana Finkbeiner. Monell Chemical Senses Center,Philadelphia, PA, USA

Poster Session V

Program in Detail | 61Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s)

SATURDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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7 AM #P181 Effects of Jasmine and Peppermint Scent Administration on Physiological and Psychological Stress Reactions in Enclosed SpacesBryan Raudenbush, August Capiola, Jessica Florian. Wheeling Jesuit University Department of Psychology, Wheeling, WV, USA

8 AM #P182 Faster Olfactory Detection in High vs. Low Anxious Healthy AdultsValérie LaBuissonnière Ariza1,2, Johannes Frasnelli1, Kevin Kojok1.1Centre de Recherche en Neuropsychologie et Cognition (CERNEC),Département de Psychologie, Université de Montréal, Montréal,QC, Canada, 2Centre de Recherche CHU Ste-Justine, Montréal, QC, Canada

9 AM #P183 Strong and Poor Predictors of Odor Recognition MemoryPerformance: An Item Analysis of the California Odor Learning TestCatherine Sumida1, Ariana Stickel1, Karalani Cross1, Claire Murphy1,2. 1San Diego State University, San Diego, CA,USA, 2University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA

10 AM #P184 Speaking of Smells: The Relationship Between Describing Odors and Memory RecognitionNicole K Beers, Amy E Callahan, David E Hornung. Biology Dept. St. Lawrence University, Canton, NY, USA

11 AM #P185 Differences in olfactory event-related potentials (OERPs) among apolipoprotein ε4 positive and negative individuals in an odor memory retrieval taskMelissa R Cervantez1, Lisa V Graves1, Amanda J Green2, Charlie D Morgan1, Claire Murphy1,2. 1San Diego State University,San Diego, CA, USA, 2University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA

12 AM #P186 Relationships between Confidence Accuracy and OdorFamiliarity: The Effect of Apolipoprotein-E StatusJacquelyn F. Szajer, Claire Murphy. San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA

Poster Session V, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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13 AM #P187 Implicit and Explicit Measures of Emotions in Response to Odors Wei He1, Sanne Boesveldt2, Cees de Graaf2, René A. de Wijk1. 1AFSG, Consumer Science & Intelligent Systems, Wageningen,Netherlands, 2Division of Human Nutrition, Wageningen UR,Wageningen, Netherlands

14 AM #P188 Impaired flavor nutrient conditioning in overweight and obese individualsTammy W. Lin1, Maria G. Veldhuizen1,2, Ivan de Araujo1,2, Dana M. Small1,2. 1The John B. Pierce Laboratory, New Haven, CT, USA, 2Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA

15 AM #P189 Odor context influences aversive conditioningAline Pichon1,2, Sylvain Delplanque2,3, Isabelle Cayeux4, David Sander2,3, Patrik Vuilleumier1. 1Laboratory for BehavioralNeurology and Imaging of Cognition, Geneva, Switzerland, 2Swiss Center for Affective Sciences, Geneva, Switzerland,3Laboratory for the Study of Emotion Elicitation and Expression,Geneva, Switzerland, 4Firmenich S.A., Geneva, Switzerland

16 AM #P190 BMI and Age Predict Psychophysical Ratings of Food StimuliAriana Stickel1, Erin Green1,2, Claire Murphy1,2. 1San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA, 2University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA

17 AM #P191 Effects of Food Neophobia and Food Neophilia on Diet andMetabolic ProcessingAugust Capiola, Bryan Raudenbush. Wheeling Jesuit UniversityDepartment of Psychology, Wheeling, WV, USA

18 AM #P192 Preference for salt in foods without or with soy sauce inchildren and adultsSara M. Castor, Loma B. Inamdar, Julie A. Mennella. Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

19 AM #P193 Cephalic Phase Blood Pressure Response to Oral Sodium Stimulus in HumansMelissa Murphy1, Paul Breslin1,2. 1Department of NutritionalSciences, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA, 2Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

SATURDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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20 AM #P194 The Relationship of Papillary Density With Taste Intensity in the Beaver Dam Offspring StudyMary E Fischer1, Karen J Cruickshanks1,2, Alex Pinto1, Carla RSchubert1, James S Pankow3, Barbara E K Klein1, Ronald Klein1, Derek J Snyder4, Guan-Hua Huang5. 1University of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences,Madison, WI, USA, 2University of Wisconsin-Madison, Departmentof Population Health Sciences, Madison, WI, USA, 3University ofMinnesota, Division of Epidemiology & Community Health,Minneapolis, MN, USA, 4San Diego State University, Department of Psychology, San Diego, CA, USA, 5National Chiao TungUniversity, Institute of Statistics, Hsinchu, Taiwan

21 AM #P195 Testing Flavor Perception in Felines: A Sour StoryNancy E Rawson, Michelle Sandau, Marlena Jones, StaceySchlanker, Amy McCarthy. AFB International/Basic Research,Saint Charles, MO, USA

22 AM #P196 Experience-based Enhancement of Preference for Dried-Bonito Dashi (a Traditional Japanese fish stock) in Various Rodent StrainsTakashi Kondoh1, Tetsuro Matsunaga1, Yoichi Ueta2, Etsuro Hori3,Hisao Nishijo3. 1AJINOMOTO Integrative Research for AdvancedDieting, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kyoto,Japan, 2Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Universityof Occupational and Environmental Health, Kitakyushu, Japan,3System Emotional Science, Graduate School of Medicine andPharmaceutical Sciences, University of Toyama, Toyama, Japan

23 AM #P197 Inhibition of Human Umami Taste Perception By the LipidLowering Drug ClofibrateMatthew C Kochem1, Ashley A Sharples1, Suzanne M Alarcon1, Paul AS Breslin1,2. 1Rutgers University/Department of NutritionalSciences, New Brunswick, NJ, USA, 2Monell Chemical SensesCenter, Philadelphia, PA, USA

24 AM #P198 Diurnal variation of plasma leptin levels and taste recognitionthresholds in over-weight and obese subjectsKeisuke Sanematsu1, Masayuki Kitagawa1, Yuki Nakamura1, Masatoshi Nomura2, Noriatsu Shigemura1, Yuzo Ninomiya1. 1Section of Oral Neuroscience, Graduate School of Dental Sciences,Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan, 2Department of Medicine andBioregulatory Science, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan

Poster Session V, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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25 AM #P199 Oxytocin decreases sensitivity to sweet tasteMichael S. Sinclair1, Marianne Abouyared2,3, Steven J. St. John4,Nirupa Chaudhari1,3. 1University of Miami, Program inNeurosciences, Miami, FL, USA, 2University of Miami, MedicalStudent-3, Miami, FL, USA, 3University of Miami, Department ofPhysiology & Biophysics, Miami, FL, USA, 4Rollins College,Department of Psychology, Winter Park, FL, USA

26 AM #P200 Methodological Aspects of the Cold-Pressor Test and the Analgesic Effect of Interoral SaccharinTheresa L. White1,2, John Prescott3. 1Le Moyne College, Syracuse, NY, USA, 2SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY,USA, 3TasteMatters Research & Consulting, Sydney, Australia

27 AM #P201 The reduction of bitterness by sodium gluconate and the effects of bitter receptor genotype in adultsKristi M. Roberts, Laura D. Lukasewycz, Liang-Dar (Daniel)Hwang, Sara M. Castor, Susana Finkbeiner, Loma B. Inamdar,Robert F. Margolskee, Gary K. Beauchamp, Danielle R. Reed, Julie A. Mennella. Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

28 AM #P202 Quantitative analysis for the masking effects to bitter tasteTakayuki Kawai, Yuko Kusakabe. National Food ResearchInstitute, Tsukuba, Japan

29 AM #P203 Agonists and Antagonists of the Insect Odorant Receptor Co-Receptor SubunitSisi Chen, Charles W. Luetje. Molecular & CellularPharmacology, University of Miami, Miami, FL, USA

30 AM #P204 A systems-level analysis of odor coding in antenna of aherbivorous insect, the Asian Citrus PsyllidIliano V. Coutinho-Abreu, Lisa Forster, Shane McInally, Robert Luck, Anandasankar Ray. Department of Entomology,University of California, Riverside, CA, USA

31 AM #P205 An Odorant Receptor Mediating Attraction of Drosophila melanogaster to a Specific Enantiomer of a Food Derived OdorantWilfredo Escala, Andrew S. Nichols, R. Grace Zhai, Charles W. Luetje. Molecular & Cellular Pharmacology,University of Miami, Miami, FL, USA

SATURDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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32 AM #P206 Temporal features of odor stimuli and the encoding of odor identity and intensity by Olfactory Receptor NeuronsCarlotta Martelli, John R Carlson, Thierry Emonet. Yale/MCDB, New Haven, CT, USA

33 AM #P207 Linking Ecological Adaptations in Olfactory Physiology andFunctional Genetics of Olfactory Receptors in a Polyphagousfemale Moth, Spodoptera littoralisMuhammad Binyameen1, William B Walker III1, NicolasMontagne2, Christelle Monsempes3, David Carrasco1, RickardIgnell1, Fredrik Schlyter1, Bill S Hansson1,4, Emmanuelle Jacquin-Joly3, Peter Anderson1, Mattias C Larsson1. 1SwedishUniversity of Agricultural Sciences, Alnarp, Sweden, 2UMR PISC,Université Paris 6, Paris, France, 3National Institute of AgronomicResearch (INRA), Versailles, France, 4Max Planck Inst forChemical Ecology, Jena, Germany

34 AM #P208 Investigating the structural basis for odorant recognition in anodorant receptor from the malarial vector, Anopheles gambiaeDavid T Hughes, Charles W Luetje. University of Miami, MillerSchool of Medicine/Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology, Miami, FL, USA

35 AM #P209 Characterization and expression of lobster olfactory variants of ionotropic glutamate receptorsElizabeth A Corey1, Yuriy V Bobkov1, Kirill Ukhanov1, Barry W Ache1,2. 1Whitney Laboratory, Center for Smell and Taste, and McKnight Brain Institute, St Augustine, FL, USA, 2Depts. of Biology and Neuroscience, University of Florida,Gainesville, FL, USA

36 AM #P210 Environmentally Regulated Patterns of Olfactory ReceptormRNA Expression In Pacific SalmonAndrew H. Dittman1, Darran May2, Marc A. Johnson3. 1Northwest Fisheries Science Center, NOAAFisheries/Environmental Physiology Program, Seattle, WA,USA, 2University of Washington/School of Aquatic and FisherySciences, Seattle, WA, USA, 3Corvallis Research Laboratory,Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, Corvallis, OR, USA

Poster Session V, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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37 AM #P211 Functional Analysis of Nematode GPCRS in YeastMuhammad Tehseen, Alisha Anderson, Mira Dumancic, Stephen Trowell. CSIRO Food Futures Flagship and Division of Ecosystem Sciences, Black Mountain Laboratories, Canberra, Australia

38 AM #P212 M3 Muscarinic Acetylcholine Receptor Potentiates Mammalian Odorant Receptors through Inhibiting ß-Arrestin2 RecruitmentYue Jiang1, Hiroaki Matsunami1,2. 1Department of MolecularGenetics and Microbiology, Duke University Medical Center,Durham, NC, USA, 2Department of Neurobiology, Duke UniversityMedical Center, Durham, NC, USA

39 AM #P213 Chemosensory processing of odorants in the skinDaniela Busse, Anna Christina Sondersorg, Heike Benecke, Hanns Hatt. Ruhr-University Bochum/ Cellphysiology, Bochum, Germany

40 AM #P214 Characterization of ectopically expressed olfactory receptorsin human liver Désirée Maßberg, Heike Benecke, Guenter Gisselmann, Hanns Hatt. Ruhr University Bochum/ Cellphysiology, Bochum, Germany

41 AM #P215 Ectopically expressed olfactory receptors in primary human skeletal muscle cellsMarkus Osterloh1, Mario Böhm1, Frank Entschladen2, Hanns Hatt1.1Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany, 2Witten/HerdeckeUniversity, Witten, Germany S

ATURDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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3:00 pm – 3:30 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

3:00 pm – 5:10 pm SYMPOSIUM: MODULATION OF EARLY OLFACTORYPROCESSING BY INTERNAL PHYSIOLOGICAL STATESChair/Organizer: Jing WangGrand Ballroom Salon DNeuromodulation in early olfactory processing has been a subjectof intensive research. Internal physiological states such asnutritional, reproductive and arousal status have a profound effect on olfactory perception through synaptic modulation at thefirst synapse. Recent research efforts are making inroads intounderstanding the molecular mechanisms and mapping out therelevant local neural circuit. This symposium highlights the currentknowledge of how internal physiological states influence olfactoryperception at the sensory input to the olfactory systems in severalanimal model systems ranging from fruit fly to salamander andmice. These talks also touch an important issue that convergentevolution has sculpted the neural circuit for internal states tomodulate olfactory processing.

3:00 pm #54 Introduction

3:05 pm #55 Neuromodulatory Effects in the Olfactory epithelium Vary with Odorant and Physiological StateHeather L Eisthen. Michigan State University, Dept of Zoology, East Lansing, MI, USA

3:30 pm #56 Metabolic Sensor in Drosophila Olfactory Receptor NeuronsJing W. Wang, Cory M. Root, Kang I. Ko, Andrew K. Shepherd, Scott A. Lindsay, Steven A. Wasserman. UCSD/Division ofBiological Sciences, La Jolla, CA, USA

3:55 pm #57 Neuromodulation of granule cell function in the olfactory bulbRicardo C. Araneda. University of Maryland/Biology, CollegePark, MD, USA

4:20 pm #58 Inhibitory Control of Sensory Input in the Mammalian Olfactory Bulb Ron Yu1,2, Limei Ma1, Qiang Qiu1. 1Stowers Institute for MedicalResearch, Kansas City, MO, USA, 2University of Kansas MedicalCenter, Kansas City, KS, USA

4:45 pm #59 Feedback Control of Circuits and Codes in the Olfactory BulbFoivos Markopoulos, Dan Rokni, Allison Provost, VenkateshMurthy. Department of Molecular & Cellular Biology and Centerfor Brain Science, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA

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68 | AChemS Program 2012

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7:00 pm – 8:00 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLEGrand Foyer

8:00 pm – 9:00 pm IFF LECTURE — NEURAL & MOLECULAR #60 MECHANISMS OF TASTE RECEPTION, TRANSMISSION

& MODULATION: A SWEET (TASTE) STORY THATBEGAN WITH SIMPLE MENDEL’S LAWChair/Organizer: Alan SpectorExclusively sponsored by:Yuzo Ninomiya, Kyushu UniversityGrand Ballroom Salon D

SATURDAY

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7:00 pm – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION VI: OLFACTION CNS; TASTEPERIPHERY & CNS; MULTIMODAL RECEPTIONHuntington Ballroom

1 PM #P216 The olfactory system of closely related wild-bee species —neuroanatomical correlations to social organization and floral preferenceChristina Kelber, Wolfgang Roessler. University of Wuerzburg/Department of Behavioral Physiology and Sociobiology, Wuerzburg, Germany

2 PM #P217 Linking sensory input to behavioral output using Drosophilaolfactory systemVikas Bhandawat, Seung-Hye Jung, Catherine Hueston. Duke University, Durham, NC, USA

3 PM #P218 This abstract has been moved to Poster Session II, page 36

4 PM #P219 Histamine Enhances Antennal Lobe Pulse Tracking andLowers False Positive Responses in Behavioral DetectionThreshold Tasks in the Moth Manduca sextaRex Burkland, Mitel Patel, Benjamin Houot, Kevin C Daly. West Virginia University/Biology, Morgantown, WV, USA

5 PM #P220 Odor attraction behavior of Drosophila melanogaster is biased via inhibitory projection neuron activity in the lateral horn areaAntonia Strutz1, Jan Soelter2, Veit Grabe1, Amelie Baschitz1, Abu Farhan1, Jürgen Rybak1, Markus Knaden1, MichaelSchmuker2,3, Bill S. Hansson1, Silke Sache1. 1Max Planck Institutefor Chemical Ecology/Evolutionary Neuroethology, Jena,Germany, 2Free University Berlin/Neuroinformatics & TheoreticalNeuroscience, Berlin, Germany, 3Bernstein Center forComputational Neuroscience, Berlin, Germany

6 PM #P221 Mapping the Microglial/Immune Response to Two Methods of Olfactory Bulb Deafferentation in ZebrafishAmanda K. McKenna, Christine A. Byrd-Jacobs. Dept. of Biological Sciences/Western Michigan University,Kalamazoo, MI, USA

Poster Session VI

70 | AChemS Program 2012 Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s)

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7 PM #P222 Deafferentation Affects the Expression of Glutamate Receptor Subunits in the Adult Zebrafish Olfactory BulbQi Xiong, Christine A. Byrd-Jacobs. Dept. of Biological Sciences,Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, USA

8 PM #P223 Olfactory Recovery is Altered in Matrix Metalloproteinase-9Knockout MiceStephen R Bakos, Grayson S Pitcher, Richard M Costanzo.Virginia Commonwealth University/Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Richmond, VA, USA

9 PM #P224 Rehabilitation of Olfactory Function Despite Persistent Olfactory Nerve Pathophysiology in a Mouse Model of Cadmium-Induced NeurotoxicityLindsey A. Czarnecki1, Andrew H. Moberly1, Daniel J. Turkel1, Tom Rubinstein1, Jospeh Pottackal1, Michelle C. Rosenthal1, Elizabeth F.K. McCandlish2, Brian Buckley2, John P. McGann1.1Rutgers University, Psychology Department, Piscataway, NJ,USA, 2Rutgers University, Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute, Piscataway, NJ, USA

10 PM #P225 Mouse Strain effects on the distribution of glomerulithroughout the glomerular layerErnesto Salcedo, Kyle Hanson, Xuan Ly, Diego Restrep. University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA

11 PM #P226 Adult-born Interneurons are Necessary for Intrabulbar Map RefinementDiana M. Cummings1, Jason S. Snyder2, Heather A. Cameron2,Leonardo Belluscio1. 1NINDS/Developmental Neural PlasticitySection, Bethesda, MD, USA, 2NIMH/Mood and Anxiety DisordersProgram, Bethesda, MD, USA

12 PM #P227 Connexins and AMPA receptor subunits have diurnal rhythms of expression in the rat olfactory bulbJohn T Corthell, DA Fadool, Paul Q Trombley. FSU, BiologicalScience, Tallahassee, FL, USA

13 PM #P228 A quantitative analysis of the Islands of Calleja in the Olfactory TubercleStacey Adjei, Daniel W. Wesson. Case Western Reserve University,Neurosciences, Cleveland, OH, USA

SATURDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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14 PM #P229 Differential projections of the anterior and posterior medialamygdala in female miceBrett T. DiBenedictis1, Michael J. Baum1, James A. Cherry2. 1Boston University Biology Department, Boston, MA, USA, 2Boston University Psychology Department, Boston, MA, USA

15 PM #P230 Parallel odor processing by two anatomically distinct olfactorybulb target structuresColleen A. Payton1, Donald A. Wilson2, Daniel W. Wesson1,2. 1Case Western Reserve Univ, Neurosciences, Cleveland, OH,USA, 2NYU School of Med & Nathan Kline Institute, Orangeburg, NY, USA

16 PM #P231 Dreaming of Odors: Odor Replay During Slow Wave SleepEnhances MemoryDylan C Barnes1,2, Julie Chapuis2,3, Donald A. Wilson1,2,3.1CUNY/Cognitive Neuroscience, New York City, NY,USA, 2NKI/Emotional Brain Instiute, Orangeburg, NY, USA, 3NYU Langone School of Medicine, New York City, NY, USA

17 PM #P232 Functional connections of the medial amygdala and response to chemosignal salienceMichael Meredith, Lindsey Biggs, Ariel Simonton, Ioana Stroe. Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA

18 PM #P233 Short-term Synaptic Plasticity Contributes to DifferentialCortical Population Responses to LOT Stimulation thatMimics Passive or Active Respiratory FrequenciesAnne-Marie M. Oswald1,2, Nathaniel N. Urban1. 1Department ofBiological Sciences, Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition,Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA, 2Department of Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

19 PM #P234 TRP channels underlie temperature-mediated changes inresponses of Geniculate Ganglion neurons to chemicalstimulation in ratsAlexandre A. Nikonov, Robert J. Contreras. Department ofPsychology & Program in Neuroscience, Florida State University,Tallahassee, FL, USA

20 PM #P235 Delayed effects of lipopolysaccharide ingestion on peripheral taste functionXiaobin Zhu1,2, Lynnette P McCluskey1. 1Georgia Health ScienceUniversity, Augusta, GA, USA, 2Zhongnan Hospital of WuhanUniversity, Wuhan, China

Poster Session VI, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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Program in Detail | 73Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s)

21 PM #P236 Capsaicin given orally in moderate doses does not produceedema in rat tongue tissueJacquelyn M. Davis, Suzanne I. Sollars. University of Nebraska at Omaha/Psychology, Omaha, NE, USA

22 PM #P237 Vertebrate Bitter Taste ReceptorsMaik Behrens, Ulrike Reichelt, Wolfgang Meyerhof. GermanInstitute of Human Nutrition Potsdam-Rehbruecke/MolecularGenetics, Nuthetal, Germany

23 PM #P238 Expression and Functional Characterization of Bitter TasteReceptors in Mammalian TestisJiang Xu1, Feng Li1, Jie Cao1, Naoko Iguchi1, Dieter Riethmacher2,Minliang Zhou1, Liquan Huang1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center,Philadelphia, PA, USA, 2University of Southampton, Faculty ofMedicine, Human Development and Health, Southampton, United Kingdom

24 PM #P239 Molecular Mechanism for the Sweet Taste Enhancer Selectivity Feng Zhang, Fernando Echeverri, Yi Ren, Catherine Tachdjian, David L. Linemeyer. Senomyx, Inc., San Diego, CA, USA

25 PM #P240 Logic of glycerol input to behavioral output in DrosophilaZev Wisotsky1, Adriana Medina2, Erica Freeman3, AnupamaDahanukar1,2,3. 1University of California/InterdepartmentalNeuroscience Program, Riverside, CA, USA, 2University ofCalifornia/Department of Entomology, Riverside, CA, USA, 3University of California/Bioengineering Interdepartmental Graduate Program, Riverside, CA, USA

26 PM #P241 Spatiotemporal Coding in Gustatory Receptor NeuronsSam A Reiter, Mark A Stopfer. National Institute of Child Healthand Development, Bethesda, MD, USA

27 PM #P242 Topology and Functional Analysis of BmGr8, a Bombyx moriGustatory ReceptorStephen C. Trowell1, 2, Hui-Jie Zhang1,2,3, Alisha R. Anderson1,2, A-Rong Luo2, Zhong-Huai Xiang3, Qing-You Xia3,4. 1CSIRO Food Futures Flagship, Canberra, Australia, 2CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences, Canberra, Australia, 3The Key Sericultural Laboratory of Agricultural Ministry,Southwest University, Chongqing, China, 4Institute of Agronomyand Life Science, Chongqing University, Chongqing, China

SATURDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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28 PM #P243 WITHDRAWN

29 PM #P244 Taste representations in the lateral hypothalamus emphasize palatabilityJennifer X. Li, Takashi Yoshida, Donald B. Katz. Brandeis University, Waltham, MA, USA

30 PM #P245 Dietary exposure to sucrose solutions alters taste-mediated licking for sweeteners, but not taste-evoked neural responses of the NST in mice Stuart A McCaughey1, Rotsen Rocha2, Tiffany Lambert2, John I Glendinning2. 1Center for Medical Education, Ball StateUniversity, Muncie, IN, USA, 2Department of Biology, Barnard College, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA

31 PM #P246 Accounting for trial-to-trial variability unmasks a suddentransition to palatability coding in gustatory cortexBrian F Sadacca, Tony Vladusich, Paul M Miller, Donald B Katz.Brandeis University, Waltham, MA, USA

32 PM #P247 Neuroanatomical maps of sweet and umami taste in the mouse PBNJennifer M Saputra1, Malinda EC Fitzgerald1,2, John D Boughter1.1University of Tennessee Health Science Center/Anatomy &Neurobiology, Memphis, TN, USA, 2Christian BrothersUniversity/Department of Biology, Memphis, TN, USA

33 PM #P248 Mapping central representation of MSG taste in the nucleus of the solitary tract using mice that lack the T1R3 receptorsubunit important for sweet and umami tasteJennifer M. Stratford, Thomas E. Finger. Rocky Mountain Tasteand Smell Center, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Program in Neuroscience, University of Colorado Denver AnschutzMedical Campus, Aurora, CO, USA

34 PM #P249 Effect of Leptin on Neurons of the Rostral Nucleus of the Solitary Tract and Potential Roles for Primary Cilia Min Wang1, Charlotte M Mistretta1, Robert M Bradley1,2.1University of Michigan/School of Dentistry/Department ofBiologic and Materials Sciences, Ann Arbor, MI, USA, 2Universityof Michigan/School of Medicine/Department of Molecular andIntegrative Physiology, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

Poster Session VI, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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Program in Detail | 75Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s)

35 PM #P250 Retronasal Olfaction/Taste (Volatiles/Sweetness) Interactions in TomatoesLinda M. Bartoshuk1,2, Adilia Blandon2, David G. Clark2, Thomas A. Colquhoun2, Sonia Hudson2, Harry J. Klee2, Howard K. Moskowitz2,3, Charles A. Sims2, Derek J. Snyder1,2,4,Denise M. Tieman2. 1University of Florida/Center for Smell and Taste, Gainesville, FL, USA, 2University of Florida/PlantInnovation Program, Gainesville, FL, USA, 3Moskowitz-Jacobs,White Plains, NY, USA, 4San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA

36 PM #P251 The effects of stimulus intensity on retronasal odorenhancement by tasteTomomi Fujimaru1, Nicole Babb1, 2, Barry Green2, Juyun Lim1. 1Oregon State University, Department of Food Science, Corvallis,OR, USA, 2The John B. Pierce Laboratory, New Haven, CT, USA

37 PM #P252 Olfactory sensing of glutamate and its modulation by hunger and satiety signals in humansJennifer Chen1, Denise Chen2. 1Psychology Department, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA, 2Neurology Department, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA

38 PM #P253 The roles of congruency and nutritive vs. non-nutritive tastes in taste-odor interactions Juyun Lim, Tomomi Fujimaru. Oregon State University, Department of Food Science, Corvallis, OR, USA

39 PM #P254 Influence of Color and Viscosity on Milk Pleasantness andIntensity Ratings in Disordered EatersMark Sappington, August Capiola, Michael Seals, BryanRaudenbush. Wheeling Jesuit University Department ofPsychology, Wheeling, WV, USA

40 PM #P255 Trigeminal stimuli influence perception of olfactory stimuliValentin A Schriever, Volker Gudziol. Smell & Taste ClinicDepartment of Otorhinolaryngology University of DresdenMedical School, Dresden, Germany

SATURDAY

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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41 PM #P256 Influence of background noise on the performance in the odorsensitivity taskHan-Seok Seo1,2, Antje Hähner2, Mandy Scheibe2, Volker Gudziol2.1Department of Food Science, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USA, 2Smell & Taste Clinic, Department ofOtorhinolaryngology, University of Dresden Medical School,Dresden, Germany

42 PM #P257 Multisensory processing of taste and oral temperature in the mouse brainDavid M Wilson, Christian H Lemon. St. Louis University Schoolof Medicine, Saint Louis, MO, USA

43 PM #P258 Food Hedonics and Sniff MagnitudeSvetlana Yakov1, Alan R. Hirsch1, Radhika Rastogi1, DanielaTeixeira1, Sally Freels2. 1Smell & Taste Treatment & ResearchFoundation, Chicago, IL, USA, 2University of Illinois, School ofPublic Health, Chicago, IL, USA

44 PM #P259 Tolerance for Bitterness in Chocolate Milk is Not Dependent on Detection ThresholdMeriel L Harwood, Gregory R Ziegler, John E Hayes. The Pennsylvania State University/Department of Food Science, University Park, PA, USA

Poster Session VI, continued

Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session. The secondnumber (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number.

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Author Index | 77

Author Index

Abe, K - P22Abernathy, M - 46Abouyared, M - P199Abraham, M - P118Acharya, N - P57Ache, B - P51, P165, P209Acosta, A - P21, P58, P129Adjei, S - P228Ahijevych, K - P144Al-juboori, S - P107Alarcon, S - P197Albeanu, D - P80Aldridge, J - P134Allen, A - P1, P2Ambaryan, A - P138Amdam, G - P218Anderson, A - P211, P242Anderson, C - 43, P47Anderson, D - 1Anderson, P - P207Araneda, R - 57, P112Arevalo, N - P75Arzi, A - 3, P167Aschenbrenner, K - P16Ashti Baghaei, K - P35Assadi-Porter, F - P24Asson-Batres, M - P91Babb, N - P251Bachmanov, A - P156Bae, W - P14Baez-Santiago, M - P61Bakos, S - P223Balcer, L - 26Ballif, B - P161Baly, C - 16Banerjee, A - P80Barham, H - P47Barlow, L - 41Barnes, D - P231Barry, N - P132Bart, M - P120Bartel, D - P53Bartholow, J - 25Bartkowiak, J - P37Bartmuss, A - P62Bartoshuk, L - 22, 23, P11, P250Baschitz, A - P220Baum, B - P21, P129Baum, D - P15Baum, M - P229

Baumgart, S - P29Bavan, S - P37Beauchamp, G - P201Beers, N - P184Behrens, M - P237Belluscio, L - 28, P100, P101, P226Ben-Shahar, Y - 14Bendahmane, M - 16Benecke, H - P213, P214Bennegger, W - P98Bennett, S - P44Bensafi, M - P63, P67Benson, W - P171Berning, M - 52Bezençon, C - 45Bhandawat, V - P217Biggs, L - P232Binyameen, M - P207Blandon, A - P250Bobkov, Y - P51, P209Boesveldt, S - P187Böhm, M - P215Bond, A - P173Bonini, N - P141Borisyuk, A - P106Bosak, N - P156Boucher, Y - P176Boughter, J - P60, P247Boughter, Jr., J - 44Bourgau, C - P9Bower, E - P113Boyle, S - 33Bozza, T - 31, 53, P107Bradley, R - P54, P55, P56, P249Bradley, S - P83Brady, K - P143Breslin, P - P45, P193, P197Brew, T - P93Brown, A - P21, P129Brunert, D - P108Buckley, B - P224Buonviso, N - 49, P133Burden, C - P218Burkland, R - P219Buschhüter, D - P71Busse, D - P213Butler, J - P134Byrd-Jacobs, C - P221, P222Byrnes, N - P1, P2Caillol, M - 16

Bold indicates first/presenting author

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Author Index, continued

78 | AChemS Program 2012

Cain, W - P118Callahan, A - P184Cameron, H - P226Cano, C - P93Cao, J - P171, P238Capiola, A - P181, P191, P254Carey, R - P73, P106Carlson, J - P206Carrasco, D - P207Carroll, B - P155Carstens, E - P176, P177Carstens, M - P176Castor, S - P192, P201Catalanotto, F - 22, 23Cayeux, I - P189Cenier, T - 50Cervantez, M - P13, P185Cessna, T - P115Chai, J - P125, P172Chaimanont, C - P99Chakirian, A - P67Chapuis, J - P231Chaudhari, N - 42, P18, P123, P199Chen, D - P252Chen, J - P252Chen, S - P203Cheng, N - 28Cherry, J - P229Cherukuri, C - P26Chery, R - P78, P109Cho, S - P105Chou, A - P89Chou, J - P125Chukir, T - P117Churakov, G - P30Cilia, A - P114Clark, D - P250Clark, J - P48Cloutier, J - P88Coldwell, S - P149Colquhoun, T - P250Cometto-Muñiz, J - P118Connelly, T - 30Contreras, R - P234Coppin, G - P116Coppola, D - P92Corey, E - P51, P209Corson, J - P54Corson, S - P55, P56Cortese, B - P143

Corthell, J - P227Corwin, R - P68Coskun, V - 9Costabile, J - 31, P107Costanzo, R - P223Coughlin, B - P152Courtiol, E - P133Coutinho-Abreu, I - P204Crasto, C - 15, P40Cross, K - P183Cruickshanks, K - P17, P194Cummings, D - P226Czarnecki, L - P224da Dilva, D - P88Dahanukar, A - P240Dalton, P - 27, P45Daly, K - P83, P86, P219Damak, S - 45Dana, R - P25, P26Dando, R - 42Dang, Q - 31, P107Danger, D - P171Daniels, M - P130Datta, S - 39Davis, J - P236Davoodi, A - P177de Araujo, I - 47, P188de Graaf, C - P187de Groot, J - P142de Wijk, R - P187Delay, E - P155Delplanque, S - P116, P140, P189Demmer, H - P77Derr, T - P152Di Lorenzo, P - P243Diaz-Qeusada, M - P108DiBenedictis, B - P229Dittman, A - P210Dlugosz, A - P124Dong, H - P76Dooley, R - P29Dotson, C - P21, P58, P129Doty, R - 26, P3Doucette, W - 4Drangsholt, M - P149Dubroff, J - 26Dubuc, R - P111Duch, C - P85Duffy, V - 21, P3Dumancic, M - P211

Bold indicates first/presenting author

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Author Index | 79Bold indicates first/presenting author

Dvoryanchikov, G - 42, P123Echeverri, F - P239Economo, M - P108Ege, E - P4Eisthen, H - 55Emonet, T - P206Engels, A - P68Ennis, M - P76Entschladen, F - P215Ermakova, I - P30Ermilov, A - P124Escala, W - P205Eslinger, P - P65Estep, J - P99Eto, Y - P23Fadool, A - P134Fadool, D - P95, P105, P134, P227Fadool, J - P134Farhan, A - P220Fark, T - P150Fedorova, E - P30Felsen, G - 31, P107Feng, P - P125, P172Ferreira, J - 47Finger, T - 43, P47, P49, P50, P53, P248Finkbeiner, S - P46, P180, P201Fischer, M - P17, P194Fitzgerald, M - P247Flegel, C - P39Fletcher, M - P72, P137Florian, J - P181Fontanini, A - 6Ford, N - P102Forestell, C - P4Formaker, B - P159Forster, L - P204Fradkin, L - P96Frank, M - P159Frank, R - P115Frasnelli, J - P119, P147, P182Freels, S - P258Freeman, E - P240Freeman, W - P143Frenchek, Z - P74Freyberg, R - P120Fujimaru, T - P251, P253Fukunaga, I - 52Gale, A - P95Gale, D - P134Galizia, C - P82

Garcia, S - P133Garneau, N - P152Garske, A - P136Gates, K - P65Ge, W - 9Gerber, J - P64, P67, P71, P151Gibson, E - P163Gilbertson, T - P27, P28, P130Gilman, J - P160Gire, D - 4, 31, P107Gisselmann, G - P35, P38, P39, P214Glendinning, J - P160, P245Goldyne, A - P121Gong, Q - P99Gooch, A - P137Gorbatyuk, O - P58Gottfried, J - P141Gottschlich, M - P64Gould, E - P94Gowing, A - P125Goyal, D - P148Grabe, V - P220Gräff, J - 13Graffeo, M - P141Graham, M - P144Grant, J - P174Graves, L - P13, P185Green, A - P13, P185Green, B - P153, P154, P251Green, E - 25, P190Green, W - P34, P111Griff, E - P102Grosmaitre, X - 30Grushka, M - P151Gu, X - 14Guang, S - P110Gudziol, V - P16, P255, P256Guo, Y - P43Gupta, N - P62Gurden, H - 16, P78, P109Guven, S - P135Haase, L - 25Haehner, A - P8, P15Hagelin, J - 13.5Hagstrom, M - P149Hähner, A - P256Hajnal, A - P57Hall, J - 26Hallmeyer-Elgner, S - P8Halpern, B - P117

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80 | AChemS Program 2012

Author Index, continued

Hammen, G - 17Han, X - 1Hansen, D - P130Hanson, K - P225Hansson, B - P207, P220Harmon, E - 26Harris, D - P155Hartwell, K - P143Harwood, M - P259Hassenklöver, T - P90Hatt, H - P29, P35, P38, P39, P52, P175,P213, P214, P215

Hauswald, B - P150Hayes, J - P1, P2, P3, P44, P68, P259He, W - P187Hegarty II, J - 25Heilman, K - P11Hellekant, G - 46Hellier, J - P75Henderson, M - P105Henkel, S - P8Herness, S - P20Herse, Z - P66Herzog, H - P21, P58, P129Hettinger, T - P159Higgins, M - P84Hines, M - P81Hing, H - P96Hirsch, A - P5, P6, P10, P121, P122, P258Hirsch, C - P122Hirsch, J - P5, P121Hochheimer, A - P126Hoffman, H - 23, P3Hoffmann, K - P175Holt, D - P27Holy, T - 17Hoopfer, E - 1Hopp, P - P8Hori, E - P196Horio, N - P170Hornung, D - P184Horvath, N - P57Houot, B - P83, P219Huang, G - P194Huang, L - P171, P238Huang, Y - P174Hudson, S - P250Hueston, C - P217Huggins, K - P149Hughes, D - P208

Hummel, C - P150, P151Hummel, T - P8, P9, P15, P16, P62, P64,P67, P71, P150, P151

Hummler, E - P156Hurtado, M - P21, P58, P129Hwang, L - P180, P201Iannilli, E - P62, P151Ignell, R - P207Iguchi, N - P238Illig, K - P136Inamdar, L - P192, P201Iodi Carstens, M - P177Irwin, M - P104Ischer, M - P140Ishii, S - P178Ishimaru, Y - P22Iwata, S - P170Jaber, L - P20Jackson, T - P171Jacobson, A - 25Jacquin-Joly, E - P207Jahng, J - P59Jansen, F - P29Janzen, N - P89Jayawickreme, C - P171Jenkins, P - 29Jiang, Y - P212Joe, C - P177Johnson, M - P93, P95, P210Joiner, A - 29, P87Jones, M - P195Joraschky, P - P16Joubert, S - P147Joussain, P - P63Julu, P - P148Jung, S - P217Kam, J - P88Kang, R - P114Karunanayaka, P - P65Kass, M - P110Kato, H - P164Katsanis, N - P36Katz, D - 18, 32, P61, P132, P244, P246Kaur, A - P31Kawai, T - P202Keita, L - P119Kelber, C - P216Keller, A - P36Keller, C - P89Kern, D - P145, P146

Bold indicates first/presenting author

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Author Index | 81Bold indicates first/presenting author

Keter, E - P148Kim, J - P59Kim, M - P56Kim, Y - P178Kingdom, T - P47Kinnamon, J - P19, P173Kinnamon, S - 43, P47Kitagawa, M - P198Klee, H - P250Kleene, N - P162Kleene, S - P162Klein, A - P177Klein, B - P17, P194Klein, R - P17, P194Knaden, M - P220Ko, K - 56Kochem, M - P197Koh, M - P80Koh, T - P14Kojok, K - P182Kolli, T - P20Kollo, M - 52Kolterman, B - P97Komatsu, Y - P128Kondoh, T - P196Kotenkova, E - P138Koulakov, A - P97Kowalewski, J - 25Kramish, C - P134Krohn, M - P126Krusemark, E - P70Kumarhia, D - P127Kurahashi, T - P164Kurian, M - P18Kurokawa, A - P22Kusakabe, Y - P202Kuttler, J - P90Kvasha, I - P138Kyereme, J - P52, P175La Sala, M - P21LaBuissonnière Ariza, V - P182, P119Laframboise, A - P34Lai, P - 15, P40Lambert, T - P245LaRowe, S - P143Larsson, M - P207Laska, M - P135Lawyer, C - P136le Coutre, J - 45Lee, E - P137

Lee, J - P59, P59Lei, T - P107Lemieux, S - P68Lemon, C - 44, P257Leon-Sarmiento, F - 26Lepore, F - P119Leung, S - 46Li, E - 9Li, F - P238Li, H - P57Li, J - P37, P244Li, K - P43Li, W - P70, P111Lilley, H - P93Lim, J - P251, P253Lin, T - P188Lindsay, S - 56Lindstrand, A - P36Linemeyer, D - P239Linster, C - P76Liu, H - P124, P128Liu, Y - P28Lloyd, E - P159Loberbaum, K - P93Logan, H - 23Lomvardas, S - 11Louie, J - P45Lübke, K - P64Lucero, M - P74Luck, R - P204Luebbert, M - P52, P175Luetje, C - P37, P203, P205, P208Lukasewycz, L - P201Lundström, J - P69Luo, A - P242Ly, X - P225Ma, B - P103Ma, L - 58Ma, M - 30Mackay-Sim, A - P48Macklin, W - P94MacWilliam, D - 33Madigan, C - P168Maeda, N - P22Mahavongtrakul, M - P99Maier, J - 18Mainland, J - P36Manteniotis, S - P39Manzini, I - P90Marambaud, P - 46

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Marbach, F - P80Margolskee, R - P160, P169, P201Margot, C - P116Marinov, T - P97Markopoulos, F - 59Marks, L - P7Marrero, Y - P61Martelli, C - P206Martens, J - 29, P87Martin, C - 16, P78, P109Maruyama, Y - P23Mary, L - P104Maßberg, D - P214Matcham, W - P144Mathes, C - P158Matsumoto, I - P22Matsunaga, T - P196Matsunami, H - P36, P42, P212May, D - P210McCandlish, E - P224McCarthy, A - P195McCaughey, S - P25, P26, P245McClernon, F - P143McClintock, M - P145, P146McCluskey, L - P127, P168, P235McEwen, D - 29McGann, J - 50, P110, P224McInally, S - P204McIntyre, J - 29, P87McKenna, A - P221McTavish, T - P81Medina, A - P240Meedeniya, A - P48Meeks, J - 17Mennella, J - P46, P180, P192, P201Meredith, M - P232Messaoudi, B - P133Meyerhof, W - P237, 54.5Migliore, M - P81Milbury, L - P69Miller, M - P84Miller, P - P246Misaka, T - P22, P178Mishina, Y - P128Mistretta, C - P55, P56, P124, P128, P249Miura, E - P23Miura, H - 41Moberg, P - 26Moberly, A - P110, P224Molenaar, P - P65

Mombaerts, P - 12Monro, J - P148Monsempes, C - P207Montagne, N - P207Moran, A - 32, P61Morgan, C - 25, P12, P13, P185Morris, M - 26Moskowitz, H - P250Mukherjee, N - P155Murata, Y - P157Murphy, C - 25, P12, P13, P113, P183,P185, P186, P190

Murphy, M - P193Murthy, V - 59Myers, E - P74Nachtigal, D - P153, P154Nagai, C - P22Nai, Q - P76Nakamura, Y - P198Nakamuta, N - P32Nakamuta, S - P32Nelson, T - P156Neuhaus, E - P29Newberg, A - 26Ngai, J - 10Nichols, A - P205Nielson, L - P131Nighorn, A - P84Nikonov, A - P234Ninomiya, Y - 60, P170, P198Nishijo, H - P196Nomura, M - P198Nondahl, D - P17Noordermeer, J - P96Novikov, S - P30Nunez-Parra, A - P112Ochs, C - P34, P111Oh, S - P178Ohkuri, T - P170Ohmoto, M - P22Oke, B - P91Osman, A - 26Osterloh, M - P215Ostholt, S - P39Oswald, A - P233Oud, B - P116Ozbay, B - P163Pain, F - P109Palmer, S - P121Pankow, J - P194

Author Index, continued

Bold indicates first/presenting author

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Author Index | 83Bold indicates first/presenting author

Park, E - P59Parker, M - P169Parnes, J - 43Patel, M - P66, P68, P219Pause, B - P64Pavesi, E - P137Payton-Webber, L - P25Payton, C - P139, P230Perea-Martinez, I - P123Pereira, E - 42Perrotta, V - P141Petersen, J - P179Peterson, B - P136Philimonenko, A - P30Phillips, M - 51Pichon, A - P189Pinto, A - P194Pinto, J - P145, P146Pitcher, G - P223Plotkin, A - 3, P167Poncelet, J - P63Pottackal, J - P224Prescott, J - P200Protas, D - P85Provost, A - 59Przybylski, L - P63Puschmann, S - P71Qiu, Q - 58Radek, J - P24Rahayel, S - P147Rajendran, A - P161Ramakrishnan, V - P47Rao, H - P24Raper, J - 38Rastogi, R - P258Rath, L - P82Raudenbush, B - P181, P191, P254Rawal, S - P3Rawson, N - P33, P195Ray, A - 33, P204Reed, D - P46, P180, P201Reed, R - 29Reichelt, U - P237Reid, E - P61Reiter, S - P241Ren, X - 47Ren, Y - P43, P239Restrep, D - P225Restrepo, D - 4, 31, P75, P94, P107, P163Reuner, U - P8

Reynolds, S - P50Rhyu, M - P178Riethmacher, D - P238Rimele, T - P171Rinberg, D - 53Riveros, P - P21, P129Roberts, K - P201Robson, S - 43Rocha, R - P245Roessler, W - P216Rogers, S - P74Rokni, D - 59Root, C - 56Roper, S - 42, P23, P174Rosenthal, M - P110, P224Roskams, J - P89Rothermel, M - P73, P108, P175Rotz, J - 26Rouby, C - P63Rubin, G - 1Rubinstein, T - P224Ruta, V - 40Ryan, S - P66Rybak, J - P220Sachdev, R - 51Sache, S - P220Sadacca, B - P246Sadrian, B - 19Sakaguchi, A - P157Sakano, H - 37Salcedo, E - P94, P225Sandau, M - P33, P195Sander, D - P116, P140, P189Sanematsu, K - P198Santos, V - P37Sappington, M - P254Saputra, J - P247Saunders, C - P50Savigner, A - 30Schaal, B - P71Schachtner, J - P86Schaefer, A - 52Schaefer, M - P100Scheibe, M - P48, P256Schlanker, S - P195Schlumberger, G - P151Schlyter, F - P207Schmaltz, A - 52Schmidt, R - P118Schmuker, M - P220

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Schoebel, N - P52Schriever, V - P255Schubert, C - P17, P194Schumm, L - P145Schumm, P - P146Sclafani, A - P160Scott, J - 41, P166Scott, M - P149Seals, M - P254Seeger, J - P92Selen, E - P24Semin, G - P142Seo, H - P151, P256Sergeyev, V - P58Sezille, C - P67Shah, M - P148Sharples, A - P197Shavit, A - P7Shea, S - P77Shepard, N - 26Shepard, T - P7Shepherd, A - 56Shepherd, G - 51, P81Sherrill, L - P166Sherwood, W - P106Shigemura, N - P170, P198Shushan, S - 3, P167Shusterman, R - 53Siderowf, A - 26Simonton, A - P232Sims, C - P250Sinclair, M - P199Sloan, M - P152Small, D - 5, P188Smear, M - 53Smeets, M - P142Smith, B - P85, P218Smith, C - P171Smith, J - P34Smith, L - P75Smitka, M - P71Snyder, D - 22, 23, P194, P250Snyder, J - P226Sobel, N - 3, P167Soelter, J - P220Sollars, S - P236Son, H - P178Sondersorg, A - P213Soto, M - P5Sparks, S - P171

Spector, A - P158Spehr, M - P29St. John, S - P199Stamps, J - P11Staudacher, E - P83, P86Stein, S - P143Steuer, E - P100, P101Stickel, A - P183, P190Stitt, J - P68Stopfer, M - P241Storm, D - 30Stowers, L - P31Straley, J - P131Stratford, J - P248Streritz, M - 43Stroe, I - P232Strutz, A - P220Stubblefield, E - P107Sumida, C - P183Sun, X - P66Sun, Y - 9Sunkara, P - P145Szabo, A - P131Szajer, J - P186Szyszka, P - P82Tachdjian, C - P239Takechi, K - P177Takeuchi, H - P164Taniguchi, K - P32, P32Tao, J - 9Tehseen, M - P211Teixeira, D - P258Tellez, L - 47Tepper, B - P144Thevenet, M - P67, P133Thiebaud, N - P95Tian, C - P42Tiede, R - P86Tieman, D - P250Tillmann, B - P63Tizzano, M - P47, P49Tokita, K - P60Tonelli, M - P24Tordoff, M - P25, P26Toth, K - P57Tripathy, S - P83Trombley, P - P227Trowell, S - P211, P242Tsai, L - 13Tsuno, Y - 50

Author Index, continued

Bold indicates first/presenting author

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Author Index | 85

Tucker, K - P105Turaga, D - 17Turetsky, B - 26Turkel, D - P224Ueta, Y - P196Uhde, T - P143Ukhanov, K - P51, P165, P209Urban, N - P233Valentine, M - P161Van Bavel, J - P116Van Houten, J - P161Vandenbeuch, A - 43Veldhuizen, M - P7, P188Vesek, J - P68Victor, J - P243Vladusich, T - P246Vosshall, L - P36Voznesenskaya, A - P138Voznessenskaya, V - P138Vuilleumier, P - P189Wachowiak, M - 50, P73, P106, P108Walker III, W - P207Wallrabenstein, I - P38Walton, J - P19Wang, H - 24, P125, P172Wang, J - 56, P65, P66, P68Wang, L - 1Wang, M - P249Wang, Z - 30Wasserman, S - 56Way, J - P171Weber, L - P38Wei, H - P6, P10Wei, Y - P43Weiler, E - P92, P98Weiss, T - 3Weitekamp, C - P65Welge-Lüssen, A - P9Werner, M - P38Wesson, D - P139, P228, P230Westermann, B - P9Wetzel, C - P179White, T - P200Whitesell, J - 4Willer, J - P36Willhite, D - 51Williams, C - 29Wilson, Da - 44, P257Wilson, Do - 19, P230, P231Wilson, J - 26

Wilson, S - P68Wise, P - P45, P46, P180Wisotsky, Z - P240Wolff Stefan, S - P16Wroblewski, K - P145, P146Wu, H - 9Wu, Y - P96Xia, Q - P242Xiang, Z - P242Xie, W - 9Xiong, K - P75Xiong, Q - P222Xu, H - P27Xu, J - P171, P238Xu, W - 19Yakov, S - P10, P258Yakov, Y - P10Yamamoto, K - P22Yang, L - P43Yang, Q - P65, P66, P68, P143Yang, R - P19, P173Yasumatsu, K - P170Yeoh, C - P148Ying, G - 26Yoders, B - 29Yokomukai, Y - P69Yoshida, T - P244Yoshikawa, K - 9Yu, R - 58Yu, Yi - P41, P42Yu, Yu - P81Zamer, H - P160Zamora, R - 25Zborala, S - P38Zhai, R - P205Zhang, C - P41, P42Zhang, F - P239Zhang, H - P111, P242Zhang, Y - 9Zhao, F - P20Zhou, M - P238Zhou, Z - P101Zhu, X - P235Ziegler, G - P259Zielinski, B - P34, P111Zielke, S - P179Zinke, H - P126Zolotukhin, S - P21, P58

Bold indicates first/presenting author

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8:00 am8:15 am8:30 am8:45 am

9:00 am9:15 am9:30 am9:45 am

10:00 am10:15 am10:30 am10:45 am

11:00 am11:15 am11:30 am11:45 am

12:00 pm12:15 pm12:30 pm12:45 pm1:00 pm1:15 pm1:30 pm1:45 pm

2:00 pm2:15 pm2:30 pm2:45 pm

3:00 pm3:15 pm3:30 pm3:45 pm

4:00 pm4:15 pm4:30 pm4:45 pm

5:00 pm5:15 pm5:30 pm5:45 pm

6:00 pm6:15 pm6:30 pm6:45 pm

7:00 pm7:15 pm7:30 pm7:45 pm

8:00 pm8:15 pm8:30 pm8:45 pm

9:00 pm9:15 pm9:30 pm9:45 pm

10:00 pm10:15 pm10:30 pm10:45 pm

Wednesday, April 25, 2012 Thursday, April 26, 2012

REGISTRATION3:30 pm – 8:00 pm

REGISTRATION7:00 am – 1:00 pm6:30 pm – 7:30 pm

AChemS Executive Committee Meeting12:00 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.

Vista Ballroom

INDUSTRYSYMPOSIUM:

Taste and Smell inTranslation:

Applications fromBasic Research

1:00 p.m. - 4:05 p.m.Grand Ballroom

Salon D

NIH WORKSHOP:Funding

Opportunities for theNew Invesigator3:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom Salon C

Welcome Banquet(Ticketed event)6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.Lighthouse Courtyard

Welcome/Awards Ceremony8:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom Salon D

GIVAUDAN LECTURE: Neural Control of Aggression in Drosophila

9:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Grand Ballroom Salon D

POSTER SESSION I:Multimodal Reception;

Chemosensation and Disease;

Taste Periphery;Olfaction Periphery8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.Huntington Ballroom

SYMPOSIUM: The Flavor of

Things to Come:Expectation and the Processing ofChemosensoryInformation

9:00 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.Grand Ballroom

Salon D

Industry Reception(Ticketed event)4:15 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.California Courtyard

POSTER SESSION II:Trigeminal System;

Taste CNS;Neuroimaging;Olfaction CNS

7:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m.Huntington Ballroom

PRESIDENTIALSYMPOSIUM:

Neural Epigeneticsand Olfaction

7:30 p.m. - 10:10 p.m.Grand Ballroom

Salon D

Refreshments Available7:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

Visual Program at a Glance

BREAK2:10 p.m. - 2:25 p.m.

Grand Foyer

BREAK10:45 a.m. - 11:15 a.m.

Grand Foyer

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8:00 am8:15 am8:30 am8:45 am9:00 am9:15 am9:30 am9:45 am10:00 am10:15 am10:30 am10:45 am11:00 am11:15 am11:30 am11:45 am12:00 pm12:15 pm12:30 pm12:45 pm1:00 pm1:15 pm1:30 pm1:45 pm2:00 pm2:15 pm2:30 pm2:45 pm3:00 pm3:15 pm3:30 pm3:45 pm4:00 pm4:15 pm4:30 pm4:45 pm5:00 pm5:15 pm5:30 pm5:45 pm6:00 pm6:15 pm6:30 pm6:45 pm7:00 pm7:15 pm7:30 pm7:45 pm8:00 pm8:15 pm8:30 pm8:45 pm9:00 pm9:15 pm9:30 pm9:45 pm10:00 pm10:15 pm10:30 pm10:45 pm

Friday, April 27, 2012 Saturday, April 28, 2012

REGISTRATION7:30 am – 12:00 pm7:30 pm – 8:00 pm

REGISTRATION7:30 am – 12:00 pm7:30 pm – 8:00 pm

POSTER SESSION III:Olfaction

Development & CNS; Human

Psychophysics; Taste Periphery

8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.Huntington Ballroom

PLATFORMPRESENTATIONS:

Olfaction8:00 a.m. - 9:45 a.m.

Grand Ballroom Salon D

SYMPOSIUM:Chemical Senses inHealth and Disease10:00 a.m. - 12:25 p.m.Grand Ballroom Salon D

AChemS Business Meeting1:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.

Grand Ballroom Salon D

PLATFORMPRESENTATIONS:

Polak YoungInvestigator Award

Winners2:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom Salon D WORKSHOP:Considering a Careerin Industry? ThingsYour Mentor Never

Told You4:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom Salon DJOINT SOCIAL:ChemosensoryEnterprise and

Mentorship Alliance(ChEMA) with IndustryCareers Workshop5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.Lighthouse Courtyard

POSTER SESSION V:Trigeminal System;

Behavior andPsychophysics;

Odorant Receptors & Olfaction Periphery

8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.Huntington Ballroom

PLATFORMPRESENTATIONS:

Taste8:00 a.m. - 9:45 a.m.

Grand Ballroom Salon D

SYMPOSIUM: The Role of

Respiration inOlfactory and Flavor

Processing10:00 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.Grand Ballroom Salon D

CLINICAL LUNCHEON: Bitter Taste, A Major Determinant

for Food Preferences (Ticketed event)

12:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.Vista Ballroom

SYMPOSIUM: Modulation of Early Olfactory Processing

by Internal Physiological States3:00 p.m. - 5:10 p.m.

Grand Ballroom Salon D

POSTER SESSION VI:

Olfaction CNS; Taste Periphery &CNS; Multimodal

Reception7:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m.Huntington Ballroom

SYMPOSIUM: Wiring Neural Circuitsin Olfactory Systems8:00 p.m. - 9:45 p.m.

Grand Ballroom Salon D

IFF LECTURE:Neural and MolecularMechanisms of Taste

Reception, Transmissionand Modulation: A Sweet(Taste) Story that Beganwith Simple Mendel’s Law8:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom Salon D

POSTER SESSION IV:

Chemical Signalingand Behavior;Psychophysics;Chemosensation and Disease;

Olfaction Periphery;Taste Periphery

7:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m.Huntington Ballroom

BREAK9:45 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.

Grand Foyer

Refreshments Available9:45 a.m. - 10:15 a.m.

Grand Foyer

Refreshments Available7:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

Grand FoyerRefreshments Available7:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

Grand Foyer

Refreshments Available3:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.

Grand Foyer

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Notes

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