Program - Association for Chemoreception Sciences

Transcription

Program - Association for Chemoreception Sciences
AChemS
Association for Chemoreception Sciences
AChemS
X
X XV i i
37 Annual Meeting
th
Program
April 22–25, 2015
Hyatt Regency
Coconut Point
Bonita Springs, FL
The Association for
Chemoreception
Sciences
Our goal is to deliver
sustained value
Human Sustainability
Providing a wide range of foods and
beverages, from treats to healthy eats
Environmental Sustainability
Finding innovative ways to minimize
our impact on the environment and
reduce our operating costs
Talent Sustainability
Providing a safe and inclusive workplace
for our employees globally and respecting,
supporting and investing in the local
communities where we operate
Follow Us On:
@PepsiCo
pepsico.com
facebook.com/PepsiCo
PepsiCo is proud
to support AChemS!
Table of Contents
2015 AChemS Meeting Sponsors & Corporate Members . . . . . . . . . . 4
2015 AChemS Meeting Exhibitors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2015 Special Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2015 Social Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2015 Award Recipients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Committees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Program at a Glance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Program in Detail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Wednesday, April 22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Thursday, April 23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Friday, April 24 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Saturday, April 25 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Poster Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Poster Session I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Poster Session II . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Poster Session III . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Poster Session IV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
Poster Session V . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Poster Session VI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Author Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
Poster Hall Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
Program at a Glance (Visual) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
Business Meeting Agenda . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
Next Year’s Meeting 2016 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
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AChemS
Association for Chemoreception Sciences
AChemS 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
The Association for Chemoreception Sciences is also grateful
for the generous support of its corporate sponsors:
Diamond Sponsors
Gold Sponsors
Silver Sponsors
Other Sponsors
MIND genomics ASSOCIATES
A special thank you to Ghislaine Polak and the late Ernest Polak
for supporting the Polak Young Investigators Awards and the
Polak Postdoctoral Travel Awards.
The Association for Chemoreception Sciences thanks our
Corporate Members for their support.
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2015 Annual Meeting Exhibitors
Exhib it Hours
Thursday, April 23
7:30 am – 10:30 am
Friday, April 24
7:30 am – 10:30 am
Saturday, April 25
7:30 am – 10:30 am
MaxCyte, Inc.
MaxCyte specializes in cell modification for cell-based
assays and protein production. Using flow electroporation,
the MaxCyte STX® Scalable Transfection System and
MaxCyte VLX® Large Scale Transfection System rapidly and
reproducibly (co)transfect of a wide range of cells with DNA,
RNA, proteins, or cell lysates with transfection efficiencies
and cell viabilities typically greater than 90%. The technology
does not require specialized constructs, engineered cells,
media additives, or chemical reagents and is able to
transfect from 5E5 cells in seconds using small-scale,
static electroporation to 2E11 cells in less than 30 minutes.
Whether used immediately or cryopreserved for future use,
transfected cells have minimal off-target effects and superior
performance in GPCR assays, complex multi-subunit ion
channels, and other cell-based targets. Find out how you
can rapidly develop assays in more biologically relevant cells
for use in high throughput screening, high content screening,
and other cell-based assays.
Company representative: Meg Duskin and Karen Donato, PhD
Oxford University
Oxford University Press is a publisher of some of the most
prestigious books and journals in the world. They include
Chemical Senses, the official journal of AACSS, ACHEMS,
ECRO and JASTS. Visit our stand to pick up gratis copies
of our journals, or go to www.oxfordjournals.org to read a
free issue online.
Company representative: Oliver Wright
Sensonics International
Sensonics International provides the medical, scientific and
industrial communities with the best smell and taste tests
for assessing chemosensory function. The Smell Identification
Test™ is the most widely used quantitative olfactory test in
the world.
Company representatives: Kyra Milnamow and Jerilyn Wissa
Tucker-Davis Technologies
Tucker-Davis Technologies (TDT) provides products for basic
and applied research in the neurophysiology, hearing, and
speech sciences as well as for general data acquisition
applications. We offer a complete line of modular DSP-based
data acquisition and stimulus generation systems
Company representatives: Victor Rush, PhD and
Nafi Yasar, PhD
Continued
5
2015 Special Events
2015 Annual Meeting Exhibitors, continued
Osmic Enterprises, Inc.
Osmic Enterprises, Inc. produces and distributes the
OLFACT™ Test Battery, a series of computerized tests
to assess olfactory function. Tests include a threshold
test, and identification test, a discrimination test, and an
odor memory test. Stimuli are generated via a miniature
olfactometer, with administration of the tests and
recording of responses under computer control.
Company representative: Lloyd Hastings
We dne sday, A p r i l 2 2
9:00 am – 12:00 pm IMAGINARIUM COMMUNITY OUTREACH EVENT
AChemS’ educational outreach mission has been
re-established with the community this year!
Volunteer AChemS Members will be inspiring
over one hundred 3rd and 4th graders from
Franklin Park Elementary School, one of the most
socio-economically challenged schools in Lee
County. Demonstrations will illustrate topics such
as genetic variation in androstenone sensitivity,
the different contributions of taste and smell to
flavor perception and food, the influence of color
on the perception of odors, and olfactory health
and the hazards of household products. The event
will be held at the Imaginarium Science Center in
Ft. Myers. Not only does AChemS have the good
fortune to forge a community connection again,
and enlighten and inspire a new generation of
chemosensory scientists, engaging with students
at this school ties in perfectly with the diversity
goals of our NIDCD grant.
6:00 – 7:00 pm GIVAUDAN LECTURE
MARINA PICCIOTTO, PHD
Nicotine Addiction: Molecular Basis
of Behaviors at the Complex Interface
between Reward, Food Intake and Taste
Calusa Ballroom 1
Marina Picciotto
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Thu rsday, A pr i l 2 3
7:30 – 9:00 am
2015 industry BREAKFAST CORNERS
Estero Terrace
Open to Everyone!
MaxCyte, Inc.
Spending too much time and money creating stable cell lines? Looking
for better expression levels in your assays? The MaxCyte STX® Scalable
Transfection System can rapidly and reproducibly transfect up to 2E10 cells
in less than 30 minutes with high efficiency, viability, and cell wall integrity.
Whether used immediately or cryopreserved for future use, transfected cells
have minimal off-target effects and superior performance in GPCR assays,
complex multi-subunit ion channels, and other cell-based targets. Find out how
you can rapidly develop assays in more biologically relevant cells for use in high
throughput screening, high content screening, and other cell-based assays.
PepsiCo
PepsiCo’s Breakfast Corner will feature a variety of products for you to try.
While you are sipping and munching meet the team from Biological and
Discovery Analytics including Senior Director Mark Pirner, M.D., Ph.D.,
Director Steve Gravina, Ph.D., Director Linda Flammer, Ph.D., and Principal
Scientist Laura Nattress, Ph.D. We’re happy to discuss our career journeys
and how we arrived at PepsiCo. Or if you are curious as to what it is like to
work in industry, we can share our perspectives. Perhaps you have a potential
research collaboration idea. Stop by, we promise it will be fun.
International Flavors & Fragrances Inc.
International Flavors & Fragrances Inc. (NYSE:IFF) is a leading global creator
of flavors and fragrances used in a wide variety of consumer products.
Consumers experience these unique scents and tastes in fine fragrances and
beauty care, detergents and household goods, as well as beverages, sweet
goods and food products. The Company leverages its competitive advantages
of consumer insight, research and development, creative expertise, and
customer intimacy to provide customers with innovative and differentiated
product offerings. A member of the S&P 500 Index, IFF has more than
6,200 employees working in 32 countries worldwide. For more information,
please visit our website at www.iff.com.
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2015 Special Events
2:00 – 4:00 pm THE BARRY DAVIS WORKSHOP: FUNDING
OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE NEW INVESTIGATOR
Calusa Ballroom 2
This workshop will include an overview of research,
training, and funding opportunities for graduate students,
postdoctoral fellows, and early stage investigators. The
discussion will provide practical information on how grant
applications are processed within NIH/NIDCD, including
Institute and study section assignments, the peer review
process, Advisory Council activities, pay lines, and the
roles of program and review staff.
Fr iday, A pri l 2 4
8:00 – 8:30 am SILVER MEMBERS GATHERING
Royal Palm Courtyard
This gathering will honor our long-standing members who
have attended 25 or more meetings of the AChemS Society!
12:30 – 1:30 pm ACHEMS BUSINESS MEETING
Calusa Ballroom 1
Join us for reports from the Executive Committee leaders
on the state of the Association. All members welcome
and encouraged to attend.
1:30 – 2:30 pm CHEMICAL SENSES EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Great Egret Room
saturday, A pr i l 2 5
12:15 – 1:15 pm TRAVEL FELLOWSHIPS FOR
DIVERSITY AWARD recipients LUNCHEON
Great Egret Room
4:00 – 5:00 pm HAROLD MCGEE
PLAYING WITH FOOD:
THREE CENTURIES OF SCIENCE IN THE KITCHEN
Calusa Ballroom 1
PHOTO © KARL PETZKE
Harold McGee
Join us for an exciting presentation from author Harold
McGee! A former columnist for the New York Times,
Mr. McGee wrote the award-winning On Food and
Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen, and most
recently Keys to Good Cooking: A Guide to Making the
Best Foods and Recipes. He will describe how science
and scientists have influenced cooking over the centuries,
and the recent heightened interest in kitchen chemistry
and sensory science among leading restaurant chefs.
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2015 Social Events
We dn e sday, A p r i l 2 2
7:00 – 9:00 pm ACHEMS WELCOME BANQUET
Join us for the traditional AChemS opportunity to
reconnect with colleagues and kick the meeting off!
Cash bar is available. An RSVP was required at time
of registration and your ticket is available in your
name badge; guest tickets can be purchased at the
Registration Desk.
Waterfall Pool Deck (Ticketed event)
*Inclement weather backup: Calusa Ballroom and Foyer
Thu rsday, A pr i l 2 3
4:00 – 6:00 pm
ACHEMS CAREER NETWORKING SOCIAL
The social is designed for graduate and post doc
attendees and RSVPs were required at the time
of registration.
The AChemS Career Networking Social is designed
for networking and discussion about topics and
issues important to junior chemosensory scientists.
Back by Popular Demand: Topic Tables will be featured
again this year at the social. This year’s topics will include
Funding, Industry Research Careers, Post-Doc Experience,
Interviewing Tips and more.
Estero Terrace and Royal Palm Courtyard
*Inclement weather backup: Driftwood
6:00 – 7:00 pm
ACHEMS GRADUATE STUDENT HAPPY HOUR
Join other graduate students for an hour of relaxing
social networking over cocktails before the evening’s
symposia. The patio of Mangroves will be the
exclusive gathering spot for this event. Cash bar.
Mangroves Patio
Fr iday, A pri l 2 4
3:00 pm ACHEMS FUN RUN/WALK
This 5K Run/Walk will start right from the hotel’s
entrance drive and continue down Coconut Road.
Prizes will be awarded for the first taste and first smell
participants to cross the finish line! An RSVP was
required at time of registration and your ticket is
available in your name badge. Spectators are welcome!
Starting Point: Hyatt Entrance Drive (Ticketed Event)
9
2015 Award Recipients
37th Annual Givaudan Lectureship
Marina Picciotto, PhD, Charles B. G. Murphy Professor of Psychiatry and
Professor in the Child Study Center, of Neurobiology and of Pharmacology;
Deputy Chair for Basic Science Research, Department of Psychiatry, Yale
School of Medicine
21st Annual Ajinomoto Award for Young Investigators in Gustation
Greg S.B. Suh, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Cell Biology,
Molecular Neurobiology Program, Skirball Institute of Biomolecular
Medicine, NYU School of Medicine, New York
24th Annual Mind Genomics Associates Award for Research
in the Psychophysics of Human Taste and Smell
(formerly Moskowitz Jacobs)
Joel Mainland, PhD, Louise Slade Assistant Member, Monell Chemical
Senses Center and Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of
Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania
Max Mozell Award for Outstanding Achievement in the
Chemical Senses
Robert Margolskee, MD, PhD, Director and President, Monell Chemical
Senses Center
AChemS Young Investigator Award for Research in Olfaction
Emre Yaksi, Associate Professor, Kavli Institute for Systems Neuroscience Center for Neural Computation, NTNU, Trondheim, Norway
2014 Don Tucker Memorial Award Recipient
Anna Talaga, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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 Recipients
Jen Beshel, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY
Daniela Brunert, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany
Archana Kumari, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
Joost Maier, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA
Casey Trimmer, Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA
Corey Williams, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL
10
Polak Postdoctoral Travel Award Recipients
Prasad Rai Choudary Doddala, PhD, Division of Chemical Ecology,
Department of Plant Protection Biology, Swedish University of
Agricultural Sciences, Alnarp, Sweden
Li Jinrong, PhD, University of Oklahoma, Department of Biology, Norman, OK
Alexia Nunex-Parra, PhD, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology,
Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell Center and Neuroscience Program,
University of Colorado Medical School, Aurora, CO
Marta Pallotto, PhD, National Institute of Health, National Institute
Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, MD
Maria Savvaki, PhD, Department of Basic Science, Institute of Molecular
Biology & Biotech, FORTH and University of Crete, Vassilika Vouton,
Heraklion, Crete, Greece
AChemS Travel Fellowships for Diversity Award Recipients
Funded by a generous grant from the National Institute on Deafness and Other
Communication Disorders and the National Institute on Aging, NIH
Genevieve Bell, Department of Biological Science, Florida State University
Ariell Joiner, Department of Pharmacology, University of Michigan
Kayla Lemons, Department of Biology, University of Maryland Baltimore County
Daniel Ramirez-Gordillo, PhD, University of Denver Anschutz Medical Campus
AChemS Student Housing and Travel Award Recipients
Funded by the Polak Foundation: Ghislaine Polak and the late Ernest Polak
Johanna Reichert
Jessica Gaby
Mostafa Abdel-Hamid
Maridel Reyes
Matthew Geramita
Dolly Al Koborssy
Sebastien Riviere
Naihua Gong
Bassem Arab
Louis Saites
Pengfei Han
Kavya Anchuri
Narumi Sato
Michaela Hanson
Maude Baldwin
Mastaneh Sharafi
Ruilong Hu
Xiaojun Bao
Angelina Schiano
Zhenbo Huang
Mary Burke
Kimberly Smith
YoonGyu Jae
Shawn Burton
Carolin Stetzler
Marley Kass
Phillip Chapman
Angela Stewart
Matthew Kochem
Mariah Cottrill
Tina Suntres
Jana Kromer
Jasper H. B. de Groot
Kate Tylicki
Kristyn Lizbinski
Claire A. de March
Inge van Rijn
Gregory Loney
Perraju Dinavahi
Crystal Wall
Brittany Martinez
Christopher Donnelly
Katja Watznauer
Elizabeth McCarthy
Guo Feng
Wenlei Ye
Maellie Midroit
Tyler Flaherty
Yuan Zhuang
Corinna Noel
Raffaela Fuerer
Logo Contest Award Recipient
Cedric Uytingco, University of Maryland, Baltimore, Maryland
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Committees
A C hemS 2015 Ex e c uti v e Co mmitt e e
President
Debra Ann Fadool, PhD
Florida State University
Past President
John Glendinning, PhD
Barnard College,
Columbia University
Senior Advisor
Alan Spector, PhD
Florida State University
President Elect
Susan Travers, PhD
The Ohio State University
Secretary
John Boughter, PhD
University of Tennessee
Membership Chair Pamela Dalton, PhD
Monell Chemical
Senses Center
Program Chair
Dana Small, PhD
JB Pierce Laboratory/
Yale University
Treasurer
Joseph Travers, PhD The Ohio State University
Sr. Councilor
Rachel Herz, PhD
Brown University
Jr. Councilor
C. Shawn Dotson, PhD
University of Florida
A C hemS 2015 Pr og ra m Co mmitt e e
Johan Lundstrom, PhD
John McGann, PhD
Joel Mainland, PhD
Bettina Malnic, PhD
Clare Mathes, PhD
Kathryn Medler, PhD
Julie Mennella, PhD
Wolfgang Meyerhof, PhD
Steven Munger, PhD
Arundhati Ray, PhD
Gordon Shepherd, PhD
Marc Spehr, PhD
Alison Ventura, PhD
Justus Verhagen, PhD
Daniel Wesson, PhD
Dana Small, PhD (Chair)
Robert Anholt, PhD
Yehuda Ben-Shahar, PhD
Sanne Boesveldt, PhD
Paul Breslin, PhD
Christine Byrd-Jacobs, PhD
Earl Carstens, PhD
Kevin Daly, PhD
Ivan De Araujo, PhD
Alfredo Fontanini, PhD
Jay Gottfried, PhD
Charles Greer, PhD
Liquan Huang, PhD
Thomas Hummel, PhD
Maria Larsson, PhD
MEETING EVALUAT I O N
The meeting evaluation is available online. Please visit www.achems.org to
give us your feedback on the meeting. Your input helps AChemS’ leadership
continue to offer quality Annual Meetings and member services.
12
Program at a Glance
We dn e sday, A p r i l 2 2 , 2 0 1 5
8:00 am
ACHEMS LONG RANGE PLANNING
COMMITTEE MEETING
Ibis Room
12:00 – 3:30 pm ACHEMS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING
The Cove at Tarpon Bay
3:30 – 7:00 pm REGISTRATION
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
5:00 – 6:00 pm WELCOME/AWARDS CEREMONY
Chair/Organizer: Susan Travers
Calusa Ballroom 1
6:00 – 7:00 pm
GIVAUDAN LECTURE:
Nicotine Addiction: Molecular Basis of
Behaviors at the Complex Interface
between Reward, Food Intake and Taste
7:00 – 9:00 pm Exclusively sponsored by:
Chair/Organizer: Dana Small
Marina Picciotto, Yale School of Medicine
Calusa Ballroom 1
WELCOME BANQUET
Waterfall Pool Deck (Ticketed event)
Inclement weather backup: Calusa Ballroom and Foyer
Thu rsday, A pr i l 2 3 , 2 0 1 5
7:00 am – 12:30 pm
6:30 – 7:30 pm REGISTRATION
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
7:30 – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
Estero Ballroom Foyer
7:30 – 9:00 am
INDUSTRY BREAKFAST CORNERS
Estero Terrace
8:00 – 10:30 am POSTER SESSION I
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 10:30 am
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Estero Ballroom Foyer
Please Note: Filming and photographing presentations (platform and poster) is prohibited
unless the presenting author has granted permission.
13
Program at a Glance, continued
10:30 am – 12:30 pm ORAL SESSION 1
Chair/Organizer: Charles Greer
Calusa Ballroom 1
10:30 am – 12:30 pm ORAL SESSION 2
Chair/Organizer: Nirupa Chaudhari
Calusa Ballroom 2
1:30 – 2:00 pm
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
2:00 – 4:00 pm INDUSTRY WORKSHOP:
Application of Chemosensory Science
to Industry Needs: Sugar Replacement,
Salt Reduction and Aromatherapy
Chair/Organizer: Christopher Simons
Calusa Ballroom 1
2:00 – 4:00 pm 4:00 – 5:00 pm THE BARRY DAVIS WORKSHOP:
FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE
NEW INVESTIGATOR
Chairs/Organizers: Susan Sullivan and Christine Livingston
Calusa Ballroom 2
CLINICAL LECTURE:
The importance of the chemical
senses during early life
Chair/Organizers: Valerie Duffy
Julie Mennella, Monell Chemical Senses Center
Calusa Ballroom 1
4:00 – 6:00 pm
ACHEMS CAREER NETWORKING SOCIAL
Chair/Organizer: Robin Dando
Estero Terrace and Royal Palm Courtyard
Inclement weather backup: Driftwood
6:00 – 7:00 pm
ACHEMS GRADUATE STUDENT HAPPY HOUR
Chair/Organizer: Robin Dando
Mangroves Patio
6:30 – 7:00 pm
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
7:00 – 9:00 pm SYMPOSIUM:
NON CALORIC SWEETENERS AND THEIR
NOT-SO-SWEET METABOLIC EFFECTS
Chair/Organizer: M. Yanina Pepino
Calusa Ballroom 1
Please Note: Filming and photographing presentations (platform and poster) is prohibited
unless the presenting author has granted permission.
14
7:00 – 9:00 pm SYMPOSIUM:
SIGNAL TRANSFORMATION AND
ROUTING IN THE OLFACTORY SYSTEM
Chair/Organizer: Marc Spehr
Calusa Ballroom 2
9:00 – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION II
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 11:00 pm
CASH BAR
Estero Ballroom Foyer
Fr iday, A pri l 2 4 , 2 0 1 5
7:30 am – 12:30 pmREGISTRATION
6:15 – 7:15 pm
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
7:30 – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
Estero Ballroom Foyer
8:00 – 8:30 am SILVER MEMBERS GATHERING
Royal Palm Courtyard
8:00 – 10:30 am POSTER SESSION III
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 10:30 am
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Estero Ballroom Foyer
10:30 am – 12:30 pm SYMPOSIUM:
ADAPTIVE EVOLUTION OF INSECT
OLFACTORY SYSTEMS
Chair/Organizer: Robert Anholt
Calusa Ballroom 1
10:30 am – 12:30 pm SYMPOSIUM:
COGNITIVE INFLUENCES ON SMELL AND TASTE:
MECHANISMS IN MICE AND MEN
Chair/Organizer: John McGann
Calusa Ballroom 2
12:30 – 1:30 pm ACHEMS BUSINESS MEETING
All members are welcome and encouraged to attend.
Calusa Ballroom 1
Please Note: Filming and photographing presentations (platform and poster) is prohibited
unless the presenting author has granted permission.
15
Program at a Glance, continued
1:30 – 2:30 pm CHEMICAL SENSES EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Great Egret Room
3:00 pm ACHEMS FUN RUN/WALK
Chair/Organizer: Dana Small
Starting Point: Hyatt Entrance Drive (Ticketed event)
6:15 – 6:45 pm
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
6:45 – 9:00 pm
PRESIDENTIAL SYMPOSIUM:
METABOLIC STATE SHIFTS SENSORY SYSTEMS
Exclusively sponsored by:
Chair/Organizer: Debra Ann Fadool
Calusa Ballroom 1
9:00 – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION IV
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 11:00 pm
CASH BAR
Estero Ballroom Foyer
Saturday, A pr i l 2 5 , 2 0 1 5
7:30 am – 12:00 pm
6:30 – 7:30 pm REGISTRATION
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
7:30 – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
Estero Ballroom Foyer
8:00 – 10:30 am POSTER SESSION V
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 10:30 am
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Estero Ballroom Foyer
10:30 am – 12:00 pm
PLATFORM PRESENTATIONS:
POLAK YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARD RECIPIENTS
Chair/Organizer: Julie Mennella
Calusa Ballroom 1
12:15 – 1:15 pm
TRAVEL FELLOWSHIPS FOR DIVERSITY AWARD
Recipients LUNCHEON
Great Egret Room
1:30 – 2:00 pm
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
Please Note: Filming and photographing presentations (platform and poster) is prohibited
unless the presenting author has granted permission.
16
2:00 – 4:00 pm 2:00 – 4:00 pm 4:00 – 5:00 pm
SYMPOSIUM:
AVIAN SPECIES AS A MODEL FOR TASTE
DETECTION: MOLECULAR RECOGNITION,
DIET CHOICE AND EVOLUTION
Chair/Organizer: Masha Niv
Calusa Ballroom 1
SYMPOSIUM:
FEEDBACK AND MODULATION IN
CHEMICAL SENSES
Chairs/Organizers: Christiane Linster and Donald Wilson
Calusa Ballroom 2
SPECIAL EVENT:
HAROLD MCGEE
PLAYING WITH FOOD: THREE CENTURIES
OF SCIENCE IN THE KITCHEN
Chair/Organizer: Dana Small
Calusa Ballroom 1
6:30 – 7:00 pm
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
7:00 – 9:00 pm
SYMPOSIUM:
CGMP SIGNALING IN THE OLFACTORY
SYSTEM: IMPLICATIONS FOR CELLULAR AND
BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO SENSORY STIMULI
Chair/Organizer: Steven Munger
Calusa Ballroom 1
7:00 – 9:00 pm
SYMPOSIUM:
TRANSMITTING CHEMICAL WARNINGS
IN ANIMALS AND MEN: THE ROLE OF
CHEMOSIGNALING IN SOCIAL COMMUNICATION
Chair/Organizer: Wen Li
Calusa Ballroom 2
9:00 – 11:00 pm
POSTER SESSION VI
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 11:00 pm
CASH BAR
Estero Ballroom Foyer
Please Note: Filming and photographing presentations (platform and poster) is prohibited
unless the presenting author has granted permission.
17
Program in Detail
We dn e sday, A p r i l 2 2 , 2 0 1 5
8:00 am ACHEMS LONG RANGE PLANNING
COMMITTEE MEETING
Ibis Room
12:00 – 3:30 pm ACHEMS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING
The Cove at Tarpon Bay
3:30 – 7:00 pm REGISTRATION
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
5:00 – 6:00 pm WELCOME/AWARDS CEREMONY
Chair/Organizer: Susan Travers
Calusa Ballroom 1
6:00 – 7:00 pm #1 GIVAUDAN LECTURE:
Nicotine Addiction: Molecular Basis
of Behaviors at the Complex Interface
between Reward, Food Intake and Taste
Exclusively sponsored by:
Chair/Organizer: Dana Small
Marina Picciotto, Yale School of Medicine
Calusa Ballroom 1
7:00 – 9:00 pm achems WELCOME BANQUET
Waterfall Pool Deck (Ticketed event)
Inclement weather backup: Calusa Ballroom and Foyer
18
Thu rsday, A pr i l 2 3 , 2 0 1 5
7:00 am – 12:30 pm REGISTRATION
6:30 – 7:30 pm Calusa Ballroom Foyer
7:30 – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
Estero Ballroom Foyer
8:00 – 10:30 am
POSTER SESSION I
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 10:30 am REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Estero Ballroom Foyer
10:30 am – 12:30 pm ORAL SESSION 1
Chair/Organizer: Charles Greer
Calusa Ballroom 1
10:30 am
#2 Olfactory receptor accessory proteins RTP1 and
RTP2 play a crucial role in receptor gene choice,
development and odor detection
Ruchira Sharma1, Yoshiro Ishimaru2, Ian Davison3,
Kentaro Ikegami4, Hiroaki Matsunami1. 1Duke University
Medical Center, Durham, NC, United States, 2University of Tokyo,
Tokyo, Japan, 3Boston University, Boston, MA, United States,
4
Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Tokyo, Japan
10:50 am
#3 Active Sampling Motor Centers project to Primary
Olfactory Networks Resulting in State Dependent
Modulation of Olfactory Function
Kevin C Daly. West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV,
United States
19
thur sday
7:30 – 9:00 am INDUSTRY BREAKFAST CORNERS
Estero Terrace
Participating Partners (See page 7 for more information):
Program in Detail, continued
11:10 am #4 Anxiety-dependent modulation of olfactory fear
conditioning: a multidimensional approach
Valentina Parma1, Marc Coutanche2, Janina Seubert3,4,
Robin Fondberg4, Laura Hackl1, Fredrik Åhs4,5, Johan N.
Lundström1,4,6. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia,
PA, United States, 2Department of Psychology, Yale University,
New Haven, CT, United States, 3Aging Research Center,
Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, 4Department of
Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden,
5
Department of Psychology, Uppsala University, Uppsala,
Sweden, 6Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA, United States
11:30 am
#5 Smell training induces functional plasticity in
patients with long-term smell loss
Kathrin Kollndorfer1,2, Florian Ph.S. Fischmeister3,
Christian A. Mueller4, Siegfried Trattnig5, Veronika
Schöpf1,6,7. 1Department of Biomedical Imaging und Imageguided Therapy, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria,
2
Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Medical
University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 3Study Group Clinical
fMRI, Department of Neurology, Medical University of Vienna,
Vienna, Austria, 4Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Medical
University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 5High-Field MR Center,
Department of Biomedical Imaging and Image-guided Therapy,
Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 6Institute of
Psychology, University of Graz, Graz, Austria, 7BioTechMed,
Graz, Austria
11:50 am
#6 Neural circuitry underlying expected food
odor value in humans
James D. Howard1, Jay A. Gottfried1, Phillippe N. Tobler2,
Thorsten Kahnt1. 1Northwestern University Feinberg
School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, Chicago, IL,
United States, 2University of Zurich, Department of Economics,
Zurich, Switzerland
12:10 pm
#7 Busting a myth: humans are not generally less
sensitive to odors than nonhuman mammals
Matthias Laska. Linköping University, IFM Biology,
Linköping, Sweden
20
10:30 am – 12:30 pm ORAL SESSION 2
Chair/Organizer: Nirupa Chaudhari
Calusa Ballroom 2
10:30 am
#8 Alterations in the Fatty Acid Signaling Pathway
Affect Dietary Fat Intake
Melissa N. Fillmore1, Dulce M. Minaya2, Timothy A.
Gilbertson1. 1Utah State University/Department of Biology,
Logan, UT, United States, 2University of Florida/Department of
Psychology, Gainesville, FL, United States
#9 The Effects of Base Temperature and Taste Context
on Perception of Thermal Sweetness
Danielle J Nachtigal1, Barry G Green1,2. 1The John B Pierce
Laboratory, New Haven, CT, United States, 2Yale School of
Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States
11:10 am
#10 The Taste Bud Connectome:
First Results From Scanning Blockface EM
Robert S. Lasher1,2, Kalie Petefish1, Ruibiao Yang1,2,
Grahame J. Kidd3, John C. Kinnamon2,4, Thomas E.
Finger1,2. 1Dept. Cell. & Devel. Biology, Univ. Colo. Sch.
Medicine, Aurora, CO, United States, 2Rocky Mountain Taste &
Smell Center, Aurora, CO, United States, 3Dept. Neuroscience,
Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH,
United States, 4Dept. Biological Sciences, University of Denver,
Denver, CO, United States
11:30 am
#11 Bidirectional plasticity at basolateral amygdala
synapses in primary gustatory cortex
Melissa Haley1,2, Alfredo Fontanini1,2, Arianna Maffei1,2.
1
Program in Neuroscience, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook,
NY, United States, 2Department of Neurobiology and Behavior,
Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, United States
11:50 am
#12 Complex taste responses of neurons in gustatory
cortex as revealed by 2-photon imaging
Max Fletcher, Lianyi Lu, John D Boughter. University of
Tennessee Health Science Center/Department of Anatomy &
Neurobiology, Memphis, TN, United States
12:10 pm
#13 Epigenetics of the human TAS2R38 gene
Danielle R Reed1, Sarah V Lipchock1, Emily Evans1, Corrine
Mansfield1, Liang-Dar Hwang1, Andrew Spielman2, Julie A
Mennella1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA,
United States, 2New York University, New York, NY, United States
21
thur sday
10:50 am
Program in Detail, continued
1:30 – 2:00 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
2:00 – 4:00 pm #13.5 INDUSTRY WORKSHOP:
Application of Chemosensory Science
to Industry Needs: Sugar Replacement,
Salt Reduction and Aromatherapy
Chair/Organizer: Christopher Simons
Calusa Ballroom 1
Evolving health and wellness needs are driving innovation
within the consumer packaged goods industry with
specific interest in sugar replacement, salt reduction and
aromatherapy. The opportunity to convene experts from
industry and academia makes the AChemS Annual Meeting
the perfect forum to apply knowledge and findings from
the chemosensory community to a broader discussion of
these issues. As such, this year’s Workshop will entail three
sequential facilitated roundtable discussions (approximately
40 minutes each) in which panels of experts from industry
and academia have been assembled to discuss the needs,
issues and potential solutions relevant to each of these
areas and entertain larger questions from the audience.
Participants include:
Sugar Replacement: John Hayes, Penn State University
(Facilitator), Grant DuBois, Sweetness Technologies, LLC,
Rick Mattes, Purdue University, Steve Munger,
University of Florida and Jay Slack, Givaudan Flavors Corp.
Salt Reduction: Chris Simons, The Ohio State University
(Facilitator), Steve Gravina, PepsiCo, Jane Leland, Kraft
Foods, Stuart McCaughey, IUSM-Muncie at Ball State
University and Paul Wise, Monell Chemical Senses Institute
Aromatherapy: Rachel Herz, Brown University (Facilitator),
Pam Dalton, Monell Chemical Senses Institute, Bryan
Raudenbush, Wheeling Jesuit University, Monique Smeets,
Unilever and Stephen Warrenburg, International Flavors
and Fragrances
22
4:00 – 5:00 pm CLINICAL LECTURE
Chair/Organizer: Valerie Duffy
Calusa Ballroom 1
#14
The importance of the chemical senses
during early life
Julie A. Mennella. Monell Chemical Senses Center,
Philadelphia, PA, United States
4:00 – 6:00 pm ACHEMS CAREER NETWORKING SOCIAL
Chair/Organizer: Robin Dando
Estero Terrace and Royal Palm Courtyard
Inclement weather backup: Driftwood
6:00 – 7:00 pm ACHEMS GRADUATE STUDENT HAPPY HOUR
Chair/Organizer: Robin Dando
Mangroves Patio
6:30 – 7:00 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
7:00 – 9:00 pm SYMPOSIUM:
NON CALORIC SWEETENERS AND THEIR
NOT-SO-SWEET METABOLIC EFFECTS
Chair/Organizer: M. Yanina Pepino
Calusa Ballroom 1
7:00 pm
#15 Non caloric sweeteners and their not-so-sweet
metabolic effects
M. Yanina Pepino. Washington University School of Medicine,
Department of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, United States
23
thur sday
2:00 – 4:00 pm THE BARRY DAVIS WORKSHOP:
FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES FOR
THE NEW INVESTIGATOR
Chairs/Organizers: Susan Sullivan and Christine Livingston
Calusa Ballroom 2
This workshop will include an overview of research,
training, and funding opportunities for graduate students,
postdoctoral fellows, and early stage investigators. The
discussion will provide practical information on how grant
applications are processed within NIH/NIDCD, including
Institute and study section assignments, the peer review
process, Advisory Council activities, pay lines, and the roles
of program and review staff.
Program in Detail, continued
7:10 pm
#16 Not so sweet revenge: Unanticipated consequences
of high-intensity sweeteners
Susan E. Swithers. Purdue University Department of
Psychological Sciences, West Lafayette, IN, United States
7:40 pm #17 Separate brain systems mediate the hedonic and
metabolic actions of sugar
Ivan de Araujo1,2. 1The John B Pierce Laboratory, New Haven,
CT, United States, 2Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States
8:10 pm #18 Sucralose Consumption Decreases Sweet Taste Sensitivity
Mary V. Burke1,2, Barkha P. Patel1,3, Maria G. Veldhuizen1,3,
Amanda E. Wray1, Dana M. Small1,3. 1The John B. Pierce
Laboratory, New Haven, CT, United States, 2Yale University/
Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, New Haven, CT,
United States, 3Yale University/Department of Psychiatry,
New Haven, CT, United States
8:25 pm
#19 Metabolic effects of sucralose in subjects with obesity
M. Yanina Pepino. Center for Human Nutrition, Washington
University School of Medicine, Department of Medicine,
St. Louis, MO, United States
7:00 – 9:00 pm SYMPOSIUM:
SIGNAL TRANSFORMATION AND
ROUTING IN THE OLFACTORY SYSTEM
Chair/Organizer: Marc Spehr
Calusa Ballroom 2
7:00 pm
#20 Signal Transformation and Routing in the
Olfactory System
Marc Spehr. RWTH Aachen University/Dept. of
Chemosensation, Aachen, Germany
7:10 pm #21 trans-Tango: Trans-synaptic Mapping and
Manipulation of Neural Circuits
Gilad Barnea, Mustafa Talay, Ethan Richman.
Brown University/Department of Neuroscience, Providence,
RI, United States
7:40 pm
#22 Neural Identity and Odor Coding in Piriform Cortex
Alexander Fleischmann, Assunta Diodato, Benjamin
Roland. CIRB/College de France, Paris, France
8:10 pm
#23 Entrained Oscillatory Discharge in an Accessory
Olfactory Bulb Microcircuit
Chryssanthi Tsitoura, Marc Spehr. RWTH Aachen University,
Dept. of Chemosensation, Aachen, Germany
24
8:25 pm
#24 Inhibition and Olfaction
Andreas T. Schaefer1,2. 1Div Neurophysiol, National Institute
for Medical Research, London, United Kingdom, 2Department of
Neuroscience, Physiology and Pharmacology, University College
London, London, United Kingdom
9:00 – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION II
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 11:00 pm Cash Bar
Estero Ballroom Foyer
Fr iday, A pri l 2 4 , 2 0 1 5
7:30 am – 12:30 pm REGISTRATION
6:15 – 7:15 pm
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
7:30 – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
Estero Ballroom Foyer
8:00 – 10:30 am POSTER SESSION III
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 10:30 am REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Estero Ballroom Foyer
10:30 am – 12:30 pm SYMPOSIUM:
ADAPTIVE EVOLUTION OF INSECT
OLFACTORY SYSTEMS
Chair/Organizer: Robert Anholt
Calusa Ballroom 1
10:30 am
#25 Adaptive Evolution of Insect Olfactory Systems
Robert R H Anholt1,2,3. 1North Carolina State University/W. M.
Keck Center for Behavioral Biology, Raleigh, NC, United States,
2
North Carolina State University Program in Genetics, Raleigh,
NC, United States, 3North Carolina State University/Department
of Biological Sciences, Raleigh, NC, United States
25
fr iday
8:00 – 8:30 am SILVER MEMBERS GATHERING
Royal Palm Courtyard
Program in Detail, continued
10:40 am
#26 The paradox of evolutionary diversification
in sexual signaling
Fred Gould1, Coby Schal1, Gissella Vasquez2, David
Heckel3, Neil Vickers4, Astrid Groot5. 1North Carolina State
University Department of Entomology, Raleigh, NC, United
States, 2US Navy Entomology, Lima, Peru, 3Max Plank Institute
for Chemical Ecology, Jena, Germany, 4University of Utah Biology
Department, Salt Lake City, UT, United States, 5University of
Amsterdam Biology Department, Amsterdam, Netherlands
11:10 am
#27 Linking Genotype to Phenotype:
Olfactory Behavior in Drosophila mojavensis
Stephanie M Rollmann, Amber Crowley-Gall, John E
Layne, Nicole Rhodes. University of Cincinnati/Department
of Biological Sciences, Cincinnati, OH, United States
11:40 am
#28 A bitter-sweet adaptive change in cockroach taste
Ayako Wada-Katsumata, Jules Silverman, Coby Schal.
Department of Entomology and W.M. Keck Center for
Behavioral Biology, NCSU, Raleigh, NC, United States
11:55 am
#29 Drosophila Olfactory Neuroecology
Marcus C Stensmyr. Lund University, Lund, Sweden
10:30 am – 12:30 pm SYMPOSIUM:
COGNITIVE INFLUENCES ON SMELL AND TASTE:
MECHANISMS IN MICE AND MEN
Chair/Organizer: John McGann
Calusa Ballroom 2
10:30 am
#30 Cognitive Influences on Smell and Taste:
Mechanisms in Mice and Men
John P. McGann. Rutgers University Psychology Department,
Piscataway, NJ, United States
10:40 am
#31 Acute and prolonged top-down modulation of taste
Dana M Small1-3, Maria G Veldhuizen1-2. 1The John B Pierce
Laboratory, New Haven, CT, United States, 2Yale University,
New Haven, CT, United States, 3University of Cologne,
Cologne, Germany
11:10 am
#32 Emotional influences on olfaction –
Anxiety-state-dependent olfactory processing
and neural circuitry adaptation
Wen Li1, Elizabeth Krusemark2, Lucas Novak1, 2.
1
Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, United States,
2
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States
26
11:40 am
#33 Gustatory cortex neuronal ensemble response
dynamics during learning and extinction
Anan Moran1,2, Donald B Katz1. 1Brandeis University,
Waltham, MA, United States, 2Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
11:55 am
#34 Surprise and Expectation Modulate Early
Olfactory Processing in Mice
John P. McGann, Lindsey A Czarnecki, Marley D Kass,
Michelle C Rosenthal, Cynthia D Fast. Rutgers University
Psychology Department, Piscataway, NJ, United States
12:30 – 1:30 pm ACHEMS BUSINESS MEETING
All members are welcome and encouraged to attend.
Calusa Ballroom 1
1:30 – 2:30 pm CHEMICAL SENSES
EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Great Egret Room
6:15 – 6:45 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
6:45 – 9:00 pm PRESIDENTIAL SYMPOSIUM:
METABOLIC STATE SHIFTS SENSORY SYSTEMS
Exclusively sponsored by:
Chair/Organizer: Debra Ann Fadool
Calusa Ballroom 1
6:45 pm
#35 Metabolic State Shifts Sensory Systems
Debra Ann Fadool. The Florida State University/Dept. of
Biological Science, Program in Neuroscience and Molecular
Biophysics, Tallahassee, FL, United States
7:00 pm
#36 Sweet Talk in the Brain: Hypothalamic Glucose Sensing
Influences Reward Neurocircuitry
Vanessa Routh. Rutgers, New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ
7:30 pm
#37 Oxidative Stress, Inflammation and a Sensory Neural Cell:
Diabetic Retinopathy
Timothy S Kern. Case Western Reserve University/Medicine,
Cleveland, OH, United States
27
fr iday
3:00 pm ACHEMS FUN RUN/WALK
Starting Point: Hyatt Entrance Drive (Ticketed event)
Program in Detail, continued
8:00 pm
#38 Inflammatory factors trigger apoptosis in taste cells,
resulting in fewer taste buds in obese mice
Robin Dando. Department of Food Science, Cornell University,
Ithaca, NY, United States
8:20 pm
#39 Hyperlipidemic Diet Disrupts Olfactory
Structure and Function
Nicolas Thiebaud1, Genevieve A. Bell1, Kassandra L.
Ferguson1, Erminia Fardone1, Melissa A. Cooper1, Arda B.
Celen1, James A. Warrington1, Debra Ann Fadool1,2.
1
The Florida State University/Dept. of Biological Science and
Program in Neuroscience, Tallahassee, FL, United States,
2
The Florida State University/Institute of Molecular Biophysics,
Tallahassee, FL, United States
8:40 pm
#40 FMRI of chemosensory response:
relationship to BMI and metabolic status
Claire Murphy1,2,3, Erin Green3, Aaron Jacobson1, Lori
Haase3, Jacquelyn Szajer3, Elissa McIntosh1. 1San Diego
State University/Psychology, San Diego, CA, United States,
2
University of California, San Diego/Surgery, San Diego, CA,
United States, 3SDSU/UCSD Joint Doctoral Program, San Diego,
CA, United States
9:00 – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION IV
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 11:00 pm Cash Bar
Estero Ballroom Foyer
Saturday, A pr i l 2 5 , 2 0 1 5
7:30 am – 12:00 pm REGISTRATION
6:30 – 7:30 pm Calusa Ballroom Foyer
7:30 – 9:00 am CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
Estero Ballroom Foyer
8:00 – 10:30 am POSTER SESSION V
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 10:30 am REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Estero Ballroom Foyer
28
10:30 am – 12:00 pm PLATFORM PRESENTATIONS:
POLAK YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARD RECIPIENTS
Chair/Organizer: Julie Mennella
Calusa Ballroom 1
10:30 am
#41 Alterations in Brain-derived Leptin-homolog
Unpaired 1 Lead to Obesity Phenotypes in Drosophila
through Regulation of Food Odor Value Signaling
Jennifer Beshel, Yi Zhong. Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory/Department of Neuroscience,
Cold Spring Harbor, NY, United States
10:45 am
#42 Serotonergic Modulation of Sensory Processing
in the Rodent Olfactory Bulb
Daniela Brunert1, Markus Rothermel1, Michael T. Shipley2,
Matt Wachowiak3. 1Department of Chemosensation, Institute
for Biology II, RWTH- Aachen University, Aachen, Germany,
2
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Program in
Neuroscience, University of Maryland School of Medicine,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 3Department of Neurobiology
and Anatomy and Brain Institute, University of Utah,
Salt Lake City, UT, United States
#43 Pharmacologic and genetic disruption of Smoothened
reveals dependence of taste organs on Hedgehog signaling
Archana Kumari1, Alexandre N. Ermilov2, Libo Li1,
Benjamin L. Allen3, Robert M. Bradley1, Andrzej A.
Dlugosz2,3, Charlotte M. Mistretta1. 1Department of Biologic
and Materials Sciences, School of Dentistry, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States, 2Department of
Dermatology, Medical School, University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor, MI, United States, 3Department of Cell and
Developmental Biology, Medical School, University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor, MI, United States
11:15 am
#44 The Taste System Modulates Smell Perception via Neural
Interactions at the Level of Primary Sensory Cortex
Joost X Maier, Donald B Katz. Brandeis University/Volen
Center for Complex Systems, Waltham, MA, United States
11:30 am
#45 Predicting human odor perception from olfactory
receptor activation
Casey Trimmer1, Jason R Willer2, Andreas Keller3, Leslie B
Vosshall3, Nicholas Katsanis2, Hiroaki Matsunami2, Joel D
Mainland1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA,
United States, 2Duke University, Durham, NC, United States,
3
The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, United States
29
sat urday
11:00 am
Program in Detail, continued
11:45 am
#46 Direct evidence for BBSome-associated intraflagellar
transport reveals distinct properties of native mammalian
olfactory sensory cilia
Corey L Williams, Jeffrey R Martens. University of
Florida/Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics,
Gainesville, FL, United States
12:15 – 1:15 pm Travel FellowshipS for Diversity Award
Recipients LunchEON
Great Egret Room
1:30 – 2:00 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
2:00 – 4:00 pm SYMPOSIUM:
AVIAN SPECIES AS A MODEL FOR TASTE
DETECTION: MOLECULAR RECOGNITION,
DIET CHOICE AND EVOLUTION
Chair/Organizer: Masha Niv
Calusa Ballroom 1
2:00 pm
#47 Avian species as a model for taste detection:
molecular recognition, diet choice and evolution
Masha Niv. The Hebrew University, Rehovot, Israel
2:10 pm
#48 Oral Nutrient Sensing in the Chicken:
A Look Beyond T1R/T2Rs
Eugeni Roura, Jun-Mo Kim, Sungbo Cho.
The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Australia
2:40 pm
#49 Recognition Profiles of Avian Bitter Taste Receptors
Maik Behrens1, Sigrun I. Korsching2, Wolfgang Meyerhof1.
1
German Institute of Human Nutrition Potsdam-Rehbruecke/
Molecular Genetics, Nuthetal, Germany, 2University at Cologne/
Institute of Genetics, Cologne, Germany
3:10 pm
#50 The evolution of sweet taste perception in hummingbirds
Maude W. Baldwin1, Yasuka Toda2, Tomoya Nakagita2,
Mary J. O’Connell3, Kirk C. Klasing4, Takumi Misaka2,
Scott V. Edwards1, Stephen D. Liberles5. 1Harvard University,
Cambridge, MA, United States, 2University of Tokyo, Tokyo,
Japan, 3Dublin City University, Dublin, Ireland, 4University of
California, Davis, Davis, CA, United States, 5Harvard Medical
School, Boston, MA, United States
30
3:25 pm
#51 Taste and Promiscuity – Structural Determinants in
G-protein Coupled Chemosensory Receptors
Masha Niv. The Hebrew University, Rehovot, Israel
2:00 – 4:00 pm SYMPOSIUM:
FEEDBACK AND MODULATION IN
CHEMICAL SENSES
Chairs/Organizers: Christiane Linster and Donald Wilson
Calusa Ballroom 2
2:00 pm
#52 Feedback and modulation in chemical senses
Christiane Linster1, Donald Wilson2. 1Cornell University, NBB,
Ithaca, NY, United States, 2NYU Langone Medical Center, NY,
NY, United States
2:10 pm
#53 Top-down control on adult-born neurons during
olfactory learning
Nathalie Mandairon, Marion Richard, Jeremy Forest,
Maellie Midroit, Xuming Yin, Anne Didier. CRNL UMR
CNRS 5292, Lyon, France
#54 Gamma and beta oscillations describe early and late
cognitive processing during odor discrimination
Leslie M. Kay1,3, Donald E. Frederick1,3, Boleslaw Osinski2,3.
1
Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago,
IL, United States, 2Biophysics, University of Chicago, Chicago,
IL, United States, 3Institute for Mind and Biology, University of
Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States
3:10 pm
#55 Limbic System Modulation of Olfactory Cortex
Benjamin Sadrian1,2, Donald Wilson1,2. 1NYU School of
Medicine, New York, NY, United States, 2Nathan Kline Institute,
Orangeburg, NY, United States
3:25 pm
#56 Processing of anticipatory and chemosensory signals
in the gustatory system: where’s the top and where’s
the bottom?
Alfredo Fontanini. Department of Neurobiology and Behavior
and Graduate Program in Neuroscience, State University of
New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY, United States
31
sat urday
2:40 pm
Program in Detail, continued
4:00 – 5:00 pm SPECIAL EVENT:
HAROLD MCGEE
PLAYING WITH FOOD: THREE CENTURIES OF
SCIENCE IN THE KITCHEN
Chair/Organizer: Dana Small
Calusa Ballroom 1
6:30 – 7:00 pm REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Calusa Ballroom Foyer
7:00 – 9:00 pm SYMPOSIUM:
CGMP SIGNALING IN THE OLFACTORY
SYSTEM: IMPLICATIONS FOR CELLULAR AND
BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO SENSORY STIMULI
Chair/Organizer: Steven Munger
Calusa Ballroom 1
7:00 pm
#57 cGMP signaling in the olfactory system:
implications for cellular and behavioral
responses to sensory stimuli
Steven D. Munger. University of Florida, Department of
Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Center for Smell and Taste,
Gainesville, FL, United States
7:10 pm
#58 Mechanisms of Carbon Dioxide Sensing in Nematodes
Elissa A. Hallem, Manon L. Guillermin, Mayra A.
Carrillo, Joon Ha Lee, Michelle L. Castelletto, Spencer S.
Gang. University of California, Los Angeles/Department of
Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics, Los Angeles,
CA, United States
7:40 pm
#59 Dissecting innate predator odor aversion:
Circuit logic and genetic substrates
Trese Leinders-Zufall1, Anabel Pérez-Gómez1, Katherin
Bleymehl1, Benjamin Stein1, Martina Pyrski1, Steve D.
Munger2, Frank Zufall1, Pablo Chamero1. 1Department of
Physiology and Center for Integrative Physiology and Molecular
Medicine, University of Saarland School of Medicine, Homburg,
Germany, 2Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics
University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States
8:10 pm
#60 Relevance of cGMP Signaling in Sensory
Neurons of the Grueneberg Ganglion
Joerg Fleischer1, Katharina Schellig1, Ying-Chi Chao2,
Ruey-Bing Yang2, Heinz Breer1. 1University of Hohenheim,
Institute of Physiology, Stuttgart, Germany, 2Academia Sinica,
Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Taipei, Taiwan
32
8:25 pm
#61 Trpc2-expressing sensory neurons in the mouse main
olfactory epithelium of type B express the soluble
guanylate cyclase Gucy1b2
Peter Mombaerts, Masayo Omura. Max Planck Research Unit
for Neurogenetics, Frankfurt, Germany
7:00 – 9:00 pm SYMPOSIUM:
TRANSMITTING CHEMICAL WARNINGS
IN ANIMALS AND MEN: THE ROLE OF
CHEMOSIGNALING IN SOCIAL COMMUNICATION
Chair/Organizer: Wen Li
Calusa Ballroom 2
7:00 pm
#62 Transmitting chemical warnings in animals and men –
The role of chemosignaling in social communication
Wen Li. Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, United States
7:10 pm #63 Leveraging pheromones to study emotional behavior
in the mouse
Lisa Stowers. The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA,
United States
7:40 pm
#64 The multimodal nature of human communication
Gün R. Semin1,2,3, M.A.M. Smeets1. 1Utrecht University,
Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Utrecht, Netherlands,
2
ISPA -Instituto Universitário, Lisbon, Portugal, 3Koç University,
Istanbul, Turkey
#65 Chemical and physical warning signals:
Common and distinct effects
Ana Farias1, Yuqi You2, Yan Zheng2, Monique Smeets3,
Gün Semin1,3, Wen Li2. 1Instituto Superior de Psicologia
Aplicada, Lisbon, Portugal, 2Florida State University, Tallahassee,
FL, United States, 3Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands
8:25 pm
#66 Chemical Warning Signals in Humans
Johan N Lundström1,2,3, Mats J Olsson1. 1Karolinska
Institutet/Clinical Neuroscience, Stockholm, Sweden,
2
Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA,
United States, 3University of Pennsylvania/Psychology,
Philadelphia, PA, United States
9:00 – 11:00 pm
POSTER SESSION VI
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 11:00 pm Cash Bar
Estero Ballroom Foyer
33
sat urday
8:10 pm
Poster Session I
Poster
Board #
(Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am)
Abstract #
8:00 – 10:30 am POSTER SESSION I
Estero Ballroom
101#P1The transcription factor Phox2b identifies taste
from non-taste neurons in the geniculate ganglion
Lisa Ohman-Gault, Tao Huang, Robin Krimm.
University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, KY,
United States
102#P2Determining the role of BASP1 in peripheral
taste development and maintenance
Yankun Gao, Kathryn Medler. University at Buffalo,
Buffalo, NY, United States
103#P3Pannexin 1 knockout mice release ATP and
respond normally to all taste qualities
Sue C Kinnamon1, Catherine B Anderson1, Aurelie
Vandenbeuch1. 1Dept. of Otolaryngology and Rocky Mountain
Taste and Smell Center, Univ. of Colorado Medical School,
Aurora, CO, United States
104#P4Genetic dissection of amine sensitivity in mice
Adam Dewan1, Annika Cichy1, Jingji Zhang1, Dmitry
Rinberg2, Thomas Bozza1. 1Department of Neurobiology,
Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, United States,
2
Neuroscience Institute, New York University Langone
Medical Center, New York, NY, United States
105#P5Genome-scale analysis of olfactory system heterogeneity
Jason B. Castro1, Shreejoy Tripathy2, Torben Noto3.
1
Bates College/Psychology and Neuroscience, Lewiston, ME,
United States, 2University of British Columbia/Center
for High Throughput Biology, Vancouver, BC, Canada,
3
UCSD/Neuroscience, San Diego, CA, United States
106#P6Single olfactory sensory neuron transcriptome analysis
Ming-Shan Chien, Hiroaki Matsunami. Duke University
Medical Center/Program in Genetics and Genomics, Durham,
NC, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
34
Abstract #
107#P7Molecular profiling of activated olfactory neurons
using phosphorylated ribosome immunoprecipitation
and RNA-Seq identifies odorant receptors responding
to odors in vivo
Yue Jiang1,2,3, Naihua N. Gong1, Mengjue J. Ni1, Radhika
Pasi1, Hiroaki Matsunami14. 1Department of Molecular
Genetics and Microbiology, Duke University Medical Center,
Durham, NC, United States, 2University Program in Genetics
and Genomics, Duke University Medical Center, Durham,
NC, United States, 3Department of Statistical Science, Duke
University, Durham, NC, United States, 4Department of
Neurobiology, Duke Institute for Brain Sciences, Duke University
Medical Center, Durham, NC, United States
108#P8Expression of Phospholipase C Isozyme Gene
Transcripts in Mouse Olfactory Sensory Neurons
and Supporting Cells.
Abdullah Al-Matrouk, Aaron Sathyanesan, Weihong Lin.
University of Maryland Baltimore County, Biology Department,
Baltimore, MD, United States
109#P9Three-dimensional Synaptic Analyses of Mitral
and External Tufted Cell Dendrites in Rat Olfactory
Bulb Glomeruli
Jennifer N Bourne, Nathan E Schoppa. University of
Colorado Denver - Anschutz Medical Campus/Department of
Physiology and Biophysics, Aurora, CO, United States
110#P10
Analytical Processing of Odorant Structure
Critically Contributes to Human Olfactory Perception
Yuan Zhuang, Wen Zhou. Institute of Psychology,
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
111#P11
Odorant-activated Transmitter Release in
Olfactory Glomeruli
Herve Kadji, Jie Ma, Graeme Lowe. Monell Chemical
Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
35
thur sday
Poster
Board #
Poster Session I
Poster
Board #
(Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Abstract #
112#P12
Molecular Nearest Neighbors Determine
Mouse Olfactory Generalization to
Overlapping Odorant Mixtures
Ryan J Brackney, Richard C Gerkin, Brian H Smith.
Arizona State University School of Life Sciences, Tempe, AZ,
United States
113#P13
Mosaic representation of odors in the output
layer of the mouse olfactory bulb
Hong Goo Chae1, Daniel Kepple1, Alexei A. Koulakov1,
Venkatesh N. Murthy2, Dinu F. Albeanu1. 1Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, United States,
2
Dept of Molecular & Cellular Biology and Center for Brain
Science, Harvard University, Boston, MA, United States
114#P14
The Role of Piriform Associational Connections
in Odor Identity and Category Coding
Xiaojun Bao1, Louise L.G. Raguet2, James D. Howard1,
Sydni M. Cole1, Jay A. Gottfried1,3. 1Northwestern
University/Neurology Department, Feinberg School of
Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States, 2École Normale
Supérieure/Department of Biology, Lyon, France,
3
Northwestern University/Department of Psychology,
Evanston, IL, United States
115#P15
Perceptual Antagonism in Odor Mixtures:
Independence from Odor Quality.
William S. Cain1, Roland Schmidt1, John M. Behan2,3.
1
Chemosensory Perception Laboratory, UC San Diego,
La Jolla, CA, United States, 2School of Psychology, University of
Kent, Canterbury, United Kingdom, 3Sensorii, Boughton Lees,
United Kingdom
116#P16
Drawing the Borders of Olfactory Space
Chung Wen Yu1, Katharine A. Prokop-Prigge1, Lindsay
A. Warrenburg1, Joel D. Mainland1,2. 1Monell Chemical
Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2University of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
36
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
118#P18
Olfactory Scene Analysis
Jose Principe1,4, In Jun Park1,4, Yuriy Bobkov2,4, Barry
Ache2,3,4. 1Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
Gainesville, FL, United States, 2Whitney Laboratory for Marine
Bioscience, St Augustine, FL, United States, 3Depts. of Biology
and Neuroscience, Gainesville, FL, United States, 4Center for
Smell and Taste, and McKnight Brain Institute, University of
Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States
119#P19
Stereo olfaction sharpens sense of smell
Jin Wang, Denise Chen. Department of Neurology, Baylor
College of Medicine, Houston, TX, United States
120#P20
The Perception of Odorant Mixtures:
Limits on Potency Ratios
Terry E Acree1, Edward H Lavin1, Alice Roche2, Anne
J Kurtz3. 1Cornell University, Geneva, NY, United States,
2
AGROSUP, Dijon, France, 3Unilever Ltd, Trumbull, CT,
United States
121#P21
Comparison of odor spaces by two approaches:
verbal profiling and perceptual similarity rating
Shiori Nakano1, Saho Ayabe-Kanamura2. 1Graduate School
of Comprehensive Human Sciences, University of Tsukuba,
Tsukuba, Japan, 2Faculty of Human Sciences, University of
Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan
122#P22
Individual Differences in Taste and Odor Sensitivity
Tyler J Flaherty, Juyun Lim. Department of Food Science and
Technology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
37
thur sday
117#P17
Predicting olfactory abilities from olfactory structure
Shyam Srinivasan1,2, Charles F. Stevens1,2. 1Salk Institute,
La Jolla, CA, United States, 2University of California/Kavli
Institute for Brain and Mind, San Diego, CA, United States
Poster Session I
Poster
Board #
(Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Abstract #
123#P23
Smell and Taste, Trait or State? The Influence of
Circadian Rhythm on Chemosensory Thresholds
Rachel S. Herz2, Mary A. Carskadon1,2,3, Jared M. Saletin1,2,
Eliza Van Reen1,2, Ashten Bartz1, Chantelle Hart4, Hollie
Raynor5. 1EP Bradley Hospital Sleep Research Lab, Providence,
RI, United States, 2Department of Psychiatry and Human
Behavior, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence,
RI, United States, 3University of South Australia Centre for Sleep
Research, Adelaide, Australia, 4Center for Obesity Research and
Education and Department of Public Health, Temple University,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 5Department of Nutrition,
University of Tennessee Knoxville, Knoxville, TN, United States
124#P24
Low spontaneous amygdala activity is associated with
increased taste intensity perception in humans
Maria G Veldhuizen1,2, Dustin Scheinost3, Michelle
Hampson3, R. Todd Constable3, Barry Green1,4, Dana M
Small12,5. 1The John B. Pierce Laboratory, New Haven, CT,
United States, 2Yale University School of Medicine, Psychiatry,
New Haven, CT, United States, 3Yale University School of
Medicine, Diagnostic Radiology, New Haven, CT, United States,
4
Yale University School of Medicine, Surgery (Otolaryngology),
New Haven, CT, United States, 5Yale University, Psychology,
New Haven, CT, United States
125#P25
Nostril-specific perceptual learning of enantioselectivity
Guo Feng, Bin Zhou, Wen Zhou. Institute of Psychology,
Chinese Academy of Science, Beijing, China
126#P26
Effects of learning and neuromodulation in a
computational model of olfactory bulb and cortex
Christiane Linster1, Thomas A Cleland2, Licurgo
deAlmeida1, Sasha Devore1. 1Cornell University, NBB, Ithaca,
NY, United States, 2Cornell University, Dept. of Psychology,
Ithaca, NY, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
38
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
128#P28
Licking activity in the Davis rig is modulated
by olfactory conditioning
Dylan C Barnes, Christian H Lemon. University of
Oklahoma/Biology, Norman, OK, United States
129#P29
The Olfactory Tubercle Encodes Odor Valence
in Behaving Mice
Marie A. Gadziola1, Kate A. Tylicki2, Diana L. Christian1,
Daniel W. Wesson1,2. 1Department of Neurosciences, Case
Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States,
2
Department of Biology, Case Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, OH, United States
130#P30
The coding of odors by single neurons in the
olfactory tubercle of mice engaged in a fixed-interval
reinforcement task
Kate A. Tylicki1, Marie A. Gadziola2, Daniel W. Wesson1,2.
1
Case Western Reserve University, Dept of Biology, Cleveland,
OH, United States, 2Case Western Reserve University,
Dept of Neurosciences, Cleveland, OH, United States
131#P31
Large Bilateral Gustatory Cortex Lesions Significantly
Impair Taste Sensitivity to KCl and Quinine but
Not to Sucrose in Rats
Michelle B. Bales, Lindsey A. Schier, Ginger D. Blonde,
Alan C. Spector. Department of Psychology and Program in
Neuroscience, Tallahassee, FL, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
39
thur sday
127#P27
Role of Basal Forebrain Cholinergic
Neurons in Olfactory Learning
Alexia Nunez-Parra, Diego Restrepo. Department of Cell and
Developmental Biology, Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell Center,
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO,
United States
Poster Session I
Poster
Board #
(Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Abstract #
132#P32
Functional Circuitry of Gustatory Cortex
During Active Tasting
Dustin Graham, Naz Dikecligil, Alfredo Fontanini.
Stony Brook University/Department of Neurobiology and
Behavior, Stony Brook, NY, United States
133#P33
Effects of the Gustatory Cortex on Temporal Coding in
the Nucleus of the Solitary Tract of the Rat
Joshua D Sammons1, Caroline E Bass2, Jonathan D Victor3,
Patricia M Di Lorenzo1. 1Binghamton University/Psychology,
Binghamton, NY, United States, 2University of Buffalo School of
Medicine and Biomedical Sciences/Pharamcology and Toxicology,
Buffalo, NY, United States, 3Weill Cornell Medical School/Brain
and Mind Research Institute, New York, NY, United States
134#P34
Dynamics of ongoing and evoked neural activity
in the gustatory cortex
Luca Mazzucato1, Alfredo Fontanini1,2, Giancarlo La
Camera1,2. 1Department of Neurobiology and Behavior/State
University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY,
United States, 2Graduate Program in Neuroscience/State
University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY,
United States
135#P35
Stimulus temperature and concentration interact
to influence the gustatory response to sodium in
the mouse brain stem
Dylan C Barnes, Christian H Lemon. University of
Oklahoma/Biology, Norman, OK, United States
136#P36
fMRI investigation of the effects of Capsaicin
as taste enhancer
Paul Bovelet1, Emilia Iannilli1, Zhao Zhigang1,2,
Thomas Hummel1. 1Interdisciplinary Center “Smell & Taste”,
Dep. of Otorhinolaryngology, TU Dresden, Germany, Dresden,
Germany, 2Center for Hypertension and Metabolic Diseases,
Department of Hypertension and Endocrinology, Daping
Hospital, Third Military Medical University, Chongqing Institute
of Hypertension, Chongqing 400042, Chongqing, China
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
40
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
137#P37
Investigating the Trigeminal network
using fMRI and Co2 stimulation
Prasanna Karunanayaka, Michael Tobia, Qing Yang.
Radiology, Center for NMR Research, Penn State University
College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, United States
139#P39
The Effect of Temperature on Umami Taste at
the Tongue Tip and in the Whole Mouth
Cynthia D. Alvarado1, Barry Green1,2. 1The John B. Pierce
Laboratory, New Haven, CT, United States, 2Yale School of
Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States
140#P40
The Effect of Menthol on Flavor Intensity and
Nicotine Irritation in an E-cigarette
Kathryn Rosbrook1, Barry Green1,2. 1The John B. Pierce
Laboratory, New Haven, CT, United States, 2Yale School of
Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States
141#P41
The evaluation of enhancing effect of spilanthol on
carbonation bite by half-tongue method
Yasutaka Shoji1, Toshio Miyazawa1, Makoto Togawa1,
Katsuya Sakuma1, Paul M. Wise2, Bruce Bryant2.
1
Ogawa & Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan, 2Monell Chemical Senses
Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States
142#P42
Developmental changes in the response profiles of
rat trigeminal neuronal populations to capsaicin,
nicotine and cooling
Jiang Xu1, Valery Audige1, Nancy Rawson2, Bruce Bryant1.
1
Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States,
2
AFB, International, St. Charles, MO, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
41
thur sday
138#P38
Resting state functional connectivity of intranasal
olfactory and trigeminal brain networks
Michael J. Tobia, Prasanna Karunanayaka, Qing X. Yang.
Center for NMR Research, Hershey, PA, United States
Poster Session I
Poster
Board #
(Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Abstract #
143#P43
Trigeminal convergence onto oral sensory neurons in
the mouse nucleus of the solitary tract associates with
gustatory and thermal tuning
Jinrong Li, Christian Lemon. The University of Oklahoma/
Department of Biology, Norman, OK, United States
144#P44
Capsaicin, nonivamide and trans-pellitorine decrease free
fatty acid uptake without TRPV1 activation and increase
acetyl-coenzyme A synthetase activity in Caco-2 cells
Barbara Lieder1,4, Annett Riedel2, Jakob P. Ley3, Sabine
Widder3, Gerhard E. Krammer3, Veronika Somoza1,2.
1
Christian Doppler Laboratory for Bioactive Aroma
Compounds, Faculty of Chemistry, Vienna, Austria,
2
Department for Nutritional and Physiological Chemistry,
Faculty of Chemistry, Vienna, Austria, 3Symrise AG,
Holzminden, Germany, 4current: Symrise AG, Holzminden,
Germany
145#P45
The Detection of Chemical Irritants by the
Earthworm, Lumbricus Terrestris:
Electrophysiology and Immunohistochemistry
Albert H Kim, Elizabeth M Hanson, Collin J Preston,
Wayne L Silver. Wake Forest University/ Department of
Biology, Winston-Salem, NC, United States
146#P46
The Detection of Chemical Irritants by the
Earthworm, Lumbricus Terrestris:
Behavior and Scanning Electron Microscopy
Wayne L Silver, Stephen W Braunewell, Maximillian
H Carter, Victoria E Elliott, Riley E Jay, Ochan Kwon,
Nanami L Miyazaki, Nicolette M Winder. Wake Forest
University/ Department of Biology, Winston-Salem, NC,
United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
42
Poster Session II (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm)
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
9:00 – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION II
Estero Ballroom
202#P48
Antennal lobe local interneurons display
heterogeneity of co-transmission
Andrew M. Dacks, Aditya Kesari, Kristyn M.
Lizbinski. West Virginia University/Biology, Morgantown,
WV, United States
203#P49
Noradrenergic modulation of information processing
in the male accessory olfactory bulb
Wayne I Doyle, Julian P Meeks. University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center/Neuroscience Department,
Dallas, TX, United States
204#P50
Serotonin Modulation of Mitral Cells of the
Main versus Accessory Olfactory Bulb
Zhenbo Huang1, Debra Ann Fadool1,2. 1The Florida State
University/Department of Biological Science and Program in
Neuroscience, Tallahassee, FL, United States, 2The Florida State
University/Institute of Molecular Biophysics, Tallahassee, FL,
United States
205#P51
Smelling without serotonin
Kaitlin S. Carlson1, Meredith S. Whitney1, Marie A.
Gadziola1, Evan S. Deneris1, Daniel W. Wesson1,2.
1
Case Western Reserve University, Department of Neurosciences,
Cleveland, OH, United States, 2Case Western Reserve University,
Department of Biology, Cleveland, OH, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
43
thur sday
201#P47
Histamine Enhances the Antennal Lobe’s Ability to
Process Natural High Frequency Stimuli Encountered
During Odor Guided Flight
Samual P Bradley, Andrew M Dacks, Kevin C Daly.
West Virginia University/Biology Department, Morgantown,
WV, United States
Poster Session II (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
206#P52
Differential serotonin action on two classes of
glomerular inhibitory interneurons
Julia Brill1, Zuoyi Shao1, Renee Cockerham1, Adam Puche1,
Matt Wachowiak2, Michael T. Shipley1. 1Dept. of Anatomy
and Neurobiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Dept. of Neurobiology and
Anatomy, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States
207#P53
Dopamine and GABA modulation of neural
transmission in the olfactory bulb in lampreys
Philippe-Antoine Beauséjour1, Gheylen Daghfous1, 2,
François Auclair1, Jean-Patrick Millette1, 2, Victor Pusca1,
Barbara Zielinski3, Réjean Dubuc1,2. 1Groupe de Recherche
sur le Systeme Nerveux Central, Dept. of Neuroscience,
Univ. Montreal, Montreal, QC, Canada, 2Groupe de Recherche
en Activite Physique Adaptee, Dept. of Kinesiology, Univ.
du Quebec a Montreal, Montreal, QC, Canada, 3Dept. of
Biological Sciences, Univ. of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada
208#P54
Enzymatic processing regulates synaptically
released dopamine in the olfactory bulb
Renee Cockerham, Shaolin Liu, Roger Cachope, Joseph
Cheer, Michael T. Shipley, Adam C. Puche. University of
Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States
209#P55
The Effect of Dopamine on Investigation of
Novel and Habituated Odors
Ariel R Simonton, Michael Meredith. Florida State University
Department of Biological Science, Tallahassee, FL, United States
210#P56
Olfactory Metacognition in Patients with
Parkinson’s Disease
Kavya Anchuri1, Jelena Djordjevic1, Theresa L. White2.
1
McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada, 2Le Moyne College,
Syracuse, NY, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
44
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
212#P58
GABAergic Modulation of Olfactory Bulb Responses
to Pheromones and Amino Acids in the Sea Lamprey
(Petromyzon marinus)
Karl Boyes1, Kaela Scott1, Charrie McFadden1, Weiming Li2,
Réjean Dubuc3,4, Barbara Zielinski1,5. 1Department of Biological
Sciences, Univ. of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada, 2Department
of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State Univ., East Lansing, MI,
United States, 3Groupe de Recherche en Activite Physique Adaptee,
Dept. of Kinesiology, Univ. du Quebec a Montreal, Montreal, QC,
Canada, 4Groupe de Recherche sur le Systeme Nerveux Central,
Dept. of Neurosciences, Univ. Montreal, Montreal, QC, Canada,
5
Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, Univ. of
Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada
213#P59
Asymmetric functional deficit in the primary olfactory
cortex of early-stage Parkinson’s disease
Jianli Wang1, Thyagarajan Subramanian2,3, Qing X. Yang1,4.
1
Penn State University College of Medicine/Radiology,
Hershey, PA, United States, 2Penn State University College of
Medicine/Neurology, Hershey, PA, United States, 3Penn State
University College of Medicine/Neural & Behavioral Sciences,
Hershey, PA, United States, 4Penn State University College of
Medicine/Neurosurgery, Hershey, PA, United States
214#P60
Drinking espresso influences vigilance –
but not olfactory function in healthy subjects
Corinne A. Hasler1, Thomas Hummel2, Antje C.
Welge-Lüssen1. 1Dept. of Otorhinolaryngology, University
Hospital, Basel, Switzerland, 2Smell & Taste Clinic, Dept. of ORL,
Dresden, Germany
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
45
thur sday
211#P57
Decreased Dopamine Receptor D2 Binding Potential
is Associated with Better Olfactory Function
Andrea Niman1, Simon Cervenka2, Johan Willander1,
Lars Bäckman3, Lars Farde2, Maria Larsson1. 1Gösta Ekman
Laboratory, Dpt of Psychology, Stockholm University, Stockholm,
Sweden, 2Dpt of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute,
Stockholm, Sweden, 3Aging Research Center, Karolinska Institute,
Stockholm, Sweden
Poster Session II (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
215#P61
Short-term effect of caffeine on olfactory function
Thomas Hummel1, Janine Albinus1, Thomas Meusel1,2,
Antje Welge-Lüssen3, Antje Hähner1. 1Smell & Taste Clinic,
Dept. of ORL, TU Dresden, Dresden, Germany, 2Dept. of ORL,
Univ. Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany, 3Dept. of ORL,
Univ. Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
216#P62
Taste in a Competitive Environment: A Field Study
Corinna Noel, Robin Dando. Department of Food Science,
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States
217#P63
Stress-Related Body Odor Heightens Attention –
and Empathy-Related Brain Activity
Matthias Hoenen, Katrin T. Luebke, Bettina M. Pause.
Heinrich-Heine-University, Department of Experimental
Psychology, Duesseldorf, Germany
218#P64
Rapid Stress System Drives
Chemosignaling of Fear in Humans
Jasper H.B. de Groot1, Monique A.M. Smeets1,2,
Gün R. Semin1,3,4. 1Utrecht University, Faculty of Social
and Behavioral Sciences, Utrecht, Netherlands, 2Unilever
R&D, Sensation Perception Behavior Strategic Sciences Group,
Vlaardingen, Netherlands, 3Instituto Superior de Psicologia
Aplicada, Lisbon, Portugal, 4Koç University, Department of
Psychology, Istanbul, Turkey
219#P65
Chemosensory Anxiety Signals Prime
Defensive Behavior in Prepubertal Girls
Katrin T. Luebke1, Matthias Hoenen1, Benoist Schaal2,
Bettina M. Pause1. 1Heinrich-Heine-University, Department
of Experimental Psychology, Duesseldorf, Germany, 2Centre des
Sciences du Goût, CNRS, Université de Bourgogne, Dijon, France
220#P66
Nosewitness Testimony: Effects of Emotional Stress
Mats J Olsson1, Laura Alho2, Jacqueline Ferreira2,
Daniela Vente2, Carlos F Silva2, Sandra C Soares2.
1
Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, 2University of Aveiro,
Aveiro, Portugal
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
46
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
222#P68
Orofacial inflammation induced temporal anxiety
phenotypes in mice
Lin Shang, Jian-sheng Su. The Affiliated Stomatology
Hospital of Tongji University, Shanghai, China
223#P69
Free Radical Scavenging Activity in Saliva after a
Stressful Task and The effect of Fragrance
Alba T. Cilia, Raphael K. L. Kang, Jenna T. Abyad.
Takasago Int’l Corp USA, Rockleigh, NJ, United States
224#P70
Tumor Necrosis Factor-Alpha Antagonist Suppresses
Inflammatory Reaction and Ameliorates Olfactory
Nerve Recovery Following Injury
Masayoshi Kobayashi, Mohammed O Al Salihi, Kengo
Tamari, Tomotaka Miyamura, Kazuhiko Takeuchi.
Mie University Graduate School of Medicine/Department of
Otorhinolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Tsu, Mie, Japan
225#P71
Intermale aggression induces Arc expression in a select
population of accessory olfactory bulb interneurons
Hillary L. Cansler, Julian P. Meeks. Department of
Neuroscience, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,
Dallas, TX, United States
226#P72
Taste Signaling Pathways in the Regulation
of Gut Inflammation
Pu Feng, Jing-hua Chai, Hong Wang. Monell Chemical
Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
47
thur sday
221#P67
Sex differences in effects of infant odor memory
on fear conditioning in adult rats
Hiroko Ishikawa1, Shiori Nakano2, Saho Ayabe-Kanamura3,
Yukio Ichitani1, Kazuo Yamada1. 1Institute of Psychology &
Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan,
2
Graduate School of Comprehensive Human Sciences, University of
Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan, 3Faculty of Human Sciences, University
of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan
Poster Session
continued
Poster
Session IV
II,(Author
Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
227#P73
Transgenic Models for Studying the Roles of
Inflammatory Cytokines in Taste Disorders
Jinghua Chai, Pu Feng, Masafumi Jyotaki, Liquan Huang,
Hong Wang. Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA,
United States
228#P74
Bitter taste is regulated by tumor necrosis factor
Masafumi Jyotaki1, Pu Feng1, Agnes Kim2, Jinghua Chai1,
Nirvine Simon2, Minliang Zhou1, Alexander A. Bachmanov1,
Liquan Huang1, Hong Wang1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2Drexel University College of
Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, United States
229#P75
Expression and functions of the GFL-Ret signaling
pathway in the development of the peripheral taste system
Christopher R Donnelly, Brian A Pierchala. University of
Michigan School of Dentistry, Ann Arbor, MI, United States
230#P76
Type III, sour-responsive taste cells are preferentially
innervated by nerve fibers expressing the serotonin receptor,
5-HT3A
Eric D Larson1,3, Jennifer M Stratford1,2, Ruibiao Yang1,2,
Ernesto Salcedo1,2, Sue C Kinnamon1,3, Tom E Finger1,2.
1
Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell Center, Aurora, CO, United
States, 2Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University
of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, United States,
3
Department of Otolaryngology, University of Colorado School of
Medicine, Aurora, CO, United States
231#P77
Functional expression of umami taste receptor
T1R1/T1R3 in neutrophil
NaHye Lee1, Young Su Jung2, Yoe-sik Bae2,
JaeHyung Koo1. 1DGIST/Department of Brain Science,
Daegu, South Korea, 2Sungkyunkwan University/Department
of Biological Science, Suwon, South Korea
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
48
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
233#P79
Organization and Synaptic Dynamics of Inhibitory
Circuitry Connected to Projection Neuron
Populations in the Mouse Rostral Nucleus of the
Solitary Tract as Revealed Through Laser Scanning
Optogenetic Stimulation
James A. Corson, Robert M. Bradley. University of Michigan,
Biologic and Materials Sciences, Ann Arbor, MI, United States
234#P80
Localization of GABA within Crh- or
Sst-expressing axon terminals in the PBN
Robert F Lundy, Cody M Sterling. University of
Louisville/ASNB, Louisville, KY, United States
235#P81
Taste-evoked responses in the nucleus of the
solitary tract of 129.B6-Tas1r3 congenic mice
Stuart A McCaughey1, Alexander A Bachmanov2.
1
IUSM-Muncie at Ball State University, Muncie, IN,
United States, 2Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia,
PA, United States
236#P82
Conditional Knockout of ENaCα Produces Altered
Terminal Field Organization of Primary Afferent Terminal
Fields in the Mouse Gustatory Brainstem
Chengsan Sun1, Edith Hummler2, David L. Hill1.
1
University of Virginia/Psychology, Charlottesville, VA,
United States, 2Pharmacology and Toxicology Department,
Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne,
Lausanne, Switzerland
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
49
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232#P78
Identification of taste stem/progenitor cells and useful
CreERT2 strain to generate conditional gene knockout
in adult taste buds
Makoto Ohmoto1, François Guillemot2, Ichiro Matsumoto1.
1
Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States,
2
MRC-National Institute of Medical Research, Mill Hill,
United Kingdom
Poster Session II (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
237#P83
Differential Inhibitory Effects on NST Taste
Neurons Studied by Optogenetics
Susan P. Travers1, Joseph Breza2, Zhixiong Chen1,
Joseph B. Travers1. 1Ohio State University, Columbus, OH,
United States, 2Eastern Michigan University, Yspilanti, MI,
United States
238#P84
Electrical Stimulation of the Anterior but not
the Posterior Gustatory Cortex Elicits Taste
Reactivity Behaviors in Conscious Rats
Michael S King1, Darina Linnik1, Rachel Luke1,
Deja F Rivera1, Priya Gurjar2. 1Stetson University/Biology,
DeLand, FL, United States, 2Spruce Creek High School,
Port Orange, FL, United States
239#P85
Parabrachial nucleus projections to ventral tegmental area
transmit taste information to the reward system in mice
Louis N. Saites, Kenichi Tokita, Lianyi Lu, John D. Boughter.
University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN,
United States
240#P86
Electrogustometric statistical evaluation of taste
Annick Faurion1, Patrick Mac Leod1, Sandrine di Donato1,
Jeremy Da Costa1, Arthur Eberhardt2, Pierre-Antoine
Bastian2. 1CNRS INAF NeuroBiologie Sensorielle Olfaction &
GustationS, Gif sur Yvette, France, 2MyRobotics, Puteaux, France
241#P87
Gustatory event-related potentials elicited by
different salt tastants
Raffaela Fürer1,2, Antje Welge-Lüssen2, Thomas Hummel1,
Emilia Iannilli1. 1Interdisciplinary Center “Smell & Taste”,
Dep. of Otorhinolaryngology, TU Dresden, Germany, 2Department
of Otorhinolaryngology, University Hospital Basel, Basel,
Switzerland
242#P88
Representation of multisensory signals in the gustatory
cortex of rats before and after associative learning
Roberto Vincis, Alfredo Fontanini. Department of Neurobiology
and Behavior, SUNY Stony Brook, NY, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
50
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
244#P90
Effects of Lemon Flavor on Sour and
Sweet Tastes, and Vice Versa
Ashik H. Siddique1, Sage Rosenthal1,2, Maria G.
Veldhuizen1,3, Lawrence E. Marks1,4,5. 1John B. Pierce
Laboratory, New Haven, CT, United States, 2John L. Miller
Great Neck North High School, Great Neck, NY, United States,
3
Yale University School of Medicine/Department of Psychiatry,
New Haven, CT, United States, 4Yale School of Public Health/
Department of Environmental Health Sciences, New Haven, CT,
United States, 5Yale University/Department of Psychology,
New Haven, CT, United States
245#P91
Sensory integration of olfactory and visual
information in Aedes aegypti mosquitoes
Jeffrey A. Riffell. University of Washington,
Department of Biology, Seattle, WA, United States
246#P92
Olfactory and visual memory: Same or different?
E. Leslie Cameron1, Cody Houzenga1, E.P. Köster2,
Per Møller3. 1Department of Psychological Science, Carthage
College, Kenosha, WI, United States, 2Helmholtz Institute,
University of Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands, 3Deparment of Food
Science, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
247#P93
Complexity of Off Flavor in Orange Juice Made
from Fruit Affected by the Huanglongbing Disease
Anne Plotto, Elizabeth Baldwin, Jinhe Bai, Smita Raithore,
John Manthey, Sophie Deterre, Clotilde Leclair. USDA,
ARS, USHRL, Fort Pierce, FL, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
51
thur sday
243#P89
Flavor Detection and Identification:
A Decision-Theoretic Framework
Lawrence E. Marks1,2,3, Ashik H. Siddique1, Emily S.
Murphy1,4, Maria G. Veldhuizen1,5. 1John B. Pierce Laboratory,
New Haven, CT, United States, 2Yale School of Public Health/
Department of Environmental Health Sciences, New Haven, CT,
United States, 3Yale University/Department of Psychology,
New Haven, CT, United States, 4University of Georgia/Department
of Psychology, Athens, GA, United States, 5Yale University School of
Medicine/Department of Psychiatry, New Haven, CT, United States
Poster Session II (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
248#P94
Identification of the Off-odor in a Food Packaging
Material Using 2D GC-MS/GC-Olfactory Analysis
Michelle Gallagher, Jim DeFelippis. The Dow Chemical
Company, Collegeville, PA, United States
249#P95
Role of Intensates® Flavors in Flavor
Perception and Salivation
Marco P. Morgenstern1, Lidia Motoi1, Dulce Paredes2,
Arran Wilson1, Jennifer B. Tartaglia2, Carter Green2.
1
The New Zealand Institute for Plant & Food Research Limited,
Christchurch, New Zealand, 2Takasago International Corp. (USA),
Rockleigh, NJ, United States
250#P96
Salivary Precipitation Index (SPI) is a better predictor
of oral astringency for tannic acid than for alum
Erin E. Fleming, Gregory R. Ziegler, John E. Hayes.
Department of Food Science, Pennsylvania State University,
University Park, PA, United States
251#P97
The Role of Salivary α-Amylase in Taste
Perception and Oral Digestion of Starch
Trina J. Lapis, Michael H. Penner, Amy S. Balto,
Juyun Lim. Department of Food Science and Technology,
Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, United States
252#P98
Salivary proteins alter the orosensory response to quinine
Ann-Marie Torregrossa, Robert J Contreras,
Laura E Martin, Larissa V Nikonova, Andrew B Paedae.
Florida State University, Dept of Psychology, Tallahassee, FL,
United States
253#P98.5
Menthol Attenuates Chemosensory Irritation and Elevates
blood Cotinine in Cigarette Smoke Exposed Mice
Sven-Eric Jordt1,2 , Michael A. Ha3, Gregory J. Smith3, Joseph
A. Cichocki3, Shrilatha Balakrishna2, Lu Fan2, Yi-Shiuan Liu4,
Ana I. Caceres1, Marina R. Picciotto2 and John B. Morris3
1Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University, Durham, NC,
USA, 2Yale Tobacco Center of Regulatory Science, Department of
Psychiatry, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA, 3Department of
Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA,
4
Department of Pharmacology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
52
Poster Session III (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am)
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
8:00 – 10:30 am POSTER SESSION III
Estero Ballroom
101#P99
Nkx2.2 is required for the generation of
type III taste receptor cells
Yumei Qin, Sunil Sukumaran, Robert F. Margolskee.
Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States
102#P100
Osmotic-sensing in taste cells
Angela Stewart, Timothy A Gilbertson. Utah State
University/Biology, Logan, UT, United States
104#P102
The Molecular Mechanism of the Umami Taste
Perception of L-Theanine
Yasuka Toda1, Masataka Narukawa1, Tomoya Nakagita1,
Yukako Hayashi2, Takumi Misaka1. 1The University of Tokyo,
Tokyo, Japan, 2Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan
105#P103
Effect of NaCl on taste preferences for
L-valine in C57BL/6 mice
Yuko Murata1, Alexander A. Bachmanov2.
1
National Research Institute of Fisheries Science, Fisheries
Research Agency, Yokohama, Japan, 2Monell Chemical Senses
Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States
106#P104
The release and re-uptake of glutamate in taste buds
Aurelie Vandenbeuch1,4, Marco Tizzano2,4, Angelo
D’Alessandro3, Catherine B. Anderson1,4, Sue C.
Kinnamon1,4. 1Dept of Otolaryngology, Aurora, CO, United
States, 2Dept of Cell and Development Biology, Aurora, CO,
United States, 3Dept of Biochemistry, Aurora, CO, United States,
4
Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell Center, University of Colorado
School of Medecine, Aurora, CO, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
53
fr iday
103#P101
The Full Length TrkB Receptor is Expressed in
Gustatory Neurons, while Taste Buds Only Express
the Truncated (TrkBT1) Receptor
Tao Tang, Robin F Krimm. University of Louisville,
School of Medicine, Louisville, KY, United States
Poster Session III (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
107#P105
Shedding Light on Type III Taste Cell Function
Courtney E. Wilson1,2,3, Wallace S. Chick1,4, Sue C.
Kinnamon1,2,3. 1University of Colorado School of Medicine
Neuroscience Program, Aurora, CO, United States, 2University
of Colorado School of Medicine Department of Otolaryngology,
Aurora, CO, United States, 3Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell
Center, Aurora, CO, United States, 4University of Colorado School
of Medicine Department of Cell and Developmental Biology,
Aurora, CO, United States
108#P106
Distinctive Properties of a Proton Current Associated
with PKD2L1 Expression in Taste Cells
Wenlei Ye, Jeremy Bushman, Emily R. Liman. Section in
Neurobiology, Department of Biological Sciences, University of
Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States
109#P107
Receptive field size, chemical responses and fiber
conduction velocity of rat chorda tympani geniculate
ganglion neurons
Yusuke Yokota, Robert M. Bradley. Biologic & Materials
Sciences, School of Dentistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor,
MI, United States
110#P108
Using functional calcium imaging technique to study the
taste representation in the geniculate ganglion
An Wu1, Gennady Dvoryanchikov2, Elizabeth Pereira2,
Nirupa Chaudhari1,2, Stephen Roper1,2. 1Department of
Neuroscience, University of Miami, Miller School of Medicine,
Miami, FL, United States, 2Department of Physiology and
Biophysics, University of Miami, Miller School of Medicine,
Miami, FL, United States
111#P109
Insulin-like growth factors are expressed at high levels in
the taste system, but do not maintain taste bud structure
Bradley T. Biggs, Tao Tang, Robin F. Krimm. University of
Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, KY, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
54
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
112#P110
Taste responsiveness to sweeteners is resistant to
elevations in plasma leptin
Steven D. Munger1, Amanda E. T. Elson2, Salina Kalik3,
Yvett Sosa3, Christa M. Patterson4, Martin G. Myers, Jr.4,
John I. Glendinning3. 1University of Florida, Department
of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Center for Smell and
Taste, Gainesville, FL, United States, 2University of Southern
California, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Saban Research
Institute, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 3Barnard College,
Columbia University, Department of Biology, New York, NY,
United States, 4University of Michigan, Department of Internal
Medicine, Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology and Diabetes,
Ann Arbor, MI, United States
114#P112
Functional and Physical Mapping of PYY-Responsive
Cranial Neuronal Network in Mice
Valeriy G. Sergeyev1, Sean M Crosson2, Seth W. Currlin2,
Byeolah S. Henson2, Luis M. Colon Perez3, Marcelo Febo3,
C. Shawn Dotson3, Sergei Zolotukhin2. 1Department of
Medical Biotechnology, Udmurt State University, Izhevsk,
Russia, 2Department of Pediatrics, University of Florida College
of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, United States, 3Department of
Neuroscience and Psychiatry, University of Florida College of
Medicine and Center for Smell and Taste, University of Florida,
Gainesville, FL, United States
115#P113
Neuropeptide Regulation of the Olfactory Bulb
Kirill S. Korshunov, Allan T. Herman, Tyler R. Prager,
Paul Q. Trombley. Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL,
United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
55
fr iday
113#P111
Hindbrain parabrachial nucleus lesions counteract
hyperphagic responses to a NPY Y4 receptor agonist
John-Paul Baird, Akosua Korboe, Mwanasha Hamuza,
Amal Ali, Lindsay Grigg, Julia Lord, Jennifer Swick.
Amherst College, Amherst, MA, United States
Poster Session III (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
116#P114
Glucose Entry Through GLUT4 in the Olfactory Bulb
Subserves as a Signaling Molecule Independent from
its Metabolic Function
Dolly Al Koborssy1, Christopher Kovach1, Brandon M.
Chelette1, Debra Ann Fadool1,2. 1The Florida State University/
Dept. of Biological Science and Program in Neuroscience,
Tallahassee, FL, United States, 2The Florida State University/
Institute of Molecular Biophysics, Tallahassee, FL, United States
117#P115
Olfactory Behavioral Analysis of the Effect of
Acute versus Chronic Intranasal Insulin Treatment
Genevieve A. Bell1,2, Debra A. Fadool1,2,3. 1The Florida
State University, Department of Biological Science, Tallahassee,
FL, United States, 2The Florida State University, Program in
Neuroscience, Tallahassee, FL, United States, 3The Florida State
University, Institute of Molecular Biophysics, Tallahassee, FL,
United States
118#P116
Caffeine-induced activation of oral and gastric
bitter taste receptors regulates gastric acid secretion
Kathrin I Liszt1,2, Jakob P Ley3, Barbara Rohm1,2,
Verena Stoeger1,2, Elke Koeck1,2, Anna Stuebler1,2,
Christina M Hochkogler1,2, Mark M Somoza2, Sabine
Widder3, Joachim Hans3, Veronika Somoza1,2. 1Christian
Doppler Laboratory for Bioactive Aroma Compounds, Vienna,
Austria, 2University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 3Symrise AG,
Holzminden, Germany
119#P117
Modulation of odor-cued memory processing
by intranasal insulin
Yvonne F Brünner1, Rea Rodriguez-Raecke1,
Christian Benedict2, Jessica Freiherr1. 1RWTH Aachen
University/Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroradiology,
Aachen, Germany, 2University Uppsala/Institute of Neuroscience,
Uppsala, Sweden
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
56
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
120#P118
Optogenetic Activation of Pre-proglucagon Neurons in
the Mouse Olfactory Bulb Controls Mitral Cell Activity
Debra A Fadool1, 2, Nicolas Thiebaud2. 1The Florida State
University/Institute of Molecular Biophysics, Tallahassee, FL,
United States, 2The Florida State University/Dept. of Biological
Science and Program in Neuroscience, Tallahassee, FL,
United States
121#P119
Taste and palatability of Pyrophosphates by Rats:
a Sensorial Qualitative and Quantitative Approach
Aurélie De Ratuld1, Magali Fournier1, Kyle R. Palmer2,
Daniel J. Long2. 1SPF - Diana Pet Food, Elven, France,
2
Opertech Bio, Inc., Philadelphia, PA, United States
123#P121
Different food culture affects relationship
between noticeability and intensity for taste
Tatsu Kobayakawa1, Wolfgang Skrandies2, Takefumi
Kobayashi3, Naomi Gotow1. 1National Institute of
Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Tsukuba,
Japan, 2Justus Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany,
3
Bunkyo Gakuin University, Fujimino, Japan
124#P122
Effect of Sucralose on Oral Glucose Tolerance
Matthew C Kochem1, Suzanne Alarcon1, Paul AS Breslin1,2.
1
Rutgers University/Nutritional Sciences, New Brunswick, NJ,
United States, 2Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA,
United States
125#P123
Human Differential Sensitivity to Fat Content in Milk
Catherine Peyrot des Gachons1, Morgane Dagot1,2,
Paul A.S. Breslin1,3. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2ENSCBP, Bordeaux, France,
3
Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
57
fr iday
122#P120
Nose Licking Good? - A Study on Taste Reactivity
in Domestic Cats (Felis catus)
Michaela H. Hanson1, Nancy Rawson2, Susan Jojola2,
Melissa Crowe2, Matthias Laska1. 1Linköping University,
Linköping, Sweden, 2AFB International, Saint Charles, MO,
United States
Poster Session III (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
126#P124
Effects of individual caffeine metabolism
on coffee preference
John Prescott1, Camilla Masi2, Caterina Dinnella2, Erminio
Monteleone2. 1TasteMatters Research & Consulting, Sydney,
Australia, 2University of Florence, GESAAF, Florence, Italy
127#P125
Design and Development of Drug-bound Nanoparticles
Targeting the Olfactory Bulb to Regulate Metabolism
Austin B. Schwartz1, John Spear1, Suh-Kee Cho2,
Goutam Pauli3, Scott Stagg1,3, Hedi Mattoussi3, Debra Ann
Fadool1,2. 1The Florida State University/Institute of Molecular
Biophysics, Tallahassee, FL, United States, 2The Florida
State University/Dept. of Biological Science and Program in
Neuroscience, Tallahassee, FL, United States, 3The Florida State
University/Department of Chemistry, Tallahassee, FL,
United States
128#P126
Marked Fat Preference Deficits in P2X2/P2X3 and
Calhm1 but not CD36 and GPR40/120 Knockout Mice
Anthony Sclafani1, Philippe Marambaud2, Karen Ackroff1.
1
Brooklyn College of CUNY/Psychology, Brooklyn, NY, United
States, 2The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, Manhasset,
NY, United States
129#P127
Neural processing of calories is modulated by sensitivity
to reward in the caudate and anterior cingulate cortex
Inge van Rijn1, Cees de Graaf1, Paul A.M. Smeets1,2.
1
Division of Human Nutrition, Wageningen University &
Research Centre, Wageningen, Netherlands, 2Image Sciences
Institute, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands
130#P128
Nutrient Sensor in the Brain Directs the
Action of Brain-Gut Axis in Drosophila
Greg S.B. Suh1, Monica Dus1,2, Jason Sih-Yu Lai1.
1
Skirball Institute, NYU School of Medicine, New York, NY,
United States, 2The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI,
United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
58
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
131#P129
ANS Responses and Facial Expressions Differentiate
between the Flavor of Commercial Breakfast Drinks
Rene A. de Wijk1, Vivian He1, Manon G.J. Mensink1,
Kees de Graaf2. 1WUR/FBR, Wageningen, Netherlands,
2
WU/Human Nutrition, Wageningen, Netherlands
132#P130
OR1A1 regulates hepatic lipid metabolism by
suppression of PPAR-γ via activation of HES-1 in
cultured hepatocytes
Sung-Joon Lee, Chunyan Wu. Korea University,
Department of Biotechnology, Seoul, Korea
134#P132
Determining the Detection Thresholds for
Methyl Anthranilate (MA) in Water versus Wine
Demetra M Perry, John E Hayes. The Pennsylvania State
University, University Park, PA, United States
135#P133
The Relationship between Taste Sensitivity for
Monosodium Glutamate, Food Neophobia,
and Daily Consumption of High-Protein Foods
Angelina N Schiano, Alan N Chiang, Fangyi Xu,
Catherine A Forestell. Department of Psychology,
College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA, United States
136#P134
Food odors direct specific appetite
Harriet F.A. Zoon, Lieke van Genderen, Cees de Graaf,
Sanne Boesveldt. Wageningen University, Wageningen,
Netherlands
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
59
fr iday
133#P131
Associations between ethanol perception
and alcohol intake
Alissa A Nolden, John E Hayes. Pennsylvania State
University, University Park, PA, United States
Poster Session III (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
137#P135
Orbitofrontal Cortex Activation by Visual Only
or Visual and Olfactory Food Stimuli Reflects
Pork Sensory Specific Satiety
Pengfei Han1, Marcus A. Gray2, David C. Reutens2,
Eugeni Roura1. 1Centre for Nutrition and Food Sciences,
The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia, 2Centre for
Advanced Imaging, The University of Queensland, Brisbane,
Australia
138#P136
One Fish, Two Fish, Orange Fish, Green Fish:
Are Foods with Non-Traditional Colors Effective
in Inducing Satiety?
Jack W Hirsch, Saul Bello Rojas, Alan R Hirsch.
Smell & Taste Treatment and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL,
United States
139#P137
Food odors trigger Drosophila males to deposit a
pheromone that guides female oviposition decisions
Christopher J Potter1, Katharine A Prokop-Prigge2,
George Pretti2,3, Chun-Chieh Lin1. 1The Solomon H. Snyder
Department of Neuroscience, Center for Sensory Biology,
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD,
United States, 2Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA,
United States, 3Department of Dermatology, School of Medicine,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States
140#P138
HLA correspondence on partnership and sexuality
Jana Kromer, Thomas Hummel, Ilona Croy.
Smell & Taste Clinic, Department of Otorhinolaryngology,
TU Dresdends, Dresden, Germany
141#P139
Sex-Dependent Olfactory Sensory Neuron
Physiology in Mice
Marley D. Kass, Lindsey A. Czarnecki, Andrew H.
Moberly, John P. McGann. Rutgers University,
Piscataway, NJ, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
60
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
142#P140
Scent on the Pathway to Fertilization? –
Olfactory Receptors, Golf and Adenylate Cyclase 3
Expression in the Male Reproductive System
Anne M Cunningham, Yuliya Makeyeva. Developmental
Neurosciences Program, Sydney Children’s Hospital and the
Faculty of Medicine, UNSW, Sydney, Australia
144#P142
Gender Difference in Chinese Adults with
Postviral Olfactory Disorder
Jia Liu1, Jayant M. Pinto2, Ling Yang3, Xutao Miao4,
Linyin Yao4, Li Li4, Kunyan Li4, Guowei Chen4,
Yongxiang Wei4. 1Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery,
Beijing, China, 2Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery,
Chicago, IL, United States, 3Molecular Biology, Beijing, China,
4
Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, Beijing, China
145#P143
Cortical feedback decorrelates olfactory bulb
output in awake mice
Gonzalo H Otazu, Hong Goo Chae, Dinu F Albeanu.
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY,
United States
146#P144
The effects of specific inhibition of feedback projection
from piriform cortex on the olfactory bulb
Anan Li1, Ethan Guthman1, Tim Lei2, Diego Restrepo1.
1
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of
Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, United States,
2
Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Colorado
Denver, Aurora, CO, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
61
fr iday
143#P141
Optogenetic inhibition of mitral cell activity in
the accessory olfactory bulb reduces lordosis in
estrous female mice
Elizabeth A. McCarthy1, Tenzin Kunkhyen2, Wayne
Korzan2, Siddhartha Vashi1, James A. Cherry2, Michael
J. Baum1. 1Boston University/Biology Department, Boston,
MA, United States, 2Boston University/Psychological and Brain
Sciences Department, Boston, MA, United States
Poster Session III (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
147#P145
Surprise alters primary sensory input to the brain
Lindsey A Czarnecki, Daniel J Turkel, Andrew H Moberly,
John P McGann. Rutgers University Psychology Department,
Piscataway, NJ, United States
148#P146
Functional connections of medial amygdala circuits
involved in evaluating chemosensory communication
signals: An electrophysiological analysis
Lindsey M. Biggs, Dr. Michael Meredith. Florida State
University, Department of Biological Science, Program in
Neuroscience, Tallahassee, FL, United States
149#P147
The olfactory thalamus: characterizing single-unit
activity of the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus in
behaving rats
Emmanuelle Courtiol1,2, Donald A. Wilson1,2.
1
Emotional Brain Institute, Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric
Research, Orangeburg, NY, United States, 2Department of Child
and Adolescent Psychiatry, New York University Langone Medical
Center, New York, NY, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
62
Poster Session IV (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm)
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
9:00 – 11:00 pm POSTER SESSION IV
Estero Ballroom
201#P148
Interaction of the N-terminal Domain of Human T1R2
Taste Receptor with Brazzein, a Sweet-tasting Protein
Anni Laffitte1, Fabrice Neiers1, Renaud Seigneuric2,
Loic Briand1. 1INRA UMR1324, CNRS UMR6265,
Université de Bourgogne, Centre des Sciences du Goût et de
l’Alimentation, Dijon, France, 2Inserm U-866 Lipides, Nutrition,
Cancer, Faculté de Médecine et de Pharmacie, Dijon, France
203#P150
Taste cell-expressed carbohydrate-digesting enzymes
contribute to gustatory responses to disaccharides
Robert F. Margolskee1, Sunil K. Sukumaran1, Karen K.
Yee1, Shusuke Iwata2, Ramana Kotha1, Yuzo Ninomiya2.
1
Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States,
2
Section of Oral Neuroscience, Graduate School of Dental Science,
Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan
204#P151
Influence of saccharide length on detection of
glucose polymers in humans
Juyun Lim, Amy S Balto, Trina J Lapis, Michael H Penner.
Oregon State University, Department of Food Science,
Corvallis, OR, United States
205#P152
Dietary sugars downregulate intestinal sweet taste
receptors leading to altered glucose absorption in mice
George A. Kyriazis1,2, Kathleen Smith1, Richard E.
Pratley1,2. 1Sanford Burnham Medical Research Institute,
Orlando, FL, United States, 2Florida Hospital, Orlando, FL,
United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
63
fr iday
202#P149
Gustatory synergy between sugars and amino acids
in the yellow fever mosquito, Aedes aegypti
Prasad RC Doddala, Sharon R Hill. Swedish University
of Agricultural Sciences, Alnarp, Sweden
Poster Session IV (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
206#P153
Does sweetener synergy depend on multiple
T1R2/T1R3 receptor binding sites?
M. Michelle Reyes, John E. Hayes. Department of Food
Science, Penn State, University Park, PA, United States
207#P154
Further Psychophysical Evidence that the Taste of
Glucose Polymers is Transduced via a T1R2+T1R3Independent Mechanism in Mice
Kimberly R Smith, Alan C Spector. Florida State University,
Department of Psychology and Program in Neuroscience,
Tallahasssee, FL, United States
208#P155
Genome-wide analysis of quantitative trait loci for
behavioral and neural taste responses to sweeteners in
F2 hybrids between C57BL/6ByJ and 129P3/J mice
Cailu Lin1, Masashi Inoue1, 2, Yutaka Ishiwatari3, Natalia
P Bosak1, Xia Li4, Danielle R Reed1, Gary Beauchamp1,
Alexander A Bachmanov1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2Laboratory of Cellular
Neurobiology, School of Life Science, Tokyo University of
Pharmacy and Life Science, Tokyo, Japan, 3Institute for
Innovation, Ajinomoto Co., Inc, Kawasaki, Japan, 4Cytogenetics
Laboratory, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, Cincinnati, OH,
United States
209#P156
Preference for sweeteners mixed with compounds
preferred or avoided by golden hamsters
(Mesocricetus auratus)
Marion E Frank, Gerri R Blick, Bethany L Horbal,
Thomas P Hettinger, Bradley K Formaker. UCONN
HEALTH/Oral Health & Diagnostic Sciences, Farmington, CT,
United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
64
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
210#P157
Mice selected for high and low saccharin intake
differ in consumption of appetitive taste solutions
regardless of their taste quality
Rachel L Poole1, Masashi Inoue2, Natalia P Bosak1,
Alexander A Bachmanov1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2Laboratory of Cellular
Neurobiology, School of Life Science, Tokyo University of
Pharmacy and Life Science, Hachioji, Tokyo, Japan
212#P159
Genetic analysis of mouse strains selectively bred
for high and low saccharin intake
Natalia P. Bosak, Maria L.Theodorides, Cailu Lin,
Gary K. Beauchamp, Alexander A. Bachmanov.
Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States
213#P160
Gustatory Stimulation with Sucralose Results in
Differential Patterns of Fos-like Immunoreactivity
in the Rostral Nucleus of the Solitary Tract of
Sucralose-Preferring and – Avoiding Rats
Gregory C Loney, Lisa A Eckel. Florida State University
Program in Neuroscience Department of Psychology,
Tallahassee, FL, United States
214#P161
Not all artificial sweeteners are created equal
John Glendinning, Marlena Holter, Diana Gruenstein.
Barnard College, Columbia University/Biology, New York,
NY, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
65
fr iday
211#P158
Reciprocal crosses between C57BL/6J and DBA/2J
reveal chromosomal and epigenetic taste-preference
signatures in laboratory mice
David A Blizard1, David J Vandenbergh1, Joseph P Gyekis1,
Thomas P Hettinger2, Tsuyoshi Koide3, Marion E Frank2.
1
Department of Biobehavioral Health, Pennsylvania State
University, University Park, PA, United States, 2Department
of Oral Health & Diagnostic Sciences, UCONN HEALTH,
Farmington, CT, United States, 3Mouse Genomics Resource
Laboratory, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Shizuoka,
Japan
Poster Session IV (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
215#P162
Maltodextrin acceptance and preference in
eight strains of mice
Rachel L Poole, Tiffany R Aleman, Michael G Tordoff.
Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States
216#P163
Dietary Sugar Levels Affect Sweet Taste Intensity
Paul M. Wise1, Laura Nattress2, Linda J. Flammer2,
Gary K. Beauchamp1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2PepsiCo Global R&D,
Hawthorne, NY, United States
217#P164
Short-term Exposure to Sucralose, but not Sucrose,
Increases Sweet Taste Preference in Adults
Barkha P Patel1,3, Mary V Burke1,2, Maria G Veldhuizen1,3,
Amanda E Babbs1, Dana M Small1-3. 1The John B. Pierce
Laboratory, New Haven, CT, United States, 2Interdepartmental
Neuroscience Program, Yale University, New Haven, CT,
United States, 3Department of Psychiatry, Yale University,
New Haven, CT, United States
218#P165
Cocaine Does not Alter Sweet Taste Sensitivity
Jennifer K Roebber1, Sari Izenwasser1,2, Nirupa
Chaudhari1,3. 1University of Miami, Graduate Program in
Neurosciences, Miami, FL, United States, 2Department of
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Miami, FL, United States,
3
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Miami, FL,
United States
219#P166
Children’s liking for the taste of nutritive
and nonnutritive sweeteners
Nuala K. Bobowski, Phoebe Mathew, Danielle R.
Reed, Julie A. Mennella. Monell Chemical Senses Center,
Philadelphia, PA, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
66
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
220#P167
Laboratory demonstration of volatile-enhanced-sweetness
Thomas A. Colquhoun1,2, Michael L. Schwieterman1,2,
Derek J. Snyder1,3, Jennifer J. Stamps1,4, Charles A. Sims1,4,
Asli Z. Odabasi1,4, Harry J. Klee1,5, Denise M. Tieman1,5,
James W. Olmstead1,5, David G. Clark1,2, Linda M.
Bartoshuk1,4. 1University of Florida/IFAS/Plant Innovation
Program, Gainesville, FL, United States, 2University of Florida/
Environmental Horticulture, Gainesville, FL, United States,
3
University of Southern California/Occupational Science
and Occupational Therapy, Los Angeles, CA, United States,
4
University of Florida/Food Science and Human Nutrition,
Gainesville, FL, United States, 5University of Florida/
Horticultural Sciences, Gainesville, FL, United States
222#P169
Epstein Barr Virus Induced Dysosmia, Hyposmia,
Dysgeusia and Hypogeusia in the Absence of
an Upper Respiratory Infection
Ayham K. Alagha1,2, Alan R. Hirsch1. 1Smell and Taste
Treatment and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL, United States,
2
Caribbean Medical University, Curacao, Netherlands Antilles
223#P170
Smell and Taste Disorders – Current Care
and Treatment in the Dutch Health Care System
Sanne Boesveldt1, Elbrich Postma1,2, Wilbert Boek3,
Kees de Graaf1. 1Division of Human Nutrition, Wageningen
University, Wageningen, Netherlands, 2Alliantie Voeding Gelderse
Vallei, Ede, Netherlands, 3ENT department, Hospital Gelderse
Vallei, Ede, Netherlands
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
67
fr iday
221#P168
Heightened preferences for sweetness in patients
with Wolfram Syndrome
M. Yanina Pepino, Allison Bischoff, Elizabeth Beach,
Amal Al-Lozi, Johanna Sonnenschein, Tamara Hershey,
WU Wolfram Study Group. Washington University,
School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, United States
Poster Session IV (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
224#P171
Pyrethroid Insecticide Induced Anosmia and Hypogeusia
Perraju Dinavahi1,2, Alan R Hirsch1. 1Smell and Taste
Treatement and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL, United States,
2
Caribbean Medical University, Curacao, Netherlands Antilles
225#P172
Chronic Cigarette Exposure Associates with
Self-reported Smell Alterations: Findings from the
U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
(NHANES) 2011-2012
S. Grace Glennon1, Shristi Rawal1, Howard J Hoffman2,
Valerie B Duffy1. 1University of Connecticut/Allied Health
Sciences, Storrs, CT, United States, 2NIDCD, NIH/Epidemiology
& Statistics Program, Bethesda, MD, United States
226#P173
Cannabis Responsive Chemosensory Dysfunction
Hilton M Hudson, Alan R Hirsch, Ayham K Alagha.
Smell & Taste Treatment and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL,
United States
227#P174
Do Sjogren’s Syndrome affect odor identification
abilities?
Renee Poon1, Nan Su1, Kelly Mo1, Mark Darling2,
Miriam Grushka1. 1Oral Medicine, Toronto, ON, Canada,
2
Department of Pathology, Schulich School of Medicine and
Dentistry, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada
228#P175
Hyposmia alters olfactory memory performance
Johanna Reichert1,2, Kathrin Kollndorfer3, Josephine
Braunsteiner3, Veronika Schöpf1,2,3. 1Institute of Psychology,
Graz, Austria, 2BioTechMed, Graz, Austria, 3Department of
Biomedical Imaging und Image-guided Therapy, Vienna, Austria
229#P176
Projected Olfactory Reference Syndrome:
A Case Report
Alfred Goldyne, Ayham Alagha, Alan R Hirsch.
Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation,
Chicago, IL, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
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68
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
230#P177
Comparative analysis of morphological changes
in human nasal biopsies across ages and pre-existing
medical conditions
Mridula (Meera) Vinjamuri1, Edmund Pribitkin2,
Liquan Huang1. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia,
PA, United States, 2Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia,
PA, United States
232#P179
TRPM5-expressing Microvillous Cells are Involved in
Modulation of Olfactory Function after Irritant Exposure
Kayla Lemons1, Imad Aoudé1, Tatsuya Ogura1, Emily
Scott2, Weihong Lin1. 1University of Maryland Baltimore
County, Department of Biology, Baltimore, MD, United States,
2
Ohio Wesleyan University, Department of Neuroscience,
Delaware, OH, United States
233#P180
Treatment of neural anosmia by topical application
of bFGF-gelatin hydrogel in the nasal cavity:
an experimental study in mice
Jumpei Nota1, Hirotaka Takahashi1,2, Nobuhiro Hakuba1,3,
Naohito Hato1, Kiyofumi Gyo1,2, Yasuhiko Tabata4.
1
Department of Otolaryngology, Ehime University, School of
Medicine, Toon-city, Japan, 2Department of Otolaryngology,
Takanoko Hospital, Matsuyama-city, Japan, 3Department of
Otolaryngology, Teikyo University Hospital, Mizonokuchi,
Kawasaki-city, Japan, 4Department of Biomaterials,
Field of Tissue Engineering, Kyoto-city, Japan
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
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69
fr iday
231#P178
Solitary Chemosensory Cells trigger avoidance
behavior to inhaled irritants
Marco Tizzano. University of Colorado, Cell & Developmental
Biology, Rocky Mountain Taste & Smell Center, Aurora, CO,
United States
Poster Session IV (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
234#P181
Numbers Matter: a Mouse Model with Reduced
Mitral Cells and Olfactory System Dysfunction
Maria Savvaki1, George G Bastakis1, Antonis Stamatakis2,
Marina Vidaki1, Domna Karagogeos1. 1Institute of Mol.
Biol. &Biotech-FoRTH and University of Crete/Dpt. of Basic
Science, Heraklion, Greece, 2University of Athens/Laboratory
of Biology, Faculty of Nursing, School of Health Sciences,
Athens, Greece
235#P182
Resilient Properties of Olfactory Ensheathing
Cells after Neuronal Loss
Tanu Sharma, Randall R. Reed. Department of Neuroscience,
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore, MD, United States
236#P183
Comparison olfactory event-related potentials (OERP)
with fMRI in patients with olfactory dysfunction
Byung G. Kim1, Woo Y. Bae2, Jin K. Kim3. 1Department
of ORL-H&N Surgery, St. Paul’s Hospital, The Catholic of
University of Korea, Seoul, South Korea, 2Department of
ORL-H&N Surgery, Dong A University Hospital, Dong A
University, Seoul, South Korea, 3Department of ORL-H&N
Surgery, Konkuk University Medical Center. Konkuk Unversity,
Seoul, South Korea
237#P184
Experience-dependent Axon Targeting and Guidance
Molecule Expression in the Mouse Olfactory System
Naihua N. Gong, Hiroaki Matsunami. Molecular Genetics
and Microbiology, Duke University, Durham, NC, United States
238#P185
Olfactory sensory deprivation as a model for
homeostatic plasticity
Thomas G Mast, Michael Dryden, Jacob Reiss.
Department of Biology, Eastern Michigan University,
Ypsilanti, MI, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
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70
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
240#P187
WITHDRAWN
241#P188
The effect of intensive training on olfactory performance
Johannes Frasnelli1,2, Noémie Mercier1. 1UQTR, Department
of Anatomy, Trois Rivières, QC, Canada, 2Research Center,
Sacré-Coeur Hospital, Montreal, QC, Canada
242#P189
Long Term Recovery of Olfactory Function
Following Bulbectomy and Olfactory Nerve
Transection in Adult Mice
Mostafa Abdel-Hamid, Taylor Pence, Richard Costanzo.
Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine,
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Richmond, VA,
United States
243#P190
The Pig Olfactory System
Peter C Brunjes1, Sandford H Feldman2, Stephen K
Osterberg1. 1University of Virginia, Psychology, Charlottesville,
VA, United States, 2University of Virginia, Comparative
Medicine, Charlottesville, VA, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
71
fr iday
239#P186
Wide-spread disruption of brain networks by chronic
peripheral sensory loss
Kathrin Kollndorfer1,2, Daniel W. Wesson3,4, Andras Jakab1,
Christian A. Mueller5, Siegfried Trattnig6, Veronika
Schöpf1,7,8. 1Department of Biomedical Imaging und Imageguided Therapy, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna,
Austria, 2Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine,
Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 3Department
of Neurosciences, Case Western Reserve University School of
Medicine, Cleveland, OH, United States, 4Department of Biology,
Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States,
5
Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Medical University of
Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 6High Field MR Center, Department
of Biomedical Imaging and Image-guided Therapy, Medical
University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 7Institute of Psychology,
University of Graz, Graz, Austria, 8BioTechMed, Graz, Austria
Poster Session IV (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
244#P191
The Diffuse Chemosensory System in Lampreys
Gheylen Daghfous1,2, Felix Blumenthal2, François Auclair2,
Masoud Mansouri2, Tina Suntres3, Barbara Zielinski3,
Réjean Dubuc1,2. 1Groupe de Recherche en Activite Physique
Adaptee, Dept. of Kinesiology, Univ. du Quebec a Montreal,
Montreal, QC, Canada, 2Groupe de Recherche sur le Systeme
Nerveux Central, Dept. of Neuroscience, Univ. Montreal,
Montreal, QC, Canada, 3Dept. of Biological Sciences,
Univ. of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada
245#P192
Solitary Chemosensory Cells During the Sea Lamprey
Life Cycle
Tina E Suntres1, Gheylen Daghfous3,4, Réjean Dubuc3,4,
Barbara Zielinski1,2. 1Department of Biological Sciences,
Univ. of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada, 2Great Lakes Institute
for Environmental Research, Univ. of Windsor, Windsor, ON,
Canada, 3Groupe de Recherche en Activite Physique Adaptee,
Dept. of Kinesiology, Univ. du Quebec a Montreal, Montreal, QC,
Canada, 4Groupe de Recherche sur le Systeme Nerveux Central,
Dept. of Neurosciences, Univ. Montreal, Montreal, QC, Canada
246#P193
Identification and Taste Sensory Evaluation of
Naturally Occurring Taste Modifier Octenyl
sulfate from Marine Organisms
Masanori Matsuura, Naoko Saito, Junji Nakamura.
Kansei Science Research, Kao Corporation, Tokyo, Japan
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
72
Poster Session V (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am)
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
8:00 – 10:30 am POSTER SESSION V
Estero Ballroom
101#P193.5
Permissive Binding Pocket and Low Activation Threshold
Underlie Exceptionally Broad Responsiveness of Some
G-Protein Coupled Odorant Receptors
Yiqun Yu1, Claire A de March2, Mengjue J Ni3, Kaylin A
Adipietro3, Jerome Golebiowski2, Hiroaki Matsunami3,
Minghong Ma1. 1Department of Neuroscience, University
of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia,
PA, United States; 2Institute of Chemistry Nice, UMR 7272,
University Nice Sophia Antipolis - CNRS, 06108, Nice cedex 2,
France; 3Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology,
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, United States
103#P195
The Role of Van Gogh in the Rotation of
Olfactory Dendrites in Drosophila melanogaster
Huey Hing1, Noah Reger1, Lee Fradkin2. 1SUNY Brockport,
Brockport, NY, United States, 2Leiden University Medical Center,
Leiden, Netherlands
104#P196
Loss of Odor-Evoked Electro-Olfactogram in
Mice with Genetic Ablation of Heterotrimeric
G-protein β1 Subunit
Aaron Sathyanesan, Weihong Lin. Department of
Biological Sciences, University of Maryland Baltimore County,
Baltimore, MD, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
73
sat urday
102#P194
G protein-dependent activation of PI signaling
by a mammalian olfactory receptor
Elizabeth A Corey1,4, Kirill Ukhanov1,4, Yuriy V
Bobkov1,4, Jeremy C McIntyre2,4, Jeffrey R Martens2,4,
Barry W Ache1,4. 1University of Florida Whitney Laboratory,
St Augustine, FL, United States, 2University of Florida
Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Gainesville,
FL, United States, 3University of Florida Departments of Biology
and Neuroscience, Gainesville, FL, United States, 4University of
Florida Center for Smell and Taste and McKnight Brain Institute,
Gainesville, FL, United States
Poster Session V (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
105#P197
Olfactory marker protein is an indicator of olfactory
receptor-associated events in non-olfactory tissues
YoonGyu Jae1, NaNa Kang1, Hyerin Kim2, NaHye Lee1,
Min-Soo Kim2, JaeHyung Koo1. 1DGIST/Department
of Brain Science, Daegu, South Korea, 2DGIST/Department
of Information and Communication Engineering, Daegu,
South Korea
106#P198
Functional characterization of heterologously
expressed Codling Moth Olfactory Receptors
Alberto M Cattaneo1, Yuriy V Bobkov2, Elizabeth
A Corey2, Jonas M Bengtsson3, Nicolas Montagné4,
Emmanuelle Jacquin-Joly5, Barry W Ache2,6, Angela
Bassoli7, Peter Witzgall8, Gianfranco Anfora1.
1
Fondazione Edmund Mach, Research and Innovation Centre/
DASB – Chemical Ecology, San Michele all’Adige, Italy,
2
Whitney Laboratory, Center for Smell and Taste, and McKnight
Brain Institute – University of Florida, Gainesville, FL,
United States, 3Stockholm University, Department of Zoology,
Stockholm, Sweden, 4Université Pierre & Marie Curie, iEES-Paris,
Paris, France, 5INRA, Institut of Ecology and Environmental
Sciences (iEES-Paris), Versailles, France, 6Depts. of Biology
and Neuroscience – University of Florida, Gainesville, FL,
United States, 7Università degli Studi di Milano – DeFENS,
Department of Food, Nutritional and Environmental Sciences,
Milano, Italy, 8Chemical Ecology Unit, Department of Plant
Protection Biology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,
Alnarp, Sweden
107#P199
Hyperpolarization-activated currents in
granule cells of the olfactory bulb
Ruilong Hu1, Christina B. Whiteus2, Dimphna H. Meijer2,
Katie A. Ferguson2, Ricardo C. Araneda1. 1University
of Maryland/Biology, College Park, MD, United States,
2
Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
74
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
108#P200
Lateral inhibition differences between mitral
and tufted cells of the mammalian olfactory bulb
Matthew A Geramita1,2,3, Nathan N Urban3,4.
1
Pitt-CMU Medical Scientist Training Program, Pittsburgh,
PA, United States, 2Center for Neuroscience at the University of
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 3Center for the Neural
Basis of Cognition, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh,
PA, United States, 4Department of Biology, Carnegie Mellon
University, Pittsburgh, PA, United States
109#P201
Deep Short-Axon Cells Mediate Interglomerular
Disinhibition in the Mammalian Main Olfactory Bulb
Shawn D. Burton1,2, Greg LaRocca1, Annie Liu2,3,
Nathaniel N. Urban1,2,3. 1Department of Biological Sciences,
Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, United States,
2
Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, Pittsburgh, PA,
United States, 3Center for Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh, PA, United States
111#P203
The role of distributed and segregated synaptic
clusters in the olfactory bulb
Michele Migliore1,2, Francesco Cavarretta3, Addolorata
Marasco4, Michael L Hines1, Gordon M Shepherd1.
1
Yale Medical School, Dept Neurobiology, New Haven, CT,
United States, 2Institute of Biophysics, National Research
Council, Palermo, Italy, 3Dept of Mathematics, Federigo Enriques,
University of Milan, Milan, Italy, 4Dept of Mathematics and
Applications, R. Caccioppoli, University of Naples Federico II,
Naples, Italy
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
75
sat urday
110#P202
Pilot exploration of the functionality of the human
olfactory bulb using high-resolution fMRI
Arnaud Fournel1, Emilia Iannilli2, Camille Ferdenzi1,
Annet Werner2, Hagen Kitzler2, Moustafa Bensafi1,
Thomas Hummel2. 1Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, CNRS,
Lyon, France, 2University of Dresden, Dresden, Germany
Poster Session V (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
112#P204
Suppression of odor processing by another
odorant in mouse main olfactory bulb
Yuhei Shinohara1,2, Graeme Lowe1. 1Monell Chemical
Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2Tobacco Science
Research Center, Japan Tobacco INC., Yokohama, Japan
113#P205
Entrained Oscillatory Discharge in an
Accessory Olfactory Bulb Microcircuit
Marc Spehr, Katja Watznauer, Monika Gorin,
Chryssanthi Tsitoura. RWTH Aachen University/Dept.
of Chemosensation, Aachen, Germany
114#P206
A Shared Molecular Mechanism Regulates
Transcription of Tyrosine Hydroxylase and Glutamate
Decarboxylase 1 in Olfactory Bulb Interneurons
Meng Wang1, Elizabeth Cai1, Nana Fujiwara1, Harriet
Baker1,2, John W. Cave1,2. 1Burke Medical Research Institute,
White Plains, NY, United States, 2Brain and Mind Research
Institute, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY,
United States
115#P207
The spatiotemporal input-output function of the
olfactory bulb is modulated by respiratory cycle activity
Shaina M Short1,2, Thomas S McTavish1, Thomas M
Morse1, Gordon M Shepherd1, Justus V Verhagen1,2.
1
Neurobio., Yale Univ., New Haven, CT, United States,
2
John B. Pierce Lab., New Haven, CT, United States
116#P208
Morphological analysis of mitral cell populations
in the mouse accessory olfactory bulb
Katja Watznauer, Monika Gorin, Chryssanthi Tsitoura,
Marc Spehr. Dept. of Chemosensation, RWTH Aachen
University, Aachen, Germany
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
76
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
117#P209
Reduction in Absolute Volume of Olfactory Bulb
Layers in Juvenile Male American Minks
(Neovison vison var. atratus)
Willi Bennegger1,2, Elke Weiler1,2. 1Faculty of Natural Sciences,
Institute for Neurobiology, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany,
2
Maria-von-Linden-Schule, Heidenheim, Germany
119#P211
Animals biosensors detect odor signatures of
hepatocellular carcinoma in urine of mice with
experimental tumors
Marina Kochevalina1, Alexander Ambaryan2,
Olga Morozova3, Galina Kogun’4, Elena Rodionova1.
1
IITP RAS, Moscow, Russia, 2A. N. Severtsov Institute of
Ecology and Evolution, Moscow, Russia, 3Institute of
Carcinogenesis, N.N. Blokhin Cancer Research Center, Moscow,
Russia, 4Cynological Division of Aviation Security Service,
Aeroflot - Russian Airlines, Sheremetyevo, Moscow, Russia
120#P212
The Pairing of Lavender and the Voluntary
Lowering of Heart Rate
Tyler J Baldino, David E Hornung. Biology
Dept./St. Lawrence University, Canton, NY, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
77
sat urday
118#P210
Sniffing Out Ovarian Cancer;
An Interdisciplinary Approach to Early Detection
Katharine A. Prokop-Prigge1, Nicholas J. Kybert2,
Janos L. Tanyi3, Cynthia M. Otto4, A. T. Charlie Johnson2,
George Preti1,5. 1Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia,
PA, United States, 2Department of Physics and Astronomy,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States,
3
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Perelman School
of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA,
United States, 4Working Dog Center, School of Veterinary
Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA,
United States, 5Department of Dermatology, Perelman School
of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA,
United States
Poster Session V (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
121#P213
The effects of peppermint scent administration
on augmenting driving performance during a
distracted driving scenario
Rebecca Brown, Emily Robinson, Kristen Custer, Bryan
Raudenbush. Wheeling Jesuit University Department of
Psychology, Wheeling, WV, United States
122#P214
Effects of peppermint scent administration on
augmenting swimming performance: challenges related
to orthonasal vs. retronasal scent administration
Nic Cochran, Bryan Raudenbush, Melanie Lamp.
Wheeling Jesuit University Department of Psychology,
Wheeling, WV, United States
123#P215
Subliminal Smells Modulate Audiovisual
Speech Perception
Jennifer Chen, Jin Wang, Denise Chen. Department of
Neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX,
United States
124#P216
Effects of male income and male pheromone scent
administration on ratings of online dating profiles
of males made by female participants
Mariah Cottrill, Stephen Saldanha, Ryan Naumann,
Killeen Schlegel, Bryan Raudenbush. Wheeling Jesuit
University Department of Psychology, Wheeling, WV,
United States
125#P217
Can learned responses to body odor affect
human social interactions?
Jessica M. Gaby1, Johan N. Lundström2,3, Pamela Dalton3.
1
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States, 2Karolinska
Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, 3Monell Chemical Senses Center,
Philadelphia, PA, United States
126#P218
Effects of L-tryptophan consumption on
attitudes towards community service
Bryan Raudenbush, Emily Robinson. Wheeling Jesuit
University Department of Psychology, Wheeling, WV,
United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
78
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
127#P219
Aroma Music Concert for Improving Mental Health
Han-Seok Seo1, Moon-Sook Park2, Robert Pellegrino1,
Shilpa S. Samant1, Skirmante Kezyte3, Camille Duez1,4,
Sara E. Jarma Arroyo1,5. 1University of Arkansas/Department
of Food Science, Fayetteville, AR, United States, 2University of
Arkansas/Department of Music, Fayetteville, AR, United States,
3
Conservatorio de Musica del Estado de Puebla and Escuela
Superior de Musica de Fausto y Andres y Aguirre, Puebla, Mexico,
4
AgroParisTech/Department of Food Technology, Paris, France,
5
Cordoba University/Department of Food Engineering, Cordoba,
Columbia
128#P220
Prognostic value of olfactory nerve assessment with
olfacto-scintigraphy in patients with olfactory disorders
Hideaki Shiga1, Junichi Taki2, Koichi Okuda3, Naoto
Watanabe4, Hisao Tonami4, Mitsuru Furukawa5, Seigo
Kinuya2, Takaki Miwa1. 1Kanazawa Medical University/
Otorhinolaryngology, Ishikawa, Japan, 2Kanazawa University/
Biotracer Medicine, Ishikawa, Japan, 3Kanazawa Medical
University/Physics, Ishikawa, Japan, 4Kanazawa Medical
University/Diagnostic and Therapeutic Radiology, Ishikawa,
Japan, 5Koike Hospital, Ishikawa, Japan
130#P222
Gravidity Responsive Phantosmia and Phantoguesia
Jibran S. Malik, Ayham K Alagha, Alan R Hirsch.
Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation,
Chicago, IL, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
79
sat urday
129#P221
Normal Flavor Despite Orthonasal and Retronasal
Anosmia; A Case Report
Alexander P Roussos1,2, Alan R Hirsch2. 1Kansas City
University of Medicine and Biosciences, Kansas City, MO,
United States, 2Smell and Taste Treatment and Research
Foundation, Chicago, IL, United States
Poster Session V (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
131#P223
Olfactory Reference Syndrome (ORS) with Mysophobia
Noah H Hirsch1, Bassem N Arab1,2, Alan R Hirsch1.
1
Smell & Taste Treatment and Research Foundation, Chicago,
IL, United States, 2Carribbean Medical University-School of
Medicine, Willemstad-Curacao, Netherlands Antilles
132#P224
Losing the Match:
Chemosensation vs. Inflatable Sumo Wrestling Suits
Alan R Hirsch, Saul Bello Rojas. Smell & Taste Treatment
and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL, United States
133#P225
Olfactory bulb volume predicts therapeutic
outcome in major depression disorder
Simona N. Negoias1, Thomas Hummel2, Anja Symmank2,3,
Julia Schellong3, Peter Joraschky3, Ilona Croy2,3.
1
Bern University Hospital, Dept. of Otorhinolaryngology,
Head and Neck Surgery, Bern, Switzerland, 2TU Dresden,
Smell & Taste Clinic, Dept. of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and
Neck Surgery, Dresden, Germany, 3TU Dresden, Department of
Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, Dresden, Germany
134#P226
Chronic Piscine Diet Induced Metallic Phantogeusia,
Dysgeusia, & Hypogeusia
Saul Bello Rojas1, Alan R. Hirsch2, Jerrold B. Leiken3.
1
Lake Forest College, Lake Forest, IL, United States, 2Smell
and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL,
United States, 3University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine,
Chicago, IL, United States
135#P227
Chemosensory Dysfunction as an Enantiopathy
for Gustatory Rhinitis
Bassem N Arab1,2, Ayham K Alagha1,2, Alan R Hirsch2.
1
Caribbean Medical University - School Of Medicine,
Willemstad- Curacao, Netherlands Antilles, 2Smell and Taste
Treatment and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
80
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
136#P228
Nothing But Aftertaste
Konstantin V. Gaftanyuk1, Alan R. Hirsch2. 1International
University of Health Sciences School of Medicine, Winnipeg, MB,
Canada, 2Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation,
Chicago, IL, United States
137#P229
Oral Sensory Pathology Moderates the Relationship
Between Fungiform Papilla Density and Taste Intensity
Derek J. Snyder1, Linda M. Bartoshuk2, Miriam Grushka3,
Jennifer J. Stamps2, Thomas A. Colquhoun4, Michael L.
Schweiterman4, Asli Z. Odabasi2, Charles A. Sims2,
C. Shawn Dotson5. 1Occupational Science, University of
Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States,
2
Food Science & Human Nutrition, University of Florida,
Gainesville, FL, United States, 3Private Dental Practice, Toronto,
ON, Canada, 4Environmental Horticulture, University of Florida,
Gainesville, FL, United States, 5Neuroscience, University of
Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States
139#P231
Prevalence and Factors Associated with Reported
Taste Loss and Distortions (Dysgeusia) during the
Past 12 Months in Adults Aged 40+ Years:
The U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey (NHANES), 2011-2012
Howard J. Hoffman1, Shristi Rawal2, Katalin G. Losonczy1,
Valerie B. Duffy2. 1Epidemiology and Statistics Program,
Bethesda, MD, United States, 2Dept. of Allied Health Sciences
and Dept. of Community Medicine and Health Care, Storrs, CT,
United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
81
sat urday
138#P230
Chemosensory Dysfunction as an Enantiopathy
for Gustatory Rhinitis
Marissa A Hirsch1, Ayham Alagha2,3, Bassem N Arab2,3,
Alan R Hirsch3. 1University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI,
United States, 2Carribean Medical University-School of Medicine,
Willemstad-Curacao, Netherlands Antilles, 3Smell & Taste
Treatment and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL, United States
Poster Session V (Author Standby 8:00 – 10:30 am) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
140#P232
Opiorphin Levels in Fluids of Burning Mouth
Syndrome Patients. A Case Control Study
Yves Boucher1,2, Marie-Noëlle Ungehauer3, Adeline Braud1,
Scarlette Agbo-Godeau2, Marie-Thérèse Guinnepain3,
Vanessa Baaroun1,2, Vianney Descroix1,2, Catherine
Rougeot3. 1Universite Paris Diderot, Paris, France, 2Groupe
Hospitalier Pitie Salpetriere Charles Foix, Paris, France,
3
Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
141#P233
Characterization of nestin-expressing cells in the
circumvallate papilla of mice
Alon Bajayo, Linda A Barlow. University of Colorado School
of Medicine, Dept. of Cell and Developmental Biology, Aurora,
CO, United States
142#P234
Characterization of Keratin 14 Progenitors that
Give Rise to Taste Cells
Amanda T Le1, Gennady Dvoryanchikov1, Isabel
Perea-Martinez1, Nirupa Chaudhari1,2. 1University of
Miami Miller School of Medicine Department of Physiology and
Biophysics, Miami, FL, United States, 2University of Miami
Miller School of Medicine Program in Neurosciences, Miami, FL,
United States
143#P235
Continuous Requirement for GLI-mediated Signal
Transduction in Taste Organ Maintenance
Libo Li1, Alexandre N. Ermilov2, Archana Kumari1,
Benjamin L. Allen3, Andrzej A. Dlugosz2,3, Charlotte M.
Mistretta1. 1Department of Biologic and Materials Sciences,
School of Dentistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI,
United States, 2Department of Dermatology, Medical School,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States,
3
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Medical School,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
82
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
144#P236
An analysis of sour and salt responses in clonal
cell lines derived from murine taste buds
Takenori Miyamoto1, Eri Katsumata2, Yukari Mitsuhashi1,
Miyako Nishiyama1, Yasuhiro Tomooka3. 1Department of
Chemical and Biological Sciences, Faculty of Sciences, Japan
Women’s University, Tokyo, Japan, 2Division of Material and
Biological Sciences, Graduate School of ScienceJapan Women’s
University, Tokyo, Japan, 3Department of Biological Science
and Technology, Faculty of Industrial Science and Technology,
Tokyo University of Science, Tokyo, Japan
sat urday
145#P237
Neural Crest Derived Cells are Distributed in
Mature Taste Buds in Adult Mice
Kristin Boggs1, Nandakumar Venkatesan1, Steve L Stice1,
Yuji Mishina2, Hong -X Liu1. 1Regenerative Bioscience Center,
Department of Animal and Dairy Science, College of Agricultural
and Environmental Sciences, University of Georgia, Athens, GA,
United States, 2Department of Biologic and Materials Sciences,
School of Dentistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI,
United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
83
Poster Session VI (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm)
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
9:00 – 11:00 pm
POSTER SESSION VI
Estero Ballroom
201#P238
An Olfactory Cilia Pattern in the Mammalian
Nose Ensures High Sensitivity to Odors
Rosemary C Challis1, Hukai Tian1, Jiwei He1, Jue Wang1,
Jianbo Jiang2, Xuanmao Chen3, Timothy Connelly1,
Limei Ma4, Wenbin Yin1, C. Ron Yu4, Jennifer L. Pluznick5,
Daniel R. Storm3, Liquan Huang2, 6, Kai Zhao2, Minghong
Ma1. 1Department of Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania
Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, United States,
2
Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States,
3
Department of Pharmacology, University of Washington School
of Medicine, Seattle, WA, United States, 4Stowers Institute for
Medical Research, Kansas City, MO, United States, 5Department
of Physiology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD,
United States, 6College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang University,
Hangzhou, China
202#P239
Arl13b Localization and Function in Cilia
in the Olfactory Epithelium
Warren W Green1, Jeremy C McIntyre1, Ariell M Joiner2,
Corey L Williams1, Jeffrey R Martens1. 1University of
Florida, College of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology
and Therapeutics, Gainesville, FL, United States, 2University
of Michigan, Department of Pharmacology, Ann Arbor, MI,
United States
203#P240
Zinc Sulfate Affects Ciliated Olfactory Sensory
Neurons More Than Microvillous Olfactory
Sensory Neurons in the Adult Zebrafish
James T. Hentig, Christine A. Byrd-Jacobs. Western Michigan
University/Biological Sciences, Kalamazoo, MI, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
84
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
204#P241
Primary Cilia on Olfactory Horizontal
Basal Cells Regulate OE Regeneration
Ariell M Joiner1, Warren W Green2, Jeremy C McIntyre2,
Jeffrey R Martens2. 1University of Michigan, Department
of Pharmacology, Ann Arbor, MI, United States, 2University
of Florida, Department of Pharmacology & Therapeutics,
Gainesville, FL, United States
205#P242
Perinatal and adult-born granule cell connectivity
in the mouse oflactory bulb
Marta Pallotto, Kevin L Briggman. National Institute
of Health/National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Strokes, Bethesda, MD, United States
206#P243
The Amphibian Olfactory System as a Model to
Study Axonal Growth and Synaptogenesis In Vivo
Ivan Manzini1,2, Thomas Hassenklöver1,2. 1University of
Göttingen, Institute of Neurophysiology and Cellular Biophysics,
Göttingen, Germany, 2University of Göttingen, Center for
Nanoscale Microscopy and Molecular Physiology of the
Brain (CNMPB), Göttingen
208#P245
HCN Channels Mediate Rhythmic Activity in
Arthropod Olfactory Receptor Neurons
Yuriy Bobkov1, Elizabeth Corey1, Barry Ache1,2.
1
Whitney Laboratory, Center for Smell and Taste, and McKnight
Brain Institute, Gainesville, FL, United States, 2Depts. Biology
and Neuroscience, Univ. Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
85
sat urday
207#P244
The Developmental and Physiological Properties of a
Novel Flight-to-Olfactory Corollary Discharge Neuron
Phillip D. Chapman, Samual P. Bradley, Sarah M. Farris,
Andrew M. Dacks, Kevin C. Daly. West Virginia University,
Morgantown, WV, United States
Poster Session VI (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
209#P246
Identification of key residues involved in activation
of G-protein Coupled Odorant Receptors
Claire A. de March1, Yiqun Yu2, Mengjue J. Ni3,
Kaylin A. Adipietro3, Hiroaki Matsunami3, Minghong
Ma2, Jérôme Golebiowski1. 1ICN - University Nice Sophia
Antipolis, Nice, France, 2Department of Neuroscience, University
of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia,
PA, United States, 3Department of Molecular Genetics and
Microbiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC,
United States
210#P247
Utilization of a Confetti Cre Reporter System
to Analyze Olfactory Neurogenesis
Bradley J. Goldstein1, Garrett M. Goss1, Joshua M. Hare2.
1
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Department
of Otolaryngology and Interdisciplinary Stem Cell Institute,
Miami, FL, United States, 2University of Miami Miller School
of Medicine, Interdisciplinary Stem Cell Institute, Miami, FL,
United States
211#P248
Receptive range analysis of a mouse odorant
receptor subfamily
Jingyi Li1, Rafi Haddad2, Vanessa Santos1, Selvan Bavan1,
Charles W. Luetje1. 1Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology,
University of Miami, Miami, FL, United States, 2Gonda Brain
Research Center, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel
212#P249
The Anatomical Basis for Modulatory Convergence
in the Antennal Lobe of Manduca sexta
Kristyn M. Lizbinski, Jackie D. Metheny, Aditya Kesari,
Andrew M. Dacks. West Virginia University/Biology,
Morgantown, WV, United States
213#P250
Metabolites as preferred ligands for the human
olfactory receptors outside “the olfactory box”
Suhaila Rahman, Benjamin Sherman, Charles Luetje,
Tatjana Abaffy. University of Miami/ Molecular and Cellular
Pharmacology, Miami, FL, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
86
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
214#P251
Structure-activity relationship and evolution
of musk odor receptors in mammals
Narumi Sato1,2, Mika Shirasu1,2, Aya Kato-Namba3,
Keiichi Yoshikawa3, Yoshihito Niimura1,2, Sayoko Ihara1,2,
Kazushige Touhara1,2. 1Department of Applied Biological
Chemistry, Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences,
The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, 2ERATO Touhara
Chemosensory Signal Project, JST, The University of Tokyo,
Tokyo, Japan, 3Kansei Laboratories, KAO Corporation, Tochigi,
Japan
215#P252
Electrophysiological analysis of odor response
in mice lacking novel protein ROOK and OMP
Anna K Talaga, Haiqing Zhao. Johns Hopkins University/
Department of Biology, Baltimore, MD, United States
217#P254
Cyclophosphamide-induced loss in the murine
olfactory epithelium and vomeronasal organ
Kara R. Proctor1, Nora Awadalish2, Eugene R. Delay3,
Rona J. Delay3. 1University of Vermont/Medical Lab
Sciences, Burlington, VT, United States, 2University of
Vermont/Neuroscience, Burlington, VT, United States,
3
University of Vermont/Biology& Vermont chemosensory
Group, Burlington, VT, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
87
sat urday
216#P253
Lamin B1 is required for olfactory sensory
neuron development
Crystal M Wall1,2, Stephen G Young3, Yixian Zheng2,
Haiqing Zhao1. 1Johns Hopkins Biology Department, Baltimore,
MD, United States, 2Carnegie Institute of Washington, Baltimore,
MD, United States, 3UCLA, Departments of Medicine and
Human Genetics, Los Angeles, CA, United States
Poster Session VI (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
218#P255
Calcium-Activated Chloride Channels in
Isolated Mouse Vomeronasal Sensory Neurons
Simone Pifferi1, Asma Amjad1, Andres Hernandez-Clavijo1,
Anna Boccaccio2, Anna Menini1. 1Neurobiology Group,
SISSA, International School for Advanced Studies, Trieste, Italy,
2
Istituto di Biofisica, CNR, Genova, Italy
219#P256
Phosphodiesterase 5A Regulates the Vomeronasal Pump
Dennean S. Lippner, Haiqing Zhao. Johns Hopkins University,
Department of Biology, Baltimore, MD, United States
220#P257
Comparative biophysical characterization of formyl
peptide receptor expressing neurons in the mouse
vomeronasal organ
Tobias Ackels1, Benoît von der Weid2, Ivan Rodriguez2,
Marc Spehr1. 1Dept. of Chemosensation, RWTH Aachen
University, Aachen, Germany, 2Dept. of Genetics and Evolution,
University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland
221#P258
Lingual ephrin-A’s repel embryonic geniculate
neurites in vitro
Matthew L Russo, David Cho, Randall W Treffy,
Omar Diaz, M William Rochlin. Loyola U Chicago,
Chicago, IL, United States
222#P259
Effects of Cyclophosphamide on Quinine
Preference in C57BK/6J Mice
Angela M. Brisson1, John H. King1, Eugene R. Delay2,3.
1
The University of Vermont/Undergraduate Neuroscience
Program, Burlington, VT, United States, 2The University
of Vermont/Biology, Burlington, VT, United States,
3
The University of Vermont/Chemical Senses Group,
Burlington, VT, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
88
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
223#P260
Genetic diversity and evolution of bitter taste
receptor genes (TAS2Rs) in wild chimpanzees
Takashi Hayakawa1, Eiji Inoue2, Hodaka Matsuo1,
Kathelijne Koops3, Miho Inoue-Murayama4, Chie
Hashimoto1, Tetsuro Matsuzawa1, Hiroo Imai1.
1
Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Inuyama,
Aichi, Japan, 2Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University,
Kyoto, Japan, 3Division of Biological Anthropology, University
of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom, 4Wildlife Research
Center of Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan
224#P261
Development of a High Throughput Sensory
Assay for Bitter Taste
R. Kyle Palmer1, Magali Fournier2, Daniel J. Long1,
Aurélie De Ratuld2. 1Opertech Bio, Inc., Philadelphia, PA,
United States, 2Diana Petfood, Elven, France
226#P263
The taste quality of nonesterified fatty acids differs
from prototypical bitter compounds
Cordelia A Running1, Bruce A Craig2, Richard D Mattes3.
1
Purdue University Department of Food Science, West Lafayette,
IN, United States, 2Purdue University Department of Statistics,
West Lafayette, IN, United States, 3Purdue University Department
of Nutrition Science, West Lafayette, IN, United States
227#P264
Feline bitter receptors TAS2R38 and TAS2R43 have
response profiles distinct from their human homologues
Michelle M. Sandau1, Jason Goodman2, Anu Thomas2,
Joseph B. Rucker2, Nancy E. Rawson1. 1AFB International,
St. Charles, MO, United States, 2Integral Molecular, Inc.,
Philadelphia, PA, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
89
sat urday
225#P262
Umami-bitter interactions: the suppression of bitterness
by umami peptides via human bitter taste receptor
Mee-Ra Rhyu1, Min Jung Kim1, Hee Jin Son1, Yiseul Kim1,
Takumi Misaka2. 1Korea Food Research Institute, Sungnam-si,
Korea, 2The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
Poster Session VI (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
228#P265
Bitter taste receptor agonists mitigate asthma
phenotype in murine models
Pawan Sharma, Roslyn Yi, Deepak A Deshpande.
Center for Translational Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University,
Philadelphia, PA, United States
229#P266
Diet induced obesity modulates turnover and
receptor expression of murine taste buds
Andrew M Kaufman, Robin Dando. Department of Food
Science and Technology, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences,
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States
230#P267
Nonivamide, a TRPV1 Agonist, promotes Body Weight
Maintenance in healthy overweight Subjects
Christina M. Hochkogler1, Barbara Lieder1, Petra Rust3,
Sabine Widder4, Jakob P. Ley4, Gerhard E. Krammer4,
Veronika Somoza1,2. 1Christian-Doppler Laboratory for
Bioactive Aroma compounds, University of Vienna, Vienna,
Austria, 2Department of Nutritional and Physiological
Chemistry, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 3Department
of Nutritional Sciences, University of Vienna, Vienna,
Austria, 4Symrise AG, Ingredient Research Flavor & Nutrition,
Holzminden, Germany
231#P268
Pathways of Associations between Taste-related
Risk Factors, Regional Taste Function and
Adiposity in Adult Women
Shristi Rawal1, Howard J Hoffman2, Valerie B Duffy1.
1
University of Connecticut/Allied Health Sciences, Storrs,
CT, United States, 2NIDCD, NIH/Epidemiology & Statistics
Program, Bethesda, MD, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
90
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
232#P269
Early consequences of a high-fructose diet on olfaction
Sébastien Rivière1,2,3, David Jarriault1,2,3, Vanessa
Soubeyre1,2,3, Nicolas Meunier4,5, Xavier Grosmaitre1,2,3.
1
CSGA UMR 6265 CNRS, Dijon, France, 2CSGA UMR 1324
INRA, Dijon, France, 3CSGA Université de Bourgogne,
Dijon, France, 4NBO INRA UR1197, Jouy-en-Josas, France,
5
Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin en Yvelines, Versailles,
France
233#P270
Taste Phenotype Explains Adiposity and Cardiovascular
Disease (CVD) Risk Factors Among Females Via
Dietary Quality Constructed From a Liking Survey
Mastaneh Sharafi, Valerie B Duffy. University of Connecticut,
Storrs, CT, United States
235#P272
Changes in Sensory Perception and Liking for Sweet and
Savory-Fat Foods During a 6-Month Behavioral Weight
Loss Intervention in Women: A Preliminary Report
Brenda Burgess, Salome P. Rao, Beverly J. Tepper.
Department of Food Science, School of Environmental and
Biological Sciences, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ,
United States
236#P273
Glucose homeostasis and body composition in
Tas1r3-knockout mice: effects of age and fasting
Vasiliy A. Zolotarev1, Vladimir O. Murovets1, Egor A.
Sozontov1, Alexander A. Bachmanov2. 1Pavlov Institute of
Physiology, Saint-Petersburg, Russia, 2Monell Chemical Senses
Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
91
sat urday
234#P271
Otitis media, food preferences and weight gain
in college students
Linda M. Bartoshuk1, Brittany M. Hubbard1, Jennifer J.
Stamps1, Valerie B. Duffy2, Howard J. Hoffmann3,
Asli Z. Odabasi1, Charles A. Sims1. 1University of Florida/
Food Science & Human Nutrition, Gainesville, FL, United States,
2
University of Connecticut/Dept of Allied Health Sciences, Storrs,
CT, United States, 3NIH/NIDCD, Bethesda, MD, United States
Poster Session VI (Author Standby 9:00 – 11:00 pm) continued
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
237#P274
Odorant receptor expression in aged mice following
genetically-mediated lesion
Jessica H. Brann1, Eleonora F. Spinazzi2, Stuart J.
Firestein2. 1Department of Biology, Loyola University Chicago,
Chicago, IL, United States, 2Department of Biological Sciences,
Columbia University, New York, NY, United States
238#P275
Aging affect olfactory perceptual learning and
olfactory bulb neurons structural plasticity
Maëllie Midroit, Nathalie Mandairon, Joëlle Sacquet,
Anne Didier, Marion Richard. CRNL, CNRS 5292,
Inserm 1028, UCBL, Lyon, France
239#P276
Men are more susceptible to age-related central olfactory
functional decline: An Olfactory fMRI Study
Brittany Martinez1, Jian-li Wang1, Prasanna
Karunanayaka1, Megha Vasavada4, Paul J Eslinger2,
Qing X Yang1,3. 1The Pennsylvania State University
College of Medicine/Radiology, Hershey, PA, United States,
2
The Pennsylvania State College of Medicine/Neurology,
Hershey, PA, United States, 3The Pennsylvania State College
of Medicine/Neurosurgery, Hershey, PA, United States,
4
UCLA/Neurology, Los Angeles, CA, United States
240#P277
Olfactory impairment in old age:
prevalence and risk factors
Janina Seubert1,2, Erika J Laukka1, Thomas Hummel3,
Laura Fratiglioni1, Lars Bäckman1, Maria Larsson4.
1
Aging Research Center, Karolinska Institutet & Stockholm
University, Stockholm, Sweden, 2Karolinska Institutet,
Clinical Neuroscience Department, Psychology Division,
Stockholm, Sweden, 3Technische Universität Dresden,
Medizinische Fakultät, Klinik für Hals-, Nasen und
Ohrenheilkunde, Dresden, Germany, 4Stockholm University,
Psychology Department, Stockholm, Sweden
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
92
Poster
Board #
Abstract #
241#P278
ApoE-e4 Mediates the Association Between
Episodic Memory Decline and Olfactory
Identification Deficit
Jonas K. Olofsson1, Maria Josefsson2, Ingrid Stanciu1,
Donald Wilson5, Steven Nordin3, Lars-Goran Nilsson1,
Lars Nyberg4, Maria Larsson1. 1Stockholm University/
Department of Psychology, Stockholm, Sweden, 2Umea
University/Department of Statistics, Umea, Sweden, 3Umea
University/Department of Psychology, Umea, Sweden, 4Umea
University/Department of Radiology, Umea, Sweden, 5New York
University/Langone School of Medicine, New York, NY,
United States
242#P279
Olfactory training with older people
B.-A. Wegener1, I. Croy1,2, A. Hähner1, T. Hummel1.
1
Smell & Taste Clinic, Department of Otorhinolaryngology,
TU Dresden, Germany, 2Department of Psychotherapy and
Psychosomatic Medicine, TU Dresden, Germany
sat urday
243#P280
Olfactory Threshold and Odor Discrimination
in Children and Adolescents
Carolin Stetzler1,2, Valentin A. Schriever1,2. 1Department
of Neuropediatrics, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus,
Dresden, Germany, 2Smell & Taste Clinic, Department of
Otorhinolaryngology, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus,
Dresden, Germany
Poster Numbering Key: The first number indicates the poster board number/session.
The second number (#Pxxx) indicates the poster abstract number. 100’s = AM, 200’s = PM
Abstracts are printed as submitted by the author(s).
Posters should be mounted by 7:00 am and taken down after 11:00 pm.
Posters are on display all day.
93
Author Index
Baldino, Tyler J. – P212
Baldwin, Elizabeth – P93
Baldwin, Maude W. – 50
Bales, Michelle B. – P31
Balto, Amy S. – P97, P151
Bao, Xiaojun – P14
Barlow, Linda A. – P233
Barnea, Gilad – 21
Barnes, Dylan C. – P28, P35
Bartoshuk, Linda M. – P167, P229, P271
Bartz, Ashten – P23
Bass, Caroline E. – P33
Bassoli, Angela – P198
Bastakis, George G. – P181
Bastian, Pierre-Antoine – P86
Baum, Michael J. – P141
Bavan, Selvan – P248
Beach, Elizabeth – P168
Beauchamp, Gary K. – P155, P159, P163
Beauséjour, Philippe-Antoine – P53
Behan, John M. – P15
Behrens, Maik – 49
Bell, Genevieve A. – 39, P115
Bello Rojas, Saul – P136, P224, P226
Benedict, Christian – P117
Bengtsson, Jonas M. – P198
Bennegger, Willi – P209
Bensafi, Moustafa – P202
Beshel, Jennifer – 41
Biggs, Bradley T. – P109
Biggs, Lindsey M. – P146
Bischoff, Allison – P168
Bleymehl, Katherin – 59
Blick, Gerri R. – P156
Blizard, David A. – P158
Blonde, Ginger D. – P31
Blumenthal, Felix – P191
Bobkov, Yuriy V. – P18, P194, P198, P245
Bobowski, Nuala K. – P166
Boccaccio, Anna – P255
Boek, Wilbert – P170
Boesveldt, Sanne – P134, P170
Boggs, Kristin – P237
Bosak, Natalia P. – P155, P157, P159
Boucher, Yves – P232
Boughter, John D. – P12, P85
Bourne, Jennifer N. – P9
Bovelet, Paul – P36
Boyes, Karl – P58
Abaffy, Tatjana – P250
Abdel-Hamid, Mostafa – P189
Abyad, Jenna T. – P69
Ache, Barry – P18, P194, P198, P245
Ackels, Tobias – P257
Ackroff, Karen – P126
Acree, Terry E. – P20
Adipietro, Kaylin A. – P193.5, P195.5, P246
Agbo-Godeau, Scarlette – P232
Åhs, Fredrik – 4
Al Hassani, Viviana – P187
Al Koborssy, Dolly – P114
Al Salihi, Mohammed O. – P70
Al-Lozi, Amal – P168
Al-Matrouk, Abdullah – P8
Alagha, Ayham K – P169, P173, P176,
P222, P227, P230
Alarcon, Suzanne – P122
Albeanu, Dinu F. – P13, P143
Albinus, Janine – P61
Aleman, Tiffany R. – P162
Alho, Laura – P66
Ali, Amal – P111
Allen, Benjamin L. – 43, P235
Alvarado, Cynthia D. – P39
Ambaryan, Alexander – P211
Amjad, Asma – P255
Anchuri, Kavya – P56
Anderson, Catherine B. – P3, P104
Anfora, Gianfranco – P198
Anholt, Robert R. H. – 25
Aoudé, Imad – P179
Arab, Bassem N. – P223, P227, P230
Araneda, Ricardo C. – P199
Auclair, François – P53, P191
Audige, Valery – P42
Awadalish, Nora – P254
Ayabe-Kanamura, Saho – P21, P67
Baaroun, Vanessa – P232
Babbs, Amanda E. – P164
Bachmanov, Alexander A. – P74, P81, P103,
P155, P157, P159, P273
Bäckman, Lars – P57, P277
Bae, Woo Y. – P183
Bae, Yoe-sik – P77
Bai, Jinhe – P93
Baird, John-Paul – P111
Bajayo, Alon – P233
Baker, Harriet – P206
Bold indicates first/presenting author
94
Cheer, Joseph – P54
Chelette, Brandon M. – P114
Chen, Denise – P19, P215
Chen, Guowei – P142
Chen, Jennifer – P215
Chen, Xuanmao – P238
Chen, Zhixiong – P83
Cherry, James A. – P141
Chiang, Alan N. – P133
Chick, Wallace S. – P105
Chien, Ming-Shan – P6
Cho, David – P258
Cho, Suh-Kee – P125
Cho, Sungbo – 48
Christian, Diana L. – P29
Cichy, Annika – P4
Cilia, Alba T. – P69
Clark, David G. – P167
Cleland, Thomas A. – P26
Cochran, Nic – P214
Cockerham, Renee – P52, P54
Cole, Sydni M. – P14
Colon Perez, Luis M. – P112
Colquhoun, Thomas A. – P167, P229
Connelly, Timothy – P238
Constable, R. Todd – P24
Contreras, Robert J. – P98
Cooper, Melissa A. – 39
Corey, Elizabeth A. – P194, P198, P245
Corson, James A. – P79
Costanzo, Richard – P189
Cottrill, Mariah – P216
Courtiol, Emmanuelle – P147
Coutanche, Marc – 4
Craig, Bruce A. – P263
Crosson, Sean M. – P112
Crowe, Melissa – P120
Crowley-Gall, Amber – 27
Croy, Ilona – P138, P225, P279
Cunningham, Anne M. – P140
Currlin, Seth W. – P112
Custer, Kristen – P213
Czarnecki, Lindsey A. – 34, P139, P145
D’Alessandro, Angelo – P104
Da Costa, Jeremy – P86
Dacks, Andrew M. – P47, P48, P244, P249
Daghfous, Gheylen – P53, P191, P192
Dagot, Morgane – P123
Dalton, Pamela – P217
Bozza, Thomas – P4
Brackney, Ryan J. – P12
Bradley, Robert M. – 43, P79, P107
Bradley, Samual P .– P47, P244
Brann, Jessica H. – P274
Braud, Adeline – P232
Braunewell, Stephen W. – P46
Braunsteiner, Josephine – P175
Breer, Heinz – 60
Breslin, Paul A.S. – P122, P123
Breza, Joseph – P83
Briand, Loic – P148
Briggman, Kevin L. – P242
Brill, Julia – P52
Brisson, Angela M. – P259
Brown, Rebecca – P213
Brunert, Daniela – 42
Brunjes, Peter C. – P190
Brünner, Yvonne F. – P117
Bryant, Bruce – P41, P42
Burdakov, Denis – 36
Burgess, Brenda – P272
Burke, Mary V. – 18, P164
Burton, Shawn D. – P201
Bushman, Jeremy – P106
Byrd-Jacobs, Christine A. – P240
Cachope, Roger – P54
Cai, Elizabeth – P206
Cain, William S. – P15
Cameron, E. Leslie – P92
Cansler, Hillary L. – P71
Carlson, Kaitlin S. – P51
Carrillo, Mayra A. – 58
Carskadon, Mary A. – P23
Carter, Maximillian H – P46
Castelletto, Michelle L. – 58
Castro, Jason B. – P5
Cattaneo, Alberto M – P198
Cavarretta, Francesco – P203
Cave, John W. – P206
Celen, Arda B. – 39
Cervenka, Simon – P57
Chae, Hong Goo – P13, P143
Chai, Jinghua – P72, P73, P74
Challis, Rosemary C – P238
Chamero, Pablo – 59
Chao, Ying-Chi – 60
Chapman, Phillip D. – P244
Chaudhari, Nirupa – P108, P165, P234
Bold indicates first/presenting author
95
Author Index, continued
Daly, Kevin C. – 3, P47, P244
Dando, Robin – 38, P62, P266
Darling, Mark – P174
Davison, Ian – 2
de Araujo, Ivan – 17
de Graaf, Cees – P127, P129, P134, P170
de Groot, Jasper H.B. – P64
de March, Claire A. – P193.5, P246
De Ratuld, Aurélie – P119, P261
de Wijk, Rene A. – P129
deAlmeida, Licurgo – P26
DeFelippis, Jim – P94
Delay, Eugene R. – P254, P259
Delay, Rona J. – P254
Deneris, Evan S. – P51
Descroix, Vianney – P232
Deshpande, Deepak A. – P265
Deterre, Sophie – P93
Devore, Sasha – P26
Dewan, Adam – P4
di Donato, Sandrine – P86
Di Lorenzo, Patricia M – P33
Diaz, Omar – P258
Didier, Anne – 53, P275
Dikecligil, Naz – P32
Dinavahi, Perraju – P171
Dinnella, Caterina – P124
Diodato, Assunta – 22
Djordjevic, Jelena – P56
Dlugosz, Andrzej A. – 43, P235
Doddala, Prasad R.C. – P149
Donnelly, Christopher R. – P75
Dotson, C. Shawn – P112, P229
Doyle, Wayne I – P49, P193.5
Dryden, Michael – P185
Dubuc, Réjean – P53, P58, P191, P192
Duez, Camille – P219
Duffy, Valerie B. – P172, P231, P268, P270,
P271
Dus, Monica – P128
Dvoryanchikov, Gennady – P108, P234
Eberhardt, Arthur – P86
Eckel, Lisa A. – P160
Edwards, Scott V. – 50
Elliott, Victoria E. – P46
Elson, Amanda E. T. – P110
Ermilov, Alexandre N. – 43, P235
Eslinger, Paul J. – P276
Evans, Emily – 13
Fadool, Debra Ann – 35, 39, P50, P114,
P115, P118, P125
Farde, Lars – P57
Fardone, Erminia – 39
Farias, Ana – 65
Farris, Sarah M. – P244
Fast, Cynthia D. – 34
Faurion, Annick – P86
Febo, Marcelo – P112
Feldman, Sandford H – P190
Feng, Guo – P25
Feng, Pu – P72, P73, P74
Ferdenzi, Camille – P202
Ferguson, Kassandra L. – 39
Ferguson, Katie A. – P199
Ferreira, Jacqueline – P66
Fillmore, Melissa N. – 8
Finger, Thomas E. – 10, P76
Firestein, Stuart J. – P274
Fischmeister, Florian Ph.S. – 5
Flaherty, Tyler J. – P22
Flammer, Linda J. – P163
Fleischer, Joerg – 60
Fleischmann, Alexander – 22
Fleming, Erin E. – P96
Fletcher, Max – 12
Fondberg, Robin – 4
Fontanini, Alfredo – 11, P32, P34, 56, P88
Forest, Jeremy – 53
Forestell, Catherine A. – P133
Formaker, Bradley K. – P156
Fournel, Arnaud – P202
Fournier, Magali – P119, P261
Fradkin, Lee – P195
Frank, Marion E. – P156, P158
Frasnelli, Johannes – P188
Fratiglioni, Laura – P277
Frederick, Donald E. – 54
Freiherr, Jessica – P117
Fujiwara, Nana – P206
Fürer, Raffaela – P87
Furukawa, Mitsuru – P220
Gaby, Jessica M. – P217
Gadziola, Marie A. – P29, P30, P51
Gaftanyuk, Konstantin V. – P228
Gallagher, Michelle – P94
Gang, Spencer S. – 58
Gao, Yankun – P2
Geramita, Matthew A. – P200
Bold indicates first/presenting author
96
Gerkin, Richard C. – P12
Gilbertson, Timothy A. – 8, P100
Glendinning, John I. – P110, P161
Glennon, S. Grace – P172
Goldstein, Bradley J. – P247
Goldyne, Alfred – P176
Golebiowski, Jérôme – P193.5, P246
Gong, Naihua N. – P7, P184
Goodman, Jason – P264
Gorin, Monika – P205, P208
Goss, Garrett M. – P247
Gotow, Naomi – P121
Gottfried, Jay A. – 6, P14
Gould, Fred – 26
Graham, Dustin – P32
Gray, Marcus A. – P135
Green, Barry G. – 9, P24, P39, P40
Green, Carter – P95
Green, Erin – 40
Green, Warren W. – P239, P241
Grigg, Lindsay – P111
Groot, Astrid – 26
Grosmaitre, Xavier – P269
Gruenstein, Diana – P161
Grushka, Miriam – P174, P229
Guillemot, François – P78
Guillermin, Manon L. – 58
Guinnepain, Marie-Thérèse – P232
Gurjar, Priya – P84
Guthman, Ethan – P144
Gyekis, Joseph P. – P158
Gyo, Kiyofumi – P180
Haase, Lori – 40
Hackl, Laura – 4
Haddad, Rafi – P248
Hähner, Antje – P61, P279
Hakuba, Nobuhiro – P180
Haley, Melissa – 11
Hallem, Elissa A. – 58
Hampson, Michelle – P24
Hamuza, Mwanasha – P111
Han, Pengfei – P135
Hans, Joachim – P116
Hanson, Elizabeth M. – P45
Hanson, Michaela H. – P120
Hare, Joshua M. – P247
Hart, Chantelle – P23
Hashimoto, Chie – P260
Hasler, Corinne A. – P60
Hassenklöver, Thomas – P243
Hato, Naohito – P180
Hayakawa, Takashi – P260
Hayashi, Yukako – P102
Hayes, John E. – P96, P131, P132, P153
He, Jiwei – P238
He, Vivian – P129
Heckel, David – 26
Henson, Byeolah S. – P112
Hentig, James T. – P240
Herman, Allan T. – P113
Hernandez-Clavijo, Andres – P255
Hershey, Tamara – P168
Herz, Rachel S. – P23
Hettinger, Thomas P. – P156, P158
Hill, David L. – P82
Hill, Sharon R. – P149
Hines, Michael L. – P203
Hing, Huey – P195
Hirsch, Alan R. – P136, P169, P171, P173,
P176, P221, P222, P223, P224, P226,
P227, P228, P230
Hirsch, Jack W. – P136
Hirsch, Marissa A. – P230
Hirsch, Noah H. – P223
Hochkogler, Christina M. – P116, P267
Hoenen, Matthias – P63, P65
Hoffman, Howard J. – P172, P231, P268,
P271
Holter, Marlena – P161
Horbal, Bethany L. – P156
Hornung, David E. – P212
Houzenga, Cody – P92
Howard, James D. – 6, P14
Hu, Ruilong – P199
Huang, Liquan – P73, P74, P177, P238
Huang, Tao – P1
Huang, Zhenbo – P50
Hubbard, Brittany M. – P271
Hudson, Hilton M. – P173
Hummel, Thomas – P36, P60, P61, P87,
P138, P187, P202, P225, P277, P279
Hummler, Edith – P82
Hwang, Liang-Dar – 13
Iannilli, Emilia – P36, P87, P202
Ichitani, Yukio – P67
Ihara, Sayoko – P251
Ikegami, Kentaro – 2
Imai, Hiroo – P260
Bold indicates first/presenting author
97
Author Index, continued
Kim, Jin K. – P183
Kim, Jun-Mo – 48
Kim, Min Jung – P262
Kim, Min-Soo – P197
Kim, Yiseul – P262
King, John H. – P259
King, Michael S. – P84
Kinnamon, John C. – 10
Kinnamon, Sue C. – P3, P76, P104, P105
Kinuya, Seigo – P220
Kitzler, Hagen – P202
Klasing, Kirk C. – 50
Klee, Harry J. – P167
Kobayakawa, Tatsu – P121
Kobayashi, Masayoshi – P70
Kobayashi, Takefumi – P121
Kochem, Matthew C. – P122
Kochevalina, Marina – P211
Koeck, Elke – P116
Kogun’, Galina – P211
Koide, Tsuyoshi – P158
Kollndorfer, Kathrin – 5, P175, P186
Koo, JaeHyung – P77, P197
Koops, Kathelijne – P260
Korboe, Akosua – P111
Korsching, Sigrun I. – 49
Korshunov, Kirill S. – P113
Korzan, Wayne – P141
Köster, E.P. – P92
Kotha, Ramana – P150
Koulakov, Alexei A. – P13
Kovach, Christopher – P114
Krammer, Gerhard E. – P44, P267
Krimm, Robin F. – P1, P101, P109
Kromer, Jana – P138
Krusemark, Elizabeth – 32
Kumari, Archana – 43, P235
Kunkhyen, Tenzin – P141
Kurtz, Anne J. – P20
Kwon, Ochan – P46
Kybert, Nicholas J. – P210
Kyriazis, George A. – P152
La Camera, Giancarlo – P34
Laffitte, Anni – P148
Lai, Jason Sih-Yu – P128
Lamp, Melanie – P214
Lapis, Trina J. – P97, P151
LaRocca, Greg – P201
Larson, Eric D. – P76
Inoue-Murayama, Miho – P260
Inoue, Eiji – P260
Inoue, Masashi – P155, P157
Ishikawa, Hiroko – P67
Ishimaru, Yoshiro – 2
Ishiwatari, Yutaka – P155
Iwata, Shusuke – P150
Izenwasser, Sari – P165
Jacobson, Aaron – 40
Jacquin-Joly, Emmanuelle – P198
Jae, YoonGyu – P197
Jakab, Andras – P186
Jarma Arroyo, Sara E. – P219
Jarriault, David – P269
Jay, Riley E. – P46
Jiang, Jianbo – P238
Jiang, Yue – P7
Johnson, A. T. Charlie – P210
Joiner, Ariell M – P239, P241
Jojola, Susan – P120
Joraschky, Peter – P225
Jordt, Sven-Eric – 1
Josefsson, Maria – P278
Jung, Young Su – P77
Jyotaki, Masafumi – P73, P74
Kadji, Herve – P11
Kahnt, Thorsten – 6
Kalik, Salina – P110
Kang, NaNa – P197
Kang, Raphael K. L. – P69
Karagogeos, Domna – P181
Karunanayaka, Prasanna – P37, P38, P276
Kass, Marley D. – 34, P139
Kato-Namba, Aya – P251
Katsanis, Nicholas – 45
Katsumata, Eri – P236
Katz, Donald B. – 33, 44
Kaufman, Andrew M – P266
Kay, Leslie M. – 54
Keller, Andreas – 45
Kepple, Daniel – P13
Kern, Timothy S. – 37
Kesari, Aditya – P48, P249
Kezyte, Skirmante – P219
Kidd, Grahame J. – 10
Kim, Agnes – P74
Kim, Albert H. – P45
Kim, Byung G. – P183
Kim, Hyerin – P197
Bold indicates first/presenting author
98
Luebke, Katrin T. – P63, P65
Luetje, Charles W. – P248, P250
Luke, Rachel – P84
Lundström, Johan N. – 4, 66, P217
Lundy, Robert F. – P80
Ma, Jie – P11
Ma, Limei – P238
Ma, Minghong – P193.5, P238, P246
Mac Leod, Patrick – P86
Maffei, Arianna – 11
Maier, Joost X – 44
Mainland, Joel D. – 45, P16
Makeyeva, Yuliya – P140
Malik, Jibran S. – P222
Mandairon, Nathalie – 53, P275
Mansfield, Corrine – 13
Mansouri, Masoud – P191
Manthey, John – P93
Manzini, Ivan – P243
Marambaud, Philippe – P126
Marasco, Addolorata – P203
Margolskee, Robert F. – P99, P150
Marks, Lawrence E. – P89, P90
Martens, Jeffrey R. – 46, P194, P239, P241
Martin, Laura E. – P98
Martinez, Brittany – P276
Masi, Camilla – P124
Mast, Thomas G. – P185
Mathew, Phoebe – P166
Matsumoto, Ichiro – P78
Matsunami, Hiroaki – 2, 45, P6, P7, P184,
P193.5, P246
Matsuo, Hodaka – P260
Matsuura, Masanori – P193
Matsuzawa, Tetsuro – P260
Mattes, Richard D. – P263
Mattoussi, Hedi – P125
Mazzucato, Luca – P34
McCarthy, Elizabeth A. – P141
McCaughey, Stuart A. – P81
McFadden, Charrie – P58
McGann, John P. – 30, 34, P139, P145
McIntosh, Elissa – 40
McIntyre, Jeremy C. – P194, P239, P241
McTavish, Thomas S – P207
Medler, Kathryn – P2
Meeks, Julian P. – P49, P71
Meijer, Dimphna H. – P199
Menini, Anna – P255
Larsson, Maria – P57, P277, P278
Lasher, Robert S. – 10
Laska, Matthias – 7, P120
Laukka, Erika J. – P277
Lavin, Edward H. – P20
Layne, John E. – 27
Le, Amanda T. – P234
Leclair, Clotilde – P93
Lee, Joon Ha – 58
Lee, NaHye – P77, P197
Lee, Sung-Joon – P130
Lei, Tim – P144
Leiken, Jerrold B. – P226
Leinders-Zufall, Trese – 59
Lemon, Christian H. – P28, P35, P43
Lemons, Kayla – P179
Ley, Jakob P. – P44, P116, P267
Li, Anan – P144
Li, Jingyi – P248
Li, Jinrong – P43
Li, Kunyan – P142
Li, Li – P142
Li, Libo – 43, P235
Li, Weiming – P58
Li, Wen – 32, 62, 65
Li, Xia – P155
Liberles, Stephen D. – 50
Lieder, Barbara – P44, P267
Lim, Juyun – P22, P97, P151
Liman, Emily R. – P106
Lin, Cailu – P155, P159
Lin, Chun-Chieh – P137
Lin, Weihong – P8, P179, P196
Linnik, Darina – P84
Linster, Christiane – P26, 52
Lipchock, Sarah V. – 13
Lippner, Dennean S. – P256
Liszt, Kathrin I – P116
Liu, Annie – P201
Liu, Hong -X – P237
Liu, Jia – P142
Liu, Shaolin – P54
Lizbinski, Kristyn M. – P48, P249
Loney, Gregory C. – P160
Long, Daniel J. – P119, P261
Lord, Julia – P111
Losonczy, Katalin G. – P231
Lowe, Graeme – P11, P204
Lu, Lianyi – 12, P85
Bold indicates first/presenting author
99
Author Index, continued
Mennella, Julie A. – 13, 14, P166
Mensink, Manon G.J. – P129
Mercier, Noémie – P188
Meredith, Michael – P55, P146
Metheny, Jackie D. – P249
Meunier, Nicolas – P269
Meusel, Thomas – P61
Meyerhof, Wolfgang – 49
Miao, Xutao – P142
Midroit, Maëllie – 53, P275
Migliore, Michele – P203
Millette, Jean-Patrick – P53
Minaya, Dulce M. – 8
Mineur, Yann S. – 1
Misaka, Takumi – 50, P102, P262
Mishina, Yuji – P237
Mistretta, Charlotte M. – 43, P235
Mitsuhashi, Yukari – P236
Miwa, Takaki – P220
Miyamoto, Takenori – P236
Miyamura, Tomotaka – P70
Miyazaki, Nanami L. – P46
Miyazawa, Toshio – P41
Mo, Kelly – P174
Moberly, Andrew H – P139, P145
Møller, Per – P92
Mombaerts, Peter – 61
Montagné, Nicolas – P198
Monteleone, Erminio – P124
Moran, Anan – 33
Morgenstern, Marco P. – P95
Morozova, Olga – P211
Morse, Thomas M. – P207
Motoi, Lidia – P95
Mueller, Christian A. – 5, P186
Munger, Steven D. – 57, 59, P110
Murata, Yuko – P103
Murovets, Vladimir O. – P273
Murphy, Claire – 40
Murphy, Emily S. – P89
Murthy, Venkatesh N. – P13
Myers, Jr., Martin G. – P110
Nachtigal, Danielle J. – 9
Nakagita, Tomoya – 50, P102
Nakamura, Junji – P193
Nakano, Shiori – P21, P67
Narukawa, Masataka – P102
Nattress, Laura – P163
Naumann, Ryan – P216
Negoias, Simona N. – P225
Neiers, Fabrice – P148
Ni, Mengjue J. – P7, P246
Niimura, Yoshihito – P251
Nikonova, Larissa V. – P98
Nilsson, Lars-Goran – P278
Niman, Andrea – P57
Ninomiya, Yuzo – P150
Nishiyama, Miyako – P236
Niv, Masha – 47, 51
Noel, Corinna – P62
Nolden, Alissa A. – P131
Nordin, Steven – P278
Nota, Jumpei – P180
Noto, Torben – P5
Novak, Lucas – 32
Nunez-Parra, Alexia – P27
Nyberg, Lars – P278
O’Connell, Mary J. – 50
Odabasi, Asli Z. – P167, P229, P271
Ogura, Tatsuya – P179
Ohman-Gault, Lisa – P1
Ohmoto, Makoto – P78
Okuda, Koichi – P220
Olmstead, James W. – P167
Olofsson, Jonas K. – P278
Olsson, Mats J. – 66, P66
Omura, Masayo – 61
Osinski, Boleslaw – 54
Osterberg, Stephen K. – P190
Otazu, Gonzalo H. – P143
Otto, Cynthia M. – P210
Paedae, Andrew B. – P98
Pallotto, Marta – P242
Palmer, R. Kyle – P119, P261
Paredes, Dulce – P95
Park, In Jun – P18
Park, Moon-Sook – P219
Parma, Valentina – 4
Pasi, Radhika – P7
Patel, Barkha P. – 18, P164
Patterson, Christa M. – P110
Pauli, Goutam – P125
Pause, Bettina M. – P63, P65
Pellegrino, Robert – P219
Pence, Taylor – P189
Penner, Michael H. – P97, P151
Pepino, M. Yanina – 15, 19, P168
Perea-Martinez, Isabel – P234
Bold indicates first/presenting author
100
Pereira, Elizabeth – P108
Pérez-Gómez, Anabel – 59
Perry, Demetra M. – P132
Petefish, Kalie – 10
Peyrot des Gachons, Catherine – P123
Picciotto, Marina R. – 1
Pierchala, Brian A. – P75
Pifferi, Simone – P255
Pinto, Jayant M. – P142
Plotto, Anne – P93
Pluznick, Jennifer L. – P238
Poole, Rachel L. – P157, P162
Poon, Renee – P174
Postma, Elbrich – P170
Potter, Christopher J – P137
Prager, Tyler R. – P113
Pratley, Richard E. – P152
Prescott, John – P124
Preston, Collin J. – P45
Preti, George – P137, P210
Pribitkin, Edmund – P177
Principe, Jose – P18
Proctor, Kara R. – P254
Prokop-Prigge, Katharine A. – P16, P137,
P210
Puche, Adam – P52, P54
Pusca, Victor – P53
Pyrski, Martina – 59
Qin, Yumei – P99
Raguet, Louise L.G. – P14
Rahman, Suhaila – P250
Raithore, Smita – P93
Rao, Salome P. – P272
Raudenbush, Bryan – P213, P214, P216,
P218
Rawal, Shristi – P172, P231, P268
Rawson, Nancy E. – P42, P120, P264
Raynor, Hollie – P23
Reed, Danielle R. – 13, P155, P166
Reed, Randall R. – P182
Reger, Noah – P195
Reichert, Johanna – P175
Reiss, Jacob – P185
Restrepo, Diego – P27, P144
Reutens, David C. – P135
Reyes, M. Michelle – P153
Rhodes, Nicole – 27
Rhyu, Mee-Ra – P262
Richard, Marion – 53, P275
Richman, Ethan – 21
Riedel, Annett – P44
Riffell, Jeffrey A. – P91
Rinberg, Dmitry – P4
Rivera, Deja F. – P84
Rivière, Sébastien – P269
Robinson, Emily – P213, P218
Roche, Alice – P20
Rochlin, M William – P258
Rodionova, Elena – P211
Rodriguez-Raecke, Rea – P117
Rodriguez, Ivan – P257
Roebber, Jennifer K – P165
Rohm, Barbara – P116
Roland, Benjamin – 22
Rollmann, Stephanie M – 27
Roper, Stephen – P108
Rosbrook, Kathryn – P40
Rosenthal, Michelle C – 34
Rosenthal, Sage – P90
Rothermel, Markus – 42
Rougeot, Catherine – P232
Roura, Eugeni – 48, P135
Roussos, Alexander P. – P221
Rucker, Joseph B. – P264
Running, Cordelia A. – P263
Russo, Matthew L – P258
Rust, Petra – P267
Sacquet, Joëlle – P275
Sadrian, Benjamin – 55
Saites, Louis N. – P85
Saito, Naoko – P193
Sakuma, Katsuya – P41
Salcedo, Ernesto – P76
Saldanha, Stephen – P216
Saletin, Jared M. – P23
Samant, Shilpa S. – P219
Sammons, Joshua D. – P33
Sandau, Michelle M. – P264
Santos, Vanessa – P248
Sathyanesan, Aaron – P8, P196
Sato, Narumi – P251
Savvaki, Maria – P181
Schaal, Benoist – P65
Schaefer, Andreas T. – 24
Schal, Coby – 26, 28
Scheinost, Dustin – P24
Schellig, Katharina – 60
Schellong, Julia – P225
Bold indicates first/presenting author
101
Author Index, continued
Schiano, Angelina N. – P133
Schier, Lindsey A. – P31
Schlegel, Killeen – P216
Schmidt, Roland – P15
Schöpf, Veronika – 5, P175, P186
Schoppa, Nathan E. – P9
Schriever, Valentin A. – P280
Schünke, Anica – P187
Schütze, Tobias – P187
Schwartz, Austin B. – P125
Schwieterman, Michael L. – P167, P229
Sclafani, Anthony – P126
Scott, Emily – P179
Scott, Kaela – P58
Seigneuric, Renaud – P148
Semin, Gün R. – 64, 65, P64
Seo, Han-Seok – P219
Sergeyev, Valeriy G. – P112
Seubert, Janina – 4, P277
Shang, Lin – P68
Shao, Zuoyi – P52
Sharafi, Mastaneh – P270
Sharma, Pawan – P265
Sharma, Ruchira – 2
Sharma, Tanu – P182
Shepherd, Gordon M. – P203, P207
Sherman, Benjamin – P250
Shiga, Hideaki – P220
Shinohara, Yuhei – P204
Shipley, Michael T. – 42, P52, P54
Shirasu, Mika – P251
Shoji, Yasutaka – P41
Short, Shaina M. – P207
Siddique, Ashik H. – P89, P90
Silva, Carlos F. – P66
Silver, Wayne L. – P45, P46
Silverman, Jules – 28
Simon, Nirvine – P74
Simonton, Ariel R. – P55
Sims, Charles A. – P167, P229, P271
Skrandies, Wolfgang – P121
Small, Dana M. – 18, P24, 31, P164
Smeets, Monique – 64, 65, P64
Smeets, Paul A.M. – P127
Smith, Brian H. – P12
Smith, Kathleen – P152
Smith, Kimberly R. – P154
Snyder, Derek J. – P167, P229
Soares, Sandra C. – P66
Somoza, Mark M. – P116
Somoza, Veronika – P44, P116, P267
Son, Hee Jin – P262
Sonnenschein, Johanna – P168
Sosa, Yvett – P110
Soubeyre, Vanessa – P269
Sozontov, Egor A. – P273
Spear, John – P125
Spector, Alan C – P31, P154
Spehr, Marc – 20, 23, P205, P208, P257
Spielman, Andrew – 13
Spinazzi, Eleonora F. – P274
Srinivasan, Shyam – P17
Stagg, Scott – P125
Stamatakis, Antonis – P181
Stamps, Jennifer J. – P167, P229, P271
Stanciu, Ingrid – P278
Stein, Benjamin – 59
Stensmyr, Marcus C. – 29
Sterling, Cody M – P80
Stetzler, Carolin – P280
Stevens, Charles F. – P17
Stewart, Angela – P100
Stice, Steve L. – P237
Stoeger, Verena – P116
Storm, Daniel R. – P238
Stowers, Lisa – 63
Stratford, Jennifer M – P76
Stuebler, Anna – P116
Su, Jian-sheng – P68
Su, Nan – P174
Subramanian, Thyagarajan – P59
Suh, Greg S.B. – P128
Sukumaran, Sunil K. – P99, P150
Summerfield, Jennifer – P187
Sun, Chengsan – P82
Suntres, Tina E. – P191, P192
Swick, Jennifer – P111
Swithers, Susan E. – 16
Symmank, Anja – P225
Szajer, Jacquelyn – 40
Tabata, Yasuhiko – P180
Takahashi, Hirotaka – P180
Takeuchi, Kazuhiko – P70
Taki, Junichi – P220
Talaga, Anna K – P252
Talay, Mustafa – 21
Tamari, Kengo – P70
Tang, Tao – P101, P109
Bold indicates first/presenting author
102
Tanyi, Janos L. – P210
Tartaglia, Jennifer B. – P95
Tepper, Beverly J. – P272
Theodorides, Maria L. – P159
Thiebaud, Nicolas – 39, P118
Thomas, Anu – P264
Tian, Hukai – P238
Tieman, Denise M. – P167
Tizzano, Marco – P104, P178
Tobia, Michael J. – P37, P38
Tobler, Phillippe N. – 6
Toda, Yasuka – 50, P102
Togawa, Makoto – P41
Tokita, Kenichi – P85
Tomooka, Yasuhiro – P236
Tonami, Hisao – P220
Tordoff, Michael G. – P162
Torregrossa, Ann-Marie – P98
Touhara, Kazushige – P251
Trattnig, Siegfried – 5, P186
Travers, Joseph B. – P83
Travers, Susan P. – P83
Treffy, Randall W. – P258
Trimmer, Casey – 45
Tripathy, Shreejoy – P5
Trombley, Paul Q. – P113
Tsitoura, Chryssanthi – 23, P205, P208
Turkel, Daniel J. – P145
Tylicki, Kate A. – P29, P30
Ukhanov, Kirill – P194
Ungehauer, Marie-Noëlle – P232
Urban, Nathan N. – P200
Urban, Nathaniel N. – P201
van Genderen, Lieke – P134
Van Reen, Eliza – P23
van Rijn, Inge – P127
Vandenbergh, David J. – P158
Vandenbeuch, Aurelie – P3, P104
Vasavada, Megha – P276
Vashi, Siddhartha – P141
Vasquez, Gissella – 26
Veldhuizen, Maria G – 18, 31, P24, P89,
P90 P164
Venkatesan, Nandakumar – P237
Vente, Daniela – P66
Verhagen, Justus V. – P207
Vickers, Neil – 26
Victor, Jonathan D. – P33
Vidaki, Marina – P181
Vincis, Roberto – P88
Vinjamuri, Mridula (Meera) – P177
von der Weid, Benoît – P257
Vosshall, Leslie B. – 45
Wachowiak, Matt – 42, P52
Wada-Katsumata, Ayako – 28
Wall, Crystal M – P253
Wang, Hong – P72, P73, P74
Wang, Jianli – P59, P276
Wang, Jin – P19, P215
Wang, Jue – P238
Wang, Meng – P206
Warrenburg, Lindsay A. – P16
Warrington, James A. – 39
Watanabe, Naoto – P220
Watznauer, Katja – P205, P208
Wegener, B. A. – P279
Wei, Yongxiang – P142
Weiler, Elke – P209
Welge-Lüssen, Antje C. – P60, P61, P87
Werner, Annet – P202
Wesson, Daniel W. – P29, P30, P51, P186
White, Theresa L. – P56
Whiteus, Christina B. – P199
Whitney, Meredith S. – P51
Widder, Sabine – P44, P116, P267
Willander, Johan – P57
Willer, Jason R – 45
Williams, Corey L. – 46, P239
Wilson, Arran – P95
Wilson, Courtney E. – P105
Wilson, Donald A. – 52, 55, P147, P278
Winder, Nicolette M. – P46
Wise, Paul M. – P41, P163
Witzgall, Peter – P198
Wolfram Study Group, WU – P168
Wray, Amanda E. – 18
Wu, An – P108
Wu, Chunyan – P130
Xu, Fangyi – P133
Xu, Jiang – P42
Yamada, Kazuo – P67
Yang, Ling – P142
Yang, Qing X. – P37, P38, P59, P276
Yang, Ruey-Bing – 60
Yang, Ruibiao – 10, P76
Yao, Linyin – P142
Ye, Wenlei – P106
Yee, Karen K. – P150
Bold indicates first/presenting author
103
Author Index, continued
Yi, Roslyn – P265
Yin, Wenbin – P238
Yin, Xuming – 53
Yokota, Yusuke – P107
Yoshikawa, Keiichi – P251
You, Yuqi – 65, P193.5
Young, Stephen G. – P253
Yu, C. Ron – P238
Yu, Chung Wen – P16
Yu, Yiqun – P246
Zhang, Jingji – P4
Zhao, Haiqing – P252, P253, P256
Zhao, Kai – P238
Zheng, Yan – 65
Zheng, Yixian – P253
Zhigang, Zhao – P36
Zhong, Yi – 41
Zhou, Bin – P25
Zhou, Minliang – P74
Zhou, Wen – P10, P25
Zhuang, Yuan – P10
Ziegler, Gregory R. – P96
Zielinski, Barbara – P53, P58, P191, P192
Zolotarev, Vasiliy A. – P273
Zolotukhin, Sergei – P112
Zoon, Harriet F. A. – P134
Zufall, Frank – 59
Bold indicates first/presenting author
104
Author Standby 8 - 10:30 AM
100’s
105
101
102
103
104
105
201
202
203
204
205
110
109
108
107
106
210
209
208
207
206
111
112
113
114
115
211
212
213
214
215
120
119
118
117
116
220
219
218
217
216
121
122
123
124
125
221
222
223
224
225
130
129
128
127
126
230
229
228
227
226
131
132
133
134
135
231
232
233
234
235
140
139
138
137
136
240
239
238
237
236
141
142
143
144
145
241
242
243
244
245
149
148
147
146
250
249
248
247
246
51
52
53
54
55
251
252
253
Poster Hall Diagram – Estero Ballroom
AChemS 37th Annual Meeting
Hyatt Regency Coconut Point | Bonita Springs, FL
April 22-25, 2015
Author Standby 9 - 11:00 PM
200’s
Visual Program at a Glance
Re g ist ration
Re gistration
3:30 – 7:00 pm
7:00 am – 12:30 pm, 6:30 – 7:30 pm
w ednesd ay, a p r i l 2 2
8:00 am
t h u r sd ay, a p r i l 2 3
Industry
Breakfast Corners
8:15 am
8:30 am
7:30 – 9:00 am
Estero Terrace
8:45 am
9:00 am
9:30 am
9:45 am
10:00 am
10:15 am
10:30 am
Poster Session I
8:00 – 10:30 am
Estero Ballroom
9:15 am
LONG RANGE
PLANNING COMMITTEE
8:00 am
Ibis Room
10:45 am
11:00 am
11:15 am
11:30 am
11:45 am
oral Session 1:
oral Session 2:
10:30 am – 12:30 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
10:30 am – 12:30 pm
Calusa Ballroom 2
Industry
Workshop
Barry Davis
NIH Funding
Workshop
12:00 pm
12:15 pm
12:30 pm
12:45 pm
1:00 pm
1:15 pm
1:30 pm
1:45 pm
2:00 pm
2:15 pm
ACHEMS EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE MEETING
12:00 – 3:30 pm
The Cove at Tarpon Bay
2:30 pm
2:45 pm
3:00 pm
2:00 – 4:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
3:15 pm
3:30 pm
2:00 – 4:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 2
3:45 pm
4:00 pm
Achems career
networking
Social
4:15 pm
4:30 pm
4:45 pm
5:00 pm
5:15 pm
5:30 pm
5:45 pm
6:00 pm
6:15 pm
6:30 pm
6:45 pm
Welcome/Awards Ceremony
5:00 – 6:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
7:30 pm
7:45 pm
8:00 pm
8:15 pm
ACHEMS GRADUATE
Student Happy Hour
6:00 – 7:00 pm
Mangroves Patio
6:00 – 7:00 pm | Calusa Ballroom 1
7:15 pm
welcome Banquet
7:00 – 9:00 pm
Waterfall Pool Deck
4:00 – 5:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
4:00 – 6:00 pm
Estero Ballroom Terrace
Royal Palm Courtyard
GIVAUDAN LECTURE:
Nicotine Addiction
7:00 pm
clinical LECTURE
Symposium:
Non Caloric
Sweeteners and
Their Not-so-sweet
Metabolic Effects
Symposium:
Signal
Transformation
and Routing in the
Olfactory System
7:00 – 9:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
7:00 – 9:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 2
8:30 pm
8:45 pm
9:00 pm
9:15 pm
9:30 pm
Poster Session II
9:45 pm
9:00 – 11:00 pm
Estero Ballroom
10:00 pm
10:15 pm
10:30 pm
10:45 pm
106
Visual Program at a Glance
Re g ist r ation
Re gist ration
7:30 am – 12:30 pm, 6:15 – 7:15 pm
7:30 am – 12:00 pm, 6:30 – 7:30 pm
f r id ay, a p r i l 2 4
s a tu r d ay, a p r i l 2 5
8:00 am
SILVER MEMBERS
GATHERING
Poster
Session III
8:15 am
8:30 am
8:00 – 8:30 am
Royal Palm Courtyard
8:00 – 10:30 am
Estero Ballroom
Poster
Session V
8:45 am
8:00 – 10:30 am
Estero Ballroom
9:15 am
9:00 am
9:30 am
9:45 am
10:00 am
10:15 am
Symposium:
Adaptive
Evolution of
Insect Olfactory
Systems
Symposium:
Cognitive
Influences on
Smell and Taste
10:30 am – 12:30 pm
Calusa Ballroom 2
10:30 am – 12:30 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
achems fun
run/walk
Free time
12:30 - 6:45 pm
3:00 pm
Hyatt Entrance Drive
10:45 am
11:00 am
11:15 am
11:30 am
11:45 am
10:30 am – 12:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
12:00 pm
TRAVEL FELLOWSHIP
LUNCHEON
ACHEMS BUSINESS
MEETING
12:30 – 1:30 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
CHEMICAL SENSES
EDITORIAL BOARD
1:30 – 2:30 pm
Great Egret Room
10:30 am
platform
presentations:
Polak Young
Investigator Award
Recipients
12:15 – 1:15 pm
Great Egret Room
12:15 pm
12:30 pm
12:45 pm
1:00 pm
1:15 pm
1:30 pm
1:45 pm
2:00 pm
Symposium:
Feedback and
Modulation in
Chemical Senses
Symposium:
Avian Species
as a Model for
Taste Detection
2:15 pm
2:00 – 4:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
2:00 – 4:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 2
3:15 pm
Special event:
Harold McGee: Playing with Food:
Three Centuries of Science in the Kitchen
4:00 – 5:00 pm | Calusa Ballroom 1
2:30 pm
2:45 pm
3:00 pm
3:30 pm
3:45 pm
4:00 pm
4:15 pm
4:30 pm
4:45 pm
5:00 pm
5:15 pm
5:30 pm
5:45 pm
6:00 pm
6:15 pm
6:30 pm
6:45 pm
7:00 pm
Presidential Symposium:
Metabolic State Shifts
Sensory Systems
6:45 – 9:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
Symposium:
cGMP Signaling
in the
Olfactory System
Symposium:
Transmitting
Chemical Warnings
in Animals and Men
7:15 pm
7:00 – 9:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
7:00 – 9:00 pm
Calusa Ballroom 2
8:15 pm
7:30 pm
7:45 pm
8:00 pm
8:30 pm
8:45 pm
9:00 pm
9:15 pm
Poster Session IV
Poster Session VI
9:00 – 11:00 pm
Estero Ballroom
9:00 – 11:00 pm
Estero Ballroom
9:30 pm
9:45 pm
10:00 pm
10:15 pm
10:30 pm
10:45 pm
107
Notes
108
AChemS Business Meeting Agenda
Friday, April 24
12:30 – 1:30 pm
Calusa Ballroom 1
1. Call to Order – Debi Fadool, PhD, President
2. Approval of Business Meeting Minutes – Debi Fadool, PhD
Bonita Springs, FL, April 2014
3. Report from the President – Debi Fadool, PhD
a) Bylaws Vote
b) New Committee Chairs
c) R13 Grant Management
4. Report from the Elections Committee – John Glendinning, PhD, Chair
a) 2015 Election Results
Junior Councilor
President-Elect
Program Chair-Elect
Treasurer
b) Thank You to Outgoing Officers
Rachel Herz, PhD, Senior Councilor
Alan Spector, PhD, Senior Advisor
Dana Small, PhD, Program Chair
Joe Travers, PhD, Treasurer
5
Report from the Treasurer – Joe Travers, PhD
a) FY2015 Projections
6. Report from the Secretary and Public Information and Affairs
Committee Chair – John Boughter, PhD
a) Newsworthy Abstracts/Press Release
b) Website
c) Newsletter
7. Report from the Program Committee Chair – Dana Small, PhD
a) Annual Meeting 2015 – Program, Highlights, Attendance
8. Report from the Membership Chair – Pam Dalton, PhD
a) 2014 and 2015 Membership
9. Report from the Councilors – Rachel Herz, PhD
a) AChemS Community Outreach Program – Imaginarium
10.Other Committee Reports – Debi Fadool, PhD
a) Long Range Planning Committee
11.Report from the NIDCD – Jim Battey, PhD
12.Welcome to the New President and Passing of Gavel –
Debi Fadool, PhD
13.Old Business
New Business
a) ISOT 2016
14.Adjourn
109
AChemS
AChemS
Association for Chemoreception Sciences
Association for Chemoreception Sciences
AChemS XXXVIII
38th Annual Meeting
AprIl 20-23, 2016
Hyatt regency coconut point
BonItA SprIngS, florIdA
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