Adult neurogenesis in the olfactory bulb (OB) contributes to structural and functional plasticity, influencing olfactory perception, learning, and memory. Adult-born granule cells (abGCs) exhibit unique morphological, electrophysiological, and synaptic properties compared to their neonatally born counterparts, suggesting a specialized role in olfactory processing. In the OB, such processing relies both on sensory inputs from the olfactory epithelium as well as top-down cortical feedback, which encompass both glutamatergic and GABAergic projections from the olfactory cortex back to the OB. While abGCs are known to integrate both bottom-up sensory inputs and top-down cortical projections, the specific connectivity and functional influence of cortical GABAergic inputs on abGCs remain largely unexplored. In this study, we investigated whether activity of cortical GABAergic projections is modulated by olfactory learning, how they impact olfactory behavior and whether these connections selectively influence mature abGCs. Using in vivo fiber photometry following odor-reward associative conditioning, we found odor- and reward-dependent activity of cortical GABAergic projections during learning session. Furthermore, their functional role was revealed using optogenetic activation which impaired both the acquisition and the reversal of an odor-reward association. Ex vivo patch-clamp recordings demonstrated that olfactory learning potentiates cortical GABAergic inputs specifically onto abGCs, and morphological analysis confirmed that learning increases the number of cortical GABAergic synapses. These findings highlight a novel mechanism by which top-down inhibitory control from the olfactory cortex selectively targets abGC activity during olfactory learning. Our results provide new insights into the functional specialization of abGCs and their role in adaptive olfactory behaviors.
China has approved the world’s first invasive brain-computer chip—here’s what’s next
One day last October, sitting in the courtyard of his house in China’s Henan province, Dong Hui decided to see if he could hold a


