4.7 Article

The Role of the Anion in Salt (NaCl) Detection by Mouse Taste Buds

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 39, Issue 32, Pages 6224-6232

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2367-18.2019

Keywords

amiloride; Ca2+ imaging; fungiform taste bud; NaCl; sensory transduction; taste

Categories

Funding

  1. Lois Pope LIFE Fellows Program
  2. National Institutes of Health/National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Grant [R01 DC006308, R01 DC007630]

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How taste buds detect NaCl remains poorly understood. Among other problems, applying taste-relevant concentrations of NaCl (50-500 mM) onto isolated taste buds or cells exposes them to unphysiological (hypo/hypertonic) conditions. To overcome these limitations, we used the anterior tongue of male and female mice to implement a slice preparation in which fungiform taste buds are in a relatively intact tissue environment and stimuli are limited to the taste pore. Taste-evoked responses were monitored using confocal Ca2+ imaging via GCaMP3 expressed in Type 2 and Type 3 taste bud cells. NaCl evoked intracellular mobilization of Ca2+ in the apical tips of a subset of taste cells. The concentration dependence and rapid adaptation of NaCl-evoked cellular responses closely resembled behavioral and afferent nerve responses to NaCl. Importantly, taste cell responses were not inhibited by the diuretic, amiloride. Post hoc immunostaining revealed that >80% of NaCl-responsive taste bud cells were of Type 2. Many NaCl-responsive cells were also sensitive to stimuli that activate Type 2 cells but never to stimuli for Type 3 cells. Ion substitutions revealed that amiloride-insensitive NaCl responses depended on Cl- rather than Na+. Moreover, choline chloride, an established salt taste enhancer, was equally effective a stimulus as sodium chloride. Although the apical transducer for Cl- remains unknown, blocking known chloride channels and cotransporters had little effect on NaCl responses. Together, our data suggest that chloride, an essential nutrient, is a key determinant of taste transduction for amiloride-insensitive salt taste.

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