4.5 Article

The stability of tastant detection by mouse lingual chemosensory tissue requires Regulator of G protein Signaling-21 (RGS21)

Journal

CHEMICAL SENSES
Volume 46, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/chemse/bjab048

Keywords

bitter gustation; mouse; regulator of G protein signaling-21 (RGS21); salt gustation; sweet gustation; taste perception

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 DA048153]
  2. E.J. Van Liere and William W. Fleming Pharmacology Trust endowments

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Studies have shown that the lack of RGS21 in mice reduces their response to tastants mediated by GPCRs, contrary to the in vitro activity of RGS21 as a GAP and inhibitor of T2R signaling. This reduction in tastant-mediated responses is not due to post-ingestive effects, but rather the inactivation of RGS21 in lingual epithelial cells leading to a decreased ability to perceive flavors.
The T1R and T2R families of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) initiate tastant perception by signaling via guanine nucleotide exchange and hydrolysis performed by associated heterotrimeric G proteins (G alpha beta gamma). Heterotrimeric G protein signal termination is sped up by G alpha-directed GTPase-accelerating proteins (GAPs) known as the Regulators of G protein Signaling (RGS proteins). Of this family, RGS21 is highly expressed in lingual epithelial cells and we have shown it acting in vitro to decrease the potency of bitterants on cultured cells. However, constitutive RGS21 loss in mice reduces organismal response to GPCR-mediated tastants-opposite to expectations arising from observed in vitro activity of RGS21 as a GAP and inhibitor of T2R signaling. Here, we show reduced quinine aversion and reduced sucrose preference by mice lacking RGS21 does not result from post-ingestive effects, as taste-salient brief-access tests confirm the reduced bitterant aversion and reduced sweetener preference seen using two-bottle choice testing. Eliminating Rgs21 expression after chemosensory system development, via tamoxifen-induced Cre recombination in eight week-old mice, led to a reduction in quinine aversive behavior that advanced over time, suggesting that RGS21 functions as a negative regulator to sustain stable bitter tastant reception. Consistent with this notion, we observed downregulation of multiple T2R proteins in the lingual tissue of Rgs21-deficient mice. Reduced tastant-mediated responses exhibited by mice lacking Rgs21 expression either since birth or in adulthood has highlighted the potential requirement for a GPCR GAP to maintain the full character of tastant signaling, likely at the level of mitigating receptor downregulation.

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