4.5 Article

Taste Bud Homeostasis in Health, Disease, and Aging

Journal

CHEMICAL SENSES
Volume 39, Issue 1, Pages 3-16

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/chemse/bjt059

Keywords

aging; cell death; cell renewal; disease; taste buds; taste dysfunction

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Deafness and Other Communication Disorders [DC010012, DC007487, P30 DC011735]
  2. National Science Foundation [DBJ-0216310]

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The mammalian taste bud is an onion-shaped epithelial structure with 50100 tightly packed cells, including taste receptor cells, supporting cells, and basal cells. Taste receptor cells detect nutrients and toxins in the oral cavity and transmit the sensory information to gustatory nerve endings in the buds. Supporting cells may play a role in the clearance of excess neurotransmitters after their release from taste receptor cells. Basal cells are precursor cells that differentiate into mature taste cells. Similar to other epithelial cells, taste cells turn over continuously, with an average life span of about 812 days. To maintain structural homeostasis in taste buds, new cells are generated to replace dying cells. Several recent studies using genetic lineage tracing methods have identified populations of progenitor/stem cells for taste buds, although contributions of these progenitor/stem cell populations to taste bud homeostasis have yet to be fully determined. Some regulatory factors of taste cell differentiation and degeneration have been identified, but our understanding of these aspects of taste bud homoeostasis remains limited. Many patients with various diseases develop taste disorders, including taste loss and taste distortion. Decline in taste function also occurs during aging. Recent studies suggest that disruption or alteration of taste bud homeostasis may contribute to taste dysfunction associated with disease and aging.

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