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Taste/Gustation

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Taste/Gustation Detection of Chemicals and Regulation of Ingestion Chemical Sensation Oldest sensory system Bacteria detect and move toward chemical food source We ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Taste/Gustation


1
Taste/Gustation
  • Detection of Chemicals and Regulation of Ingestion

2
Chemical Sensation
  • Oldest sensory system
  • Bacteria detect and move toward chemical food
    source
  • We taste chemicals in food
  • Our cells bind and respond to chemicals within
    our bodies

3
Chemosensation
  • Taste Smell conscious awareness of chemicals
  • Nerve endings in skin and in mucous membranes
    react to irritating chemicals
  • Nerve endings in digestive tract respond to
    chemicals
  • Receptors in aorta measure carbon dioxide and
    oxygen

4
Organs of Taste
  • Tongue, epiglottis, palate, pharynx
  • Taste is due to chemicals, texture, temperature
    and pain and smell
  • Taste cells and somatosensory receptors

5
Combination of Receptors
  • Complex tastes arise from activation of multiple
    receptors at once
  • Smell of food contributes to distinction of
    taste
  • Texture and temperature and paincapsaicin from
    hot peppers
  • Vision also participates in food selection and in
    enjoyment and expectation-emotional response to
    food

6
Cravings
  • Body can detect the absence of certain chemicals
    and create cravings for them
  • Food Allergies allergic to foods you crave or
    cant live without
  • Due to abnormal flora in gut that creates craving
    for energy source for that bacteria

7
Chemotransduction
  • Detection of chemicals in the environment (food)
  • Chemicals activate chemoreceptors that
    transiently alter membrane potential of taste
    cell
  • Called a receptor potential
  • Can be depolarizing or hyperpolarizing

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Papillae
  • On tongue surface are protrusions (bumps) with
    different shapes (ridges, pimples, mushrooms)
  • Each papilla is a collection of 100-200 buds
  • Each taste bud has 50-150 taste receptor cells
    arranged as orange sections
  • Taste cells1 of tongue epitheliumrest is basal
    cells and gustatory afferent axons

10
Organization of Taste Organ
  • Papillae (contain taste buds 100s)
  • Vallate (pimple)
  • Fungiform (mushroom)
  • Foliate (ridges)
  • Taste buds (contain taste cells 50-150)
  • Taste Cells (innervated by gustatory afferent
    axons of CN 7, 9, 10)
  • Basal cells synapse with axons taste cells

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12
Taste Buds
  • Normal range is 2000-5000 taste buds
  • Can be as little as 500 or as many as 20,000
  • 90 of taste cells respond to 2 or more chemicals
  • Allow for population coding

13
Taste Cells
  • Do not have axonsare like hair cells that are
    innervated by sensory axons which receive
    excitatory input from taste receptor cells within
    taste bud

14
Taste Cell Life Cycle
  • 2 weeksgrowth, death, regeneration
  • Requires afferent innervation
  • If axon is damaged , then taste cell degenerates

15
Taste Cell Anatomy
  • Apical End-membrane region near tongue surface
  • Has microvilli that project into the taste pore
  • Taste cells have synapses with endings of
    gustatory afferents near bottom of taste cell

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17
Taste Cells
  • Taste bud contains 100 taste receptor cells
  • Saliva has low Na concentration
  • microvilli on apical end of taste cell detect
    chemicals in the aqueous (saliva) environment

18
Taste Cells Basal Cells
  • Taste cells have electrical and chemical synapse
    with basal cells
  • Basal cells can synapse with gustatory afferents
  • Form information processing circuit within taste
    bud

19
Modalities of Taste
  • Only 4 components to taste
  • SaltyHigh sodium ions
  • Souracidic compoundshigh protons
  • Bitteramino acids other organics, K, caffeine
  • Sweetsugars s.a. sucrose
  • 5th Taste Umamijapanese for delicious MSG or
    taste of glutamate

20
Bitter Sour Salty Sweet
21
Transduction
  • Tastant taste stimuli
  • Transduce the taste by
  • Directly passing through ion channel (salt
    sour)
  • Bind and block K ion channel (sour bitter)
  • Bind and open channel (amino acids)
  • Bind receptors that activate 2nd messengers that
    open or close ion channels (sweet, bitter umami)

22
Saltiness
  • Taste of Na
  • Na selective ion channel blocked by amilioride,
    insensitive to voltage always open
  • As you eat salty food the external Na increases
    and Na flows into cell through channel
  • Directly depolarized membrane

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24
Sourness
  • High acid foods taste sour (low pH)
  • HCl generates H ions
  • Transduced by
  • H passing through amilioride sensitive Na
    Channel, Depolarizes cell (cant tell salt from
    sour)
  • H binds weakly blocks K channels causes
    depolarization at normal ph channel open

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26
Sweetness
  • Sweet transduced by
  • Binding specific receptors activate 2nd
    messenger cascades
  • G protein triggers formation of cAMP, activation
    of PKA, phosphorylation of K channel (not sour
    channel) and closes it leading to depolarization
  • Cation channels directly gated by sugars

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28
Bitterness
  • Bitter receptors detect poisons
  • Transduced in many ways
  • Quinine (bitter,tonic) Ca bind to K channel
    and block them
  • Bitter receptors that activate G proteins that
    lead to increased IP3 levels modulates NT
    release without depolarizing celldirectly causes
    Ca release from intracellular stores

29
Amino Acids
  • Umamiglutamate, aspartate
  • Glutamate transduced by
  • Permeating Na/Ca ion channel, depolarizes, opens
    voltage gated Ca channel that triggers NT release
  • Binds G-protein coupled, decreases cAMP
  • Arginine and proline gate their own channels

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31
Receptor Potential
  • Hyperpolarization or Depolarization caused by
    activation of taste cell
  • Depolarization causes calcium channel opening
  • Triggers NT release at synapse with afferent
    neuron (unknown NT)
  • Causes AP in afferent sensory axon

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33
Threshold Concentration
  • Concentration of a basic chemical that registers
    a perception of taste
  • At low concentration, papilla are very sensitive
    but at high concentration they respond to all
    stimuli

34
Perception of Taste
  • One afferent axon gets input from many different
    taste cells each maximally responsive to
    combinations of taste
  • Population Coding Groups of broadly tuned
    neurons specify taste rather than single finely
    tuned taste cells and neurons.

35
Population Coding
  • Analysis of the response of population of cells
    to particular food
  • Some nerve cells will increase or decrease the
    rate of firing
  • Cortex discerns what the overall pattern of
    activation is and decides you ate chocolate

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37
CNS Pathways
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39
Central Taste Pathways
  • Taste bud- brain stem-thalamus-cerebral cx
  • 3 CN carry taste
  • Anterior 2/3 of tongue have afferents in CN7
    facial nerve
  • Posterior 1/3 of tongue have afferents in CN9,
    the glossopharyngeal
  • Epiglottis, pharynx, glottis have axons in CN10
    vagus

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41
Gustatory-Solitary Nucleus
  • In Medulla-first synapse for taste afferents is
    the gustatory nucleus that is part of nucleus
    solitary

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43
Thalamus-CNS
  • From Gustatory nucleus to ventral posterior
    medial (VPM) nucleus of thalamus (sensory for
    head)
  • To Broadman area 36 above temporal lobe Primary
    Gustatory Cortex
  • To insula cortex
  • Uncrossed Crossed pathways from CN to CX

44
Gustatory Projections
  • Projects to nuclei in medulla involved in
    swallowing, salivation gagging, vomiting,
    digestion and respiration
  • Hypothalamus amygdala involved in controlling
    eating
  • Lesions to amygdala can cause animals to ignore
    food or overeat

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46
Somatosensory Inputs
  • The tongue in also innervated by afferents for
    touch temperature and pain that contribute to
    recognition of foods by texture and heat
  • Travel to primary somatosensory cortex in post
    central gyrus

47
Additional CNS Circuit
  • Nucleus Solitary to Pons Pontine Taste Nucleus
  • to Hypothalamus For feeding regulation
  • To Amygdala for emotional connections
  • To Thalamus for Taste perception
  • Primitive Pathway
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