Action Potential–Enhanced ATP Release From Taste Cells Through Hemichannels

Author:

Murata Yoshihiro1,Yasuo Toshiaki1,Yoshida Ryusuke1,Obata Kunihiko2,Yanagawa Yuchio3,Margolskee Robert F.4,Ninomiya Yuzo1

Affiliation:

1. Section of Oral Neuroscience, Graduate School of Dental Science, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan;

2. Obata Research Unit, RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Wako, Japan;

3. Department of Genetic and Behavioral Neuroscience, Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine, Maebashi, Japan; and

4. Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA

Abstract

Only some taste cells fire action potentials in response to sapid stimuli. Type II taste cells express many taste transduction molecules but lack well-elaborated synapses, bringing into question the functional significance of action potentials in these cells. We examined the dependence of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) transmitter release from taste cells on action potentials. To identify type II taste cells we used mice expressing a green fluorescence protein (GFP) transgene from the α-gustducin promoter. Action potentials were recorded by an electrode basolaterally attached to a single GFP-positive taste cell. We monitored ATP release from gustducin-expressing taste cells by collecting the electrode solution immediately after tastant-stimulated action potentials and using a luciferase assay to quantify ATP. Stimulation of gustducin-expressing taste cells with saccharin, quinine, or glutamate on the apical membrane increased ATP levels in the electrode solution; the amount of ATP depended on the firing rate. Increased spontaneous firing rates also induced ATP release from gustducin-expressing taste cells. ATP release from gustducin-expressing taste cells was depressed by tetrodotoxin and inhibited below the detection limit by carbenoxolone. Our data support the hypothesis that action potentials in taste cells responsive to sweet, bitter, or umami tastants enhance ATP release through pannexin 1, not connexin-based hemichannels.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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