Impairment of Bitter Taste Sensor Transient Receptor Potential Channel M5-Mediated Aversion Aggravates High-Salt Intake and Hypertension

Author:

Cui Yuanting1,Wu Hao1,Li Qiang1,Liao Jianwen1,Gao Peng1,Sun Fang1,Zhang Hexuan1,Lu Zongshi1,Wei Xiao1,He Chengkang1,Ma Tianyi1,Wei Xing1,Chen Xiaowei2,Zheng Hongting3,Yang Gangyi4,Liu Daoyan1,Zhu Zhiming1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Hypertension and Endocrinology, Center for Hypertension and Metabolic Diseases, Daping Hospital, Chongqing Institute of Hypertension (Y.C., H.W., Q.L., J.L., P.G., F.S., H.Z., Z.L., X.W., C.H., T.M., X.W., D.L., Z.Z.), Third Military Medical University, China

2. Brain Research Center (X.C.), Third Military Medical University, China

3. Department of Endocrinology, Translational Research Key Laboratory for Diabetes, Xinqiao Hospital (H.Z.), Third Military Medical University, China

4. Department of Endocrinology, The Second Affiliated Hospital, Chongqing Medical University, China (G.Y.).

Abstract

Excessive salt consumption leads to cardiovascular diseases. Despite various measures designed to reduce salt intake, daily salt intake remains at a high level. Appropriate salt intake is balanced by salt taste preference triggered by epithelium sodium channel and salt taste aversion evoked by bitter taste sensor, transient receptor potential channel M5 (TRPM5). However, the behavioral mechanism of excessive salt intake remains largely elusive. In this study, wild type and TRPM5 −/− mice were applied to study the influence of high-salt administration on epithelium sodium channel/TRPM5 and the associated behavior to salt consumption. We found that long-term high-salt intake impaired the aversive behavior to high-salt stimulation but did not alter the preference to low salt in mice. The mechanistic evidence demonstrated that high-salt intake blunted the TRPM5-mediated aversive behavior to noxious salt stimulation through inhibiting PKC (protein kinase C) activity and PKC-dependent threonine phosphorylation in the tongue epithelium but did not affect the epithelium sodium channel–dependent salt taste preference. Inhibition of TRPM5 also resulted in an impaired aversive response to high salt, with reduced taste perception in bitter cortical field of mice. TRPM5 −/− mice showed a lowered aversion to high-salt diet and developed salt-induced hypertension. The impaired perception to bitter taste evoked by high-salt intake also existed in hypertensive patients with high-salt consumption. We demonstrate that long-term high-salt consumption impairs aversive response to concentrated salt by downregulating bitter taste sensor TRPM5. It suggests that enhancing TRPM5 function might antagonize excessive salt intake and high salt–induced hypertension.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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