Bioelectrical signal associated with sweet taste transduction in humans is a hyperpolarizing potential on the lingual epithelium

Author:

Fukuda Satoshi1,Murabe Naoyuki1,Mizuta Haruno2,Yamamoto Takashi2,Nagai Takatoshi13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, Teikyo University School of Medicine, Tokyo 173-8605, Japan

2. Department of Nutrition, Faculty of Health Sciences, Kio University, Nara 635-0832, Japan

3. Emeritus Professor of Keio University, Yokohama 223-8521, Japan

Abstract

Abstract The lingual surface potential (LSP), which hyperpolarizes in response to salt and bitter stimuli, is thought to be a bioelectrical signal associated with taste transduction in humans. In contrast, a recent study reported sweet and sour stimuli to evoke a depolarization of the LSP. We questioned the origin of such a depolarization because liquid junction potentials (JPs), which arise at the interfaces of recording electrode and taste solutions, are neglected in the report. We recorded the LSPs to sucrose and NaCl solutions on the human tongue using an Ag/AgCl electrode. To estimate JPs generated by each taste solution, we made an agar model to simulate the human tongue. The lingual surface was rinsed with a 10 mM NaCl solution that mimics the sodium content of the lingual fluid. In the human tongue, sucrose dissolved in distilled water evoked a depolarizing LSP that could be attributed to JPs, resulting from the change in electrolyte concentration of the taste solution. Sucrose dissolved in 10 mM NaCl solution evoked a hyperpolarizing LSP which became more negative in a concentration-dependent manner (300–1500 mM). Lactisole (3.75 mM), an inhibitor of sweet taste, significantly reduced the LSPs and decreased perceived intensity of sweetness by human subjects. The negative JPs generated by 100 mM NaCl in the agar model were not different from the LSPs to 100 mM NaCl. When the electrolyte environment on the lingual surface is controlled for JPs, the bioelectrical signal associated with sweet taste transduction is a hyperpolarizing potential.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Physiology (medical),Sensory Systems,Physiology

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