An inhibitory mechanism for suppressing high salt intake in Drosophila

Author:

Dey Manali1ORCID,Ganguly Anindya1ORCID,Dahanukar Anupama12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, University of California , Riverside, CA 92521 , United States

2. Department of Molecular, Cell & Systems Biology, University of California , Riverside, CA 92521 , United States

Abstract

Abstract High concentrations of dietary salt are harmful to health. Like most animals, Drosophila melanogaster are attracted to foods that have low concentrations of salt, but show strong taste avoidance of high salt foods. Salt in known on multiple classes of taste neurons, activating Gr64f sweet-sensing neurons that drive food acceptance and 2 others (Gr66a bitter and Ppk23 high salt) that drive food rejection. Here we find that NaCl elicits a bimodal dose-dependent response in Gr64f taste neurons, which show high activity with low salt and depressed activity with high salt. High salt also inhibits the sugar response of Gr64f neurons, and this action is independent of the neuron’s taste response to salt. Consistent with the electrophysiological analysis, feeding suppression in the presence of salt correlates with inhibition of Gr64f neuron activity, and remains if high salt taste neurons are genetically silenced. Other salts such as Na2SO4, KCl, MgSO4, CaCl2, and FeCl3 act on sugar response and feeding behavior in the same way. A comparison of the effects of various salts suggests that inhibition is dictated by the cationic moiety rather than the anionic component of the salt. Notably, high salt-dependent inhibition is not observed in Gr66a neurons—response to a canonical bitter tastant, denatonium, is not altered by high salt. Overall, this study characterizes a mechanism in appetitive Gr64f neurons that can deter ingestion of potentially harmful salts.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

United States Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

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