Responses of the hamster chorda tympani nerve to binary component taste stimuli: evidence for peripheral gustatory mixture interactions |
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Authors: | Bradley K Formaker Marion E Frank |
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Abstract: | Studies of taste mixtures suggest that stimuli which elicit different perceptual taste qualities physiologically interact in the gustatory system and thus. are not independently processed. The present study addressed the role of the peripheral gustatory system in these physiological interactions by measuring the effects of three heterogeneous taste mixtures on responses of the chorda tympani (CT) nerve in the hamster ( Mesocricetus auratus). Binary taste stimuli were presented to the anterior tongue and multi-fiber neural responses were recorded from the whole CT. Stimuli consisted of a concentration series of quinine. HCI (QHCI: 1–30 mM), sodium chloride (NaCl: 10–250 mM). sucrose (50–500 mM) and binary combinations of the three different chemicals. Each mixture produced a unique pattern of results on CT response magnitudes measured 10 s into the response. Sucrose responses were inhibited by quinine in QHCI-sucrose mixtures. Neural activity did not increase when quinine was added to 50–250 mM NaCl in QHCINaCl mixtures. However, the neural activity elicited by sucrose-NaCl mixtures was greater than the activity elicited by either component stimulus presented alone. The results demonstrate that gustatory mixture interactions are initiated at the level of the taste bud or peripheral nerve. Mechanisms for these interactions are unknown. The results are consistent with one component stimulus modifying the interaction of the other component stimulus with its respective transduction mechanism. Alternatively, peripheral inhibitory mechanisms may come into play when appetitive and aversive stimuli are simultaneously presented to the taste receptors. |
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Keywords: | Taste Mixture: Chorda tympani Hamster Quinine Sucrose |
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