Chapter 8 - Chemical Senses Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 steps common to all 5 senses?

A
  • physical stimulus (light, sound, …)
  • Set of events by which the stimulus is transduced into a set of nerve impulses
  • A response to the message, often in the perception or conscious experience of sensations
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2
Q

What are the three components of flavor?

A

Taste + olfaction + somatosensory

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3
Q

Where can taste receptors be found?

A

Palate, pharynx, epiglottis, tongue

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4
Q

What do taste cells do?

A

They transduce sensory stimuli into signals that are sent to the brain via the gustatory nerves

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5
Q

Are taste cells neurons? Can they generate AP?

A

They are not neurons but some can have Na+ channels that can generate AP

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6
Q

Explain what each cell type does

A

Type 1 cell: glial-like support cells

Type 2: “receptor cells”: express metabotropic receptors for sweet, bitter and umami. Cells tend to be narrowly tuned to a single taste quality

Type 3: “presynaptic cells” express receptors for sour and salty. An average type 3 cell responds to ~3 taste qualities

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7
Q

What do type 2 cells use to transduce chemical tastants?

A

G-protein coupled receptors

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8
Q

How do type 2 cells fire AP? Keywords

A
  • gustducin
  • Ca dependent cation channel
  • voltage gated Na channels
  • use of ATP as a transmitter
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9
Q

How does the transduction mechanism for salty tastants work?

A

See photo album

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10
Q

How does the transduction mechanism for sour tastants work?

A

See album

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11
Q

Why can we say that type 3 cells respond to multiple taste qualities?

A

Type 2 cells release ATP. This can activate neighboring presynaptic cells.

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12
Q

Define the structure of a taste bud

A

A collective unit involving extensive cell-to-cell interactions

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13
Q

What is population coding?

A

Different tastes have different spatial and temporal patterns of activation in cortex, and this is presumed to be the neural “fingerprint” of the taste.

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14
Q

How does the odorant depolarize the olfactory cell?

A

See pic album

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15
Q

Cells expressing a given gene go to how many glomeruli in each bulb?

A

2

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16
Q

What does the olfactory map enable?

A
  • maximizes sensitivity to low concentrations of odorant

- important for stimulation of odor memories

17
Q

What are the two central olfactory pathways?

A
  • second-order neurons project to piriform cortex (1o olfactory cortex) in the olfactory tract. From there information is sent to other temporal lobe structures which mediate emotion, motivation, memory effects of odors
  • Second order neurons project to olfactory tubercle to MD thalamus to-> orbitofrontal neocortex
    Conscious perceptions of smell, odor discrimination
18
Q

What are the receptors for:

  • sweet quality
  • umami
  • bitter
A

Sweet: T1R2 + T1R3
Umami: T1R1 + T1R3
Bitter: T2Rs