The Chemical Senses Flashcards

1
Q

What do chemoreceptors in the arteries of the neck measure?

A

CO2/O2 levels in our blood

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2
Q

What do nerve endings in skin/mucus membranes warn us of?

A

Chemical irritants

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3
Q

What do sensory nerve endings in muscle respond to?

A

Acidity

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4
Q

What are the innate taste preferences?

A

We enjoy sweet and avoid bitter flavours

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5
Q

What does gustation mean?

A

Taste

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6
Q

What are the 5 basic tastes?

A

Salt, sweet, sour, bitter and umami

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7
Q

What (apart from taste) plays an important role in flavour perception?

A

Touch, texture, smell and temperature

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8
Q

What are the organs of taste?

A

Tongue, palate, epiglottis, pharynx and nasal cavity

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9
Q

What does the palate and epiglottis contain that enables them to be an organ of taste?

A

Taste buds

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10
Q

How are the pharynx and nasal cavity involved in taste?

A

Odours can pass via the pharynx to the nasal cavity and are detected by the olfactory receptors

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11
Q

How many taste receptor cells do each taste bud contain?

A

50-150

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12
Q

What are taste pores?

A

The chemically receptive end of the taste cell

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13
Q

What are taste buds surrounded by?

A

Basal cells (taste cell precursors) and gustatory afferent axons

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14
Q

How do taste receptor cells transmit gustatory information?

A

Form synapses with gustatory afferent axons

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15
Q

What are the two mechanisms of taste transduction and which tastes work by what?

A

Ion channel mechanisms (salt, sour)

GPCR via T1 and T2 taste receptors (bitter, sweet and umami)

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16
Q

What is the salt taste mainly derived from?

A

Sodium

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17
Q

How does sodium cause a salty taste?

A

Ions pass through the Na+ selective channels down the conc gradients
This depolarises the taste cell, activating voltage gated calcium channels
Causes the vesicular release of neurotransmitter, activating gustatory afferents

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18
Q

What do high concentrations of salt activate?

A

Bitter and sour taste cells

19
Q

What are the determinants of acidity and sourness?

A

Protons

20
Q

How do we taste sourness?

A

Protons pass through the channels, bind to and block potassium selective channels. This leads to depolarisation of the taste cell, activating voltage gated sodium and calcium channels to open

21
Q

What are bitter substances detected by?

A

25 T2Rs

22
Q

What are sweet substances detected by?

A

T1R2 and T1R3 proteins

23
Q

What are umami substances detected by?

A

T1R1 and T1R3 proteins

24
Q

What is the T2R coupled to?

A

Gq pathway

25
Q

What does the Gq pathway do?

A

Stimulates the enzyme phospholipase C, which leads to the production of IP3
IP3 activates a special type of sodium ion channel and releases calcium from intracellular storage sites

26
Q

Why don’t we confuse bitter, umami and sweet tastes?

A

Taste cells express either bitter, umami or sweet receptors not both

27
Q

What pathway does taste information take to the brain?

A

Taste cells -> gustatory axons -> gustatory nucleus -> ventral posterior medial nucleus -> gustatory cortex

28
Q

Where is the gustatory nucleus found?

A

Medulla

29
Q

Where is the ventral posterior medial nucleus found?

A

Thalamus

30
Q

What three cranial nerves carry gustatory axons to the brain?

A

VII (facial), IX (glossopharyngeal) and X (vagus)

31
Q

What are pheromones?

A

Olfactory stimuli used for chemical communication between individuals

32
Q

What are pheromones important for (in animals)?

A

Reproductive behaviours, marking territory and indicating aggression or submission

33
Q

What is the olfactory epithelium?

A

Small sheets of cells high up in the nasal cavity

34
Q

What are the three main cell types in the olfactory epithelium?

A

olfactory receptor cells, supporting cells, basal cells

35
Q

What do the olfactory receptor cells do?

A

Transduction

36
Q

What do supporting cells do in the olfactory epithelium?

A

Function to produce mucus, because odorants dissolve in mucus layer before contacting the cilia of olfactory receptor cells

37
Q

What are basal cells?

A

Immature olfactory receptor cells that are able to differentiate into mature olfactory receptor cells

38
Q

What are the olfactory transduction mechanisms?

A

Odorant molecules bind to odorant receptor proteins in the cilia, which activates an olfactory specific G protein.
Adenylyl cyclase activate increases cAMP formation, which allows sodium and calcium influx

39
Q

What do odorants generate in the cilia?

A

Slow receptor potential

40
Q

Which parts of the brain deal with olfaction?

A

Frontal cortex, hypothalamus and amygdala and hippocampus

41
Q

What part of olfaction does the frontal cortex control?

A

Conscious perception of smell

42
Q

What part of olfaction do the hypothalamus and amygdala control?

A

Motivational and emotional

43
Q

What part of olfaction does the hippocampus control?

A

Odour memory

44
Q

What is population coding?

A

The responses of a large number of broadly tuned neurones are used to specify the properties of a particular stimulus