Physiology Of Taste Flashcards
(26 cards)
What is the pathway of taste?
As through the thalamus before they project to their relevant cortical area
Taste afferents from the midbrain are involved in visceral reflexes (e.g. secretion of gastric juices)
What 2 sensations?
Chemosensory and somatosensory
What are the 5 taste sensations?
Umami
Sweet
Sour
Bitter
Salty
How are sourness and saltiness detected?
Sodium ions and hydrogen ions across a membrane
What does transduction of wetness and bitterness involve?
2nd messengers
What is umami associated with?
Glutamate
Where are the receptors for umami taste?
Back of the pharynx
What nerves are involved in taste?
Primary sensory jnpit to the cortex travels via the
facial (frontal of tongue),
Glossopharyngeal (back of tongue) and
vagus (soft palate and mouth)
Where does the taste/food go?
Taste pore
Wheat happens when the taste sensory cells are depolarised?
Transmit AP and taste sensed
What are papillae in order?
Circumvallate
Folliate
Fungiform
How is taste sensed? (Pathway)
Action potentials to the gustatory cortex
What papillae is shown?
Circumvallate
What receptor senses sweet?
T1R family
What receptor senses bitterness?
T2R family
What receptor senses glutamate?
t-mGluR4
What receptor senses sodium salt?
What receptors are 7 pass transmembrane receptors?
Why is there variability in taste between individuals?
There are variable amino acids between membrane of R families
What is the taster mouse?
Amino acids exchanged so the mouse cannot taste sweet taste
How can a sweet receptor bind to different sweet ligands?
Dimerisation of receptors
What does depolarisation cause?
Increase Ca2+ into the cell and NTrelease
What type of receptor do. Utter and sweet ligands use?
GPCR in membranes
Describe the pathway of sweet ligands on GPCR
Sweet ligands, gustducin, activates a cAMP second messenger that closes K+ channels and depolarise the cell
And increase Ca2+ and neurotransmission