Addition of Low Sodium Does Not Increase Sensitivity to Glucose in Wild-Type Mice, or Lead to Partial Glucose Taste Detection in T1R3 Knock-Out Mice

Physiology & Behavior(2024)

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摘要
The sodium glucose cotransporter 1 (SGLT1) has been proposed as a non-T1R glucosensor contributing to glucose taste. Studies have shown that the addition of NaCl at very weak concentrations to a glucose stimulus can enhance signaling in the gustatory nerves of mice and significantly lower glucose detection thresholds in humans. Here, we trained mice with (wild-type; WT) and without (knockout; KO) a functioning T1R3 subunit on a two-response operant detection task to differentially respond to the presence or absence of a taste stimulus immediately after sampling. After extensive training (∼40 sessions), KO mice were unable to reliably discriminate 2M glucose+0.01M NaCl from 0.01M NaCl alone, but all WT mice could. We then tested WT mice on a descending array of glucose concentrations (2.0–0.03M) with the addition of 0.01M NaCl vs. 0.01M NaCl alone. The concentration series was then repeated with glucose alone vs. water. We found no psychophysical evidence of a non-T1R taste transduction pathway involved in the detection of glucose. The addition of NaCl to glucose did not lower taste detection thresholds in WT mice, nor did it render the stimulus detectable to KO mice, even at 2M. The proposed pathway must contribute to functions other than sensory-discriminative detection, at least when tested under these conditions. Detection thresholds were also derived for fructose and found to be 1/3 log10 lower than for glucose, but highly correlated (r=0.88) between the two sugars, suggesting that sensitivity to these stimuli in this task was based on a similar neural process.
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关键词
SGLT1,T1R3,taste psychophysics,gustatory,salt,sugar
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