An amino-acid taste receptor
Top Cited Papers
- 24 February 2002
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 416 (6877), 199-202
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature726
Abstract
The sense of taste provides animals with valuable information about the nature and quality of food. Mammals can recognize and respond to a diverse repertoire of chemical entities, including sugars, salts, acids and a wide range of toxic substances. Several amino acids taste sweet or delicious (umami) to humans, and are attractive to rodents and other animals. This is noteworthy because L-amino acids function as the building blocks of proteins, as biosynthetic precursors of many biologically relevant small molecules, and as metabolic fuel. Thus, having a taste pathway dedicated to their detection probably had significant evolutionary implications. Here we identify and characterize a mammalian amino-acid taste receptor. This receptor, T1R1+3, is a heteromer of the taste-specific T1R1 and T1R3 G-protein-coupled receptors. We demonstrate that T1R1 and T1R3 combine to function as a broadly tuned L-amino-acid sensor responding to most of the 20 standard amino acids, but not to their D-enantiomers or other compounds. We also show that sequence differences in T1R receptors within and between species (human and mouse) can significantly influence the selectivity and specificity of taste responses.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mammalian Sweet Taste ReceptorsCell, 2001
- Molecular Genetic Identification of a Candidate Receptor Gene for Sweet TasteBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2001
- Putative Mammalian Taste ReceptorsCell, 1999
- Expression cloning of GABAB receptors uncovers similarity to metabotropic glutamate receptorsNature, 1997
- Gα15 and Gα16 Couple a Wide Variety of Receptors to Phospholipase CPublished by Elsevier ,1995
- Molecular Diversity of Glutamate Receptors and Implications for Brain FunctionScience, 1992
- The genetics of tasting in mice: VI. Saccharin, acesulfame, dulcin and sucroseGenetics Research, 1989
- Synergistic effects of 5′-nucleotides on rat taste responses to various amino acidsBrain Research, 1986
- Measurement of cytosolic free Ca2+ in individual small cells using fluorescence microscopy with dual excitation wavelengthsCell Calcium, 1985
- Gustatory effectiveness of amino acids in mice: Behavioral and neurophysiological studiesPhysiology & Behavior, 1985