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Volume 17, Number 24, Issue of December 15, 1997 pp. 9634-9641

Development of Membrane Properties in Taste Cells of Fungiform Papillae: Functional Evidence for Early Presence of Amiloride-Sensitive Sodium Channels

Received Aug. 12, 1997; revised Sept. 26, 1997; accepted Sept. 30, 1997.

A. H. Kossel, M. McPheeters, W. Lin, and S. C. Kinnamon

Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80521, and Rocky Mountain Taste and Smell Center, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado 80262

Behavioral and physiological studies have demonstrated a reduced sensitivity to several taste stimuli early in development. It has been suggested that this reduced sensitivity results from a late maturation of underlying transduction mechanisms. Little is known, however, about maturation of membrane properties of taste cells early in development. We have obtained whole-cell recordings from single fungiform taste cells of rat pups to examine the development of the NaCl transduction system. Although taste buds undergo a considerable increase in size during development, membrane capacitance measurements revealed no change in membrane surface area of individual taste cells, suggesting that the increase in size results from an increase in the total number of cells per bud. Whole-cell recordings showed that taste cells from very young pups [postnatal day 2 (PND2)] already possessed voltage-activated Na+ and K+ currents with no apparent differences in size or kinetics compared with adults. Surprisingly, amiloride-sensitive Na+ responses, important for Na+ transduction, were found as early as PND2. The magnitude of responses to amiloride and the percentage of amiloride-sensitive cells remained the same throughout all age groups. Furthermore, the similarity of amiloride inhibition constants suggested that the channel in neonates is the same channel that is expressed in adult taste buds. Our results indicate that taste cells at PND2 already have acquired the transduction elements necessary for signaling NaCl responses to the afferent nerve. We hypothesize that complete functionality of the salt taste transduction system, however, may not be reached until amiloride-sensitive Na+ channels become selectively localized at the apical membrane. This would explain previous studies indicating that amiloride sensitivity cannot be detected before PND12 in the intact tongue. Apical clustering of channels along with the opening of the taste pore and an increase in the total number of taste cells per bud likely constitute additional important steps toward a fully functional sensory system.

Key words: development; membrane properties; whole-cell recording; fungiform taste receptor cells; amiloride-sensitive sodium channels; taste pore




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