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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 1, 1998, 18(11):4353-4362
Behavioral Discrimination between Quinine and KCl Is Dependent on
Input from the Seventh Cranial Nerve: Implications for the Functional
Roles of the Gustatory Nerves in Rats
Steven J.
St. John and
Alan C.
Spector
Department of Psychology, University of Florida, Gainesville,
Florida 32611
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ABSTRACT |
The rat glossopharyngeal nerve (GL), which innervates posterior
tongue taste buds, contains several physiologically defined taste fiber
types; at least one type is primarily responsive to certain alkaloids
(such as quinine), and another is primarily responsive to acids and
salts. In contrast, the chorda tympani (CT), which innervates anterior
tongue taste buds, does not appear to contain fibers that
differentially respond to quinine relative to salts and acids. It was
therefore predicted that GL transection should disrupt behavioral
discriminations between quinine and either acids or salts.
Water-restricted rats were trained to press one of two levers if a
sampled taste stimulus was quinine (0.1-1.0 mM) and the
second lever if the sampled stimulus was KCl (0.1-1.0 M).
Sham surgery, GL transection, and sublingual and submaxillary salivary
gland extirpation were found to have no effect relative to presurgical
performance. Both CT transection and combined GL and CT transection
caused a substantial and approximately equal decrement in
discrimination performance. Removal of the gustatory branches of the
seventh cranial nerve [CT and greater superficial petrosal (GSP)]
nearly eliminated the discrimination of the taste stimuli, and combined
transection of the CT, GL, and GSP unequivocally reduced performance to
chance levels. Although these findings were not presaged by the known
electrophysiology, they nonetheless compare favorably with other
studies reporting little effect of GL transection on behavioral
responses to quinine. These results, in the context of other
discrimination studies reported in the literature, suggest that, in
rats, the neural coding of taste quality depends primarily on the input
of the facial nerve.
Key words:
taste; chorda tympani nerve; glossopharyngeal nerve; greater superficial petrosal nerve; neural coding; animal
psychophysics; quinine; KCl; nerve transection
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INTRODUCTION |
Taste buds in the rat are innervated
by four branches of three cranial nerves. Although all of these
branches respond to all of the classes of prototypical taste compounds,
they are differentially sensitive to these sapid stimuli. The chorda
tympani (CT) branch of the seventh nerve, which innervates tastes buds
on the anterior tongue, is noted for its sensitivity to sodium salts
and acids, whereas this nerve responds poorly to sugars and alkaloids
(Pfaffmann, 1955 ; Frank et al., 1983 ; Boudreau et al., 1985 ; Nejad,
1986 ; Dahl et al., 1997 ; Harada et al., 1997 ). The greater superficial petrosal branch of the seventh nerve (GSP), which innervates palatal taste buds, responds strongly to sugars but modestly to alkaloids (such
as quinine) and salts (Nejad, 1986 ; Nejad and Beidler, 1987 ; Harada et
al., 1997 ; Sollars and Hill, 1997 ). The lingual-tonsilar branch
of the ninth nerve (GL) innervates the remaining lingual taste buds.
Relative to the branches of the facial nerve, the GL has the strongest
response to quinine, responds as well to acids, and has a somewhat
weaker response to salts and sugars (Yamada, 1966 ; Oakley, 1967 ;
Boudreau et al., 1987 ; Frank, 1991 ; Dahl et al., 1997 ). Only sparse
data are available on the chemoresponsiveness of the superior laryngeal
branch of the 10th nerve in the rat (Andrew, 1956 ; Shingai, 1980 ),
which innervates a few taste buds in the laryngeal epithelium (Miller,
1977 ; Travers and Nicklas, 1990 ). On the whole, based on behavioral and
electrophysiological data in rodents and sheep, as well as the
anatomical position of its receptor field, this nerve has been
hypothesized to play no major role in taste quality coding (Dickman and
Smith, 1988 ; Smith and Hanamori, 1991 ; St. John et al., 1994 ; Spector
et al., 1996b ).
As might be expected from these electrophysiological observations,
transection of the CT severely disrupts the behavioral discrimination
of NaCl from water and other salt stimuli in rats (Spector et al.,
1990b ; Spector and Grill, 1992 ; Breslin et al., 1993 ). Surprisingly,
however, GL transection has no effect on a variety of taste-guided
behavioral responses to quinine. For example, GL transection has been
found to have no effect on quinine avoidance in two-bottle preference
tests (Akaike et al., 1965 ; Grill et al., 1992 ), lick rate of
water-deprived rats to quinine in brief access tests (Yamamoto and
Asai, 1986 ; St. John et al., 1994 ), and quinine detection thresholds
assessed by a conditioned shock avoidance procedure (St. John and
Spector, 1996 ). The failure of GL transection to compromise the
behavioral expression of quinine responsiveness in these tasks is
puzzling in light of the pronounced sensitivity of the ninth nerve to
this alkaloid, as assessed electrophysiologically (Yamada, 1966 ;
Boudreau et al., 1987 ; Frank, 1991 ). How is it possible that
transection of a nerve that innervates >60% of all rat taste buds
(Miller, 1977 ) and that is vigorously stimulated by quinine does not
affect these taste-guided responses to this stimulus? One possible
resolution of this paradox was suggested by St. John and Spector
(1996) , who noted that previous studies on behavioral responses to
quinine merely required the rat to discriminate quinine from water.
Although the quinine sensitivity of the GSP and CT is not remarkable,
these nerves do, nonetheless, respond to quinine in a
concentration-dependent manner and thus may be sufficient to maintain
behaviors that do not require high resolution processing.
A more definitive and rigorous test of the GL contribution to the
neural code representing quinine would involve a task that required the
discrimination of quinine from other taste stimuli. We therefore
examined the performance of rats operantly trained to discriminate
quinine from KCl, a salt that tastes salty-bitter to humans (van der
Klaauw and Smith, 1995 ). This stimulus pair was chosen because single
fibers in the CT do not appear to respond differentially to quinine and
KCl, whereas GL fibers do (Ogawa et al., 1968 ; Boudreau et al., 1983 ,
1987 ; Frank et al., 1983 ; Frank, 1991 ). Thus, we hypothesized that the
GL would be critical in the behavioral discrimination between these
stimuli, whereas the CT would not.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects
Forty naive, male, Sprague Dawley rats (Charles River
Laboratories, Wilmington, MA) that weighed 259-314 gm at the start of the experiment served as subjects. Two squads of 20 rats each were
tested (see Surgery). The rats were housed individually in hanging,
wire mesh cages in a room where temperature, humidity, and lighting
(lights on from 6:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.) were automatically controlled.
All manipulations were performed during the lights on phase. The rats
always had access to Purina Chow (5001; Ralston-Purina, St. Louis, MO)
while in the home cage. Distilled water was also available but was
removed ~24 hr before the first behavioral test session of the week
and was replaced at the completion of the final session. In most cases,
behavioral testing took place 5 d/week and the rats had ad
libitum access to distilled water on the weekend (i.e., for 48 hr
after last session).
Apparatus
The design of the apparatus was modified from the gustometer of
Spector et al. (1990a) . This apparatus was essentially an operant
chamber housed inside a sound attenuation enclosure. The operant
chamber contained two levers equidistant (80 mm) from a narrow aperture
through which the rat could lick one of two drinking spouts. The sample
spout delivered 5 µl of a taste stimulus (quinine hydrochloride, KCl,
or distilled water) per lick. The reinforcement spout delivered
distilled water at the same rate. Either spout could be positioned
opposite the aperture and was computer-controlled via a stepping motor.
Between taste trials, the sample spout was moved over a drainage
funnel, rinsed with distilled water, and blown dry with pressurized
air. The chamber also contained a speaker that provided white noise
during behavioral sessions. The house lights and two glass-covered cue
lights (each located 50 mm above one lever) were illuminated at various
phases of a taste trial.
Trial structure
The two-lever discrimination paradigm was modeled from earlier
work by Morrison (1967) . The trial structure was essentially the same
as used in a previous taste discrimination study except for the stimuli
used (St. John et al., 1997b ). Basically, rats were trained to press
one of the two levers if the sampled stimulus was quinine and the other
lever if the sampled stimulus was KCl (Fig.
1). The appropriate lever (left or right)
for quinine and KCl was counterbalanced across rats, but was held
constant for a given rat throughout the experiment. During a behavioral
session, stimuli were delivered in discrete trials that were initiated when the rat made two licks on the dry sample spout. Briefly, the rat
was allowed 10 licks (or 3 sec of licking after the second lick,
whichever came first) of quinine (0.1, 0.3, or 1.0 mM) or KCl (0.1, 0.3, or 1.0 M). The spout was then withdrawn from
the stimulus-access aperture, and a lever press was required. After a
correct lever press, the reinforcement phase of the trial began, consisting of 40 licks from, or 10 sec access to, the reinforcement spout, whichever came first. After an incorrect response or the absence
of a response 5 sec after the sample spout was withdrawn, a time-out
period began during which the chamber remained dark and the spouts were
removed from the stimulus-access aperture. During the training phase,
the duration of the time-out period was systematically increased over
sessions from 0 to 30 sec. All contingencies took effect immediately
after a lever press or the end of the 5 sec period. At the end of the
time-out punishment or reinforcement period, a 10 sec intertrial
interval was initiated, and the sample spout was cleaned as described
previously. Rats typically took >60 trials per 40 min behavioral
session.

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Figure 1.
Flow chart of the trial structure. After 10 licks
or 3 sec access to either quinine or KCl (SAMPLING
PHASE), the sample spout was removed, and the rat was required
to press one of two levers (DECISION PHASE). A correct
lever press (e.g., the left-hand lever when KCl was sampled) produced
the reinforcement spout (REINFORCEMENT), which
was present for 40 licks or 10 sec access to distilled water. An
incorrect press, or lack of a response for 5 sec, resulted in a 30 sec
time-out (TIME OUT). In either event, the trial
ended with a 10 sec interval during which the sample spout was rinsed
with water (INTERTRIAL INTERVAL).
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Training procedure
The only notable differences in the training procedure used in
this study compared with the previously published study (St. John et
al., 1997b ) were the stimuli used and the number of sessions during
each phase of training. During training, some of the parameters of the
trial structure were relaxed, such as the 5 sec period allowed for a
lever press. For a more detailed explanation of the training phases,
see St. John et al. (1997b) .
Responses were initially shaped for one concentration of one of the two
stimuli (0.1 M KCl or 0.1 mM quinine). An
experimenter observed the shaping sessions through a one-way mirror in
the sound attenuation chamber and controlled reinforcement delivery remotely. The behavior of pressing the lever appropriate to the first
stimulus was shaped by the reinforcement of successive approximations. Once all rats were performing appropriately, sessions included only the
one concentration of the other stimulus and responses on the second
lever were shaped. Two rats (one in each squad) did not learn to press
the levers reliably and were removed from the experiment.
In the next phase of training, both 0.1 M KCl and 0.1 mM quinine were included in the stimulus array, and the
stimuli were delivered in alternation such that the rat was required to
make a fixed number of correct responses on one lever before receiving a block of trials with the second stimulus. The purpose of these sessions was to ensure that responses on both levers were reinforced within a single behavioral session.
For the remainder of training, solutions were delivered in randomized
blocks. At first, the stimulus array included only the training
concentrations but eventually included all three concentrations of each
stimulus (0.1, 0.3, and 1.0 mM quinine hydrochloride; Sigma, St. Louis, MO; 0.1, 0.3, and 1 M KCl, Fisher
Scientific, Houston, TX). It was important to use a range of
concentrations for each stimulus so that responses could not reliably
be reinforced merely on the basis of perceived intensity. Although we
cannot be absolutely certain that these concentrations overlapped in perceived intensity, it seems unlikely that the broad ranges chosen did
not at least partly overlap on the basis of other behavioral studies
measuring avoidance behavior or detection thresholds of quinine and KCl
(St. John et al., 1994 ; St. John and Spector, 1996 ; Geran et al.,
1997 ). The high quinine concentration and the two lower KCl
concentrations approximate those used in electrophysiological studies
(Boudreau et al., 1987 ; Frank, 1991 ).
Testing
The presurgical assessment of taste discriminability occurred in
five daily sessions that were identical to the final training sessions.
The 5 d postsurgical assessment was begun after a surgical recovery period (see Postsurgical treatment). On the day after the
final postsurgical test session, the rats were given a "water test"
in which all six stimuli were replaced with distilled water; half were
assigned as left-lever appropriate and half as right-lever appropriate.
The water test was conducted to determine whether rats required a
chemical cue to respond at better than chance levels in this paradigm.
After the water test, sham rats were given five "retraining"
sessions that were identical to the postsurgical behavioral sessions to
return the rats to asymptotic performance levels. The rats were then
given a 5 d test with a modified stimulus array; the high
concentration of each stimulus was replaced with distilled water. Thus,
one water stimulus was reinforced as if it were quinine, and the other
was reinforced as if it were KCl. The stimulus array thus modeled the
hypothetical case that a nerve section rendered the lowest of the three
concentrations of each stimulus tasteless and reduced the perceived
intensity of the higher concentrations.
The rats were tested in two separate squads. Presurgical and
postsurgical testing was identical for both squads, and there were only
minor differences in the training phases (some phases ended in fewer
sessions for one squad compared with another). The greatest difference
between the squads was in their treatment during the surgical recovery
period, as noted below. It is important to note that both squads
included subjects from the sham control group (squad 1, n = 4; squad 2, n = 3).
Surgery
All rats received a prophylactic dose of penicillin the day
before (squad 1) or the day of (squad 2) surgery (30,000 U, s.c.) and
were anesthetized intramuscularly with a mixture of ketamine hydrochloride (125 mg/kg of body weight) and xylazine hydrochloride (5 mg/kg of body weight). All nerve transections were performed bilaterally.
Squad 1. Five rats received CT transection (CTX). The
auditory meatus was widened with five blunted and curved hypodermic needles. The tympanic membrane and ossicles were removed, and the CT
was avulsed with number 7 microforceps.
Five rats had the GL transected alone (GLX), and five rats had the GL
transected along with the CT (GLX + CTX). To transect the GL, an
incision was made in the skin of the ventral neck, and the sublingual
and submaxillary glands, the sternohyoid, omohyoid, and digastric
muscles were retracted to expose the GL. A large section of the nerve
(5-10 mm) was removed, and the wound was closed with a nylon
suture.
Finally, four rats received sham surgery, in which the tympanic
membrane was punctured, and the GL was exposed but not manipulated.
Squad 2. Five rats had the GSP avulsed in addition to the CT
(7TH), which removed the combined gustatory input of the facial nerve,
and six rats had the GL sectioned along with the GSP and CT (TRIPLE).
Transection of the GSP involved an incision around the dorsal side of
the pinna, which was then retracted. The auditory meatus was cut and
widened by careful dissection of the fascia and retraction of the
surrounding musculature. The bony meatus was enlarged with a pneumatic
dental drill. The tympanic membrane, ossicles, and CT were removed. The
tensor tympani and a small piece of temporal bone were removed,
exposing the GSP, which was avulsed with microforceps. The incision was
closed with wound clips.
Five rats were partially desalivated (DSAL). An incision was made in
the ventral neck, and fascia was dissected to expose the sublingual and
submaxillary salivary glands. The duct was ligated with a 4-0 silk
suture, and the glands were then removed distal to the ligature. The
wound was closed with a nylon suture.
Finally, three rats received sham surgery (CON). The procedure was
basically identical to the sham surgery in squad 1, except that an
incision was made around the dorsal side of the pinna, and the auditory
meatus was retracted before cutting the tympanic membrane.
Postsurgical treatment
Squad 1. The rats in squad 1 were allowed at least
12 d to recover before postsurgical testing. These rats were not
given any special diets during the recovery period.
Squad 2. As in previous studies in which water-restricted,
partially desalivated rats were tested (St. John et al., 1994 , 1997b ),
we gave the rats a moist "corn oil diet" (five parts Purina Chow to
two parts 100% corn oil) (Catalanotto and Sweeney, 1973 ) to facilitate
food intake in the home cage. The corn oil diet was given to all rats
in squad 2 beginning the last 10 sessions of training before surgery
and continuing throughout presurgical testing, postsurgical recovery,
postsurgical testing, and the water test.
In addition, some rats (especially in the 7TH and TRIPLE groups) were
hypophagic and dropped to ~80% of their presurgical body weight
during the first week of recovery. Two palatable diets were introduced
in an effort to stimulate feeding in these rats (Jacquin, 1983 ). First,
wet mash was supplemented with Nutri-Cal (Evsco Pharmaceuticals, Buena,
NJ) for 6 d. Then, for the next 4 d, all rats were given a
palatable liquid diet (354 ml of Borden condensed milk, 354 ml of
distilled water, and 1 ml of multiple vitamins with iron; Poly
Visol, Mead-Johnson). Approximately 50 ml of the milk diet was
available each night.
Histology
Rats were deeply anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital and then
perfused transcardially with saline followed by 10% formalin. Sham
rats were perfused at the conclusion of the additional behavioral testing, whereas the other rats were perfused after the water test. The
tongue, nasoincisal papilla, and soft palate were removed and
post-fixed for at least 1 week in 10% formalin. Because taste buds
degenerate after gustatory nerve transection, inspection of the
appropriate taste bud receptor field allowed confirmation of the
efficacy of nerve transection.
The tongue anterior to the intermolar eminence was soaked in distilled
water for at least 30 min and was then dipped briefly in 0.5%
methylene blue and rinsed with distilled water. The epithelium was
removed and pressed between two glass slides. The number of taste pores
and fungiform papillae were quantified in tissue from all groups except
the GLX. After such staining, taste pores appear as dark blue dots on
the background of pale staining fungiform papillae and reliably
indicate the presence of morphologically intact taste buds (St. John et
al., 1995 ).
The circumvallate papilla was examined in all rats except those in the
CTX and 7TH groups, and both the geschmacksstreifen (a taste bud-rich
stripe of soft palate bordering the hard palate) and nasoincisal
papilla were examined in all rats except those in the CTX, GLX, and GLX + CTX groups. These tissues were embedded in paraffin and cut (10 µm)
on a rotary microtome. Sections were mounted on glass slides and were
stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Taste pores were then visualized
under a light microscope and counted.
Data analysis
The primary dependent measure was the percentage of trials on
which a correct response was made. Because trials in which the rat did
not make a response were discarded, 50% represented chance performance. Group means were analyzed using ANOVAs.
Rats in this experiment received 175-415 trials in which the rat made
a lever press during the 5 d presurgical or postsurgical test. In
the tradition of animal psychophysics, large group sizes were
sacrificed in preference to obtaining a large number of trials for each
individual subject. To capitalize on this feature of the data set,
performance was also analyzed within individual subjects such that each
trial was considered an independent Bernoulli trial resulting in a
correct or incorrect response. The postsurgical percentage correct
across all trials, or as a function of concentration, was compared with
the presurgical percentage correct using the normal approximation to
the binomial distribution (Brown and Hollander, 1977 ).
For all analyses, two-tailed tests were conducted, and the statistical
rejection criterion (i.e., ) was set at p = 0.05.
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RESULTS |
Histology
Examination of oral tissue confirmed the efficacy of all nerve
sections (Table 1). No rat in the CTX,
GLX + CTX, 7TH, or TRIPLE groups had >21 pores in the fungiform
papillae, whereas sham rats always had at least 141. The persistence of
a few taste pores after CT transection is consistent with previous
reports (Whitehead et al., 1987 ; Ganchrow and Ganchrow, 1989 ; St. John et al., 1994 ). Although an occasional taste bud was seen in palatal fields in GSP-sectioned rats, no rat in the 7TH or TRIPLE group had
more than nine buds in the nasoincisal papilla or four buds in the
geschmacksstreifen compared with at least 97 and 93 in control tissue,
respectively. Therefore, it does not appear that any significant
regeneration occurred during the postsurgical recovery and testing
phases of the experiment. Separate one-way ANOVAs confirmed that the
groups differed in the number of taste pores counted in the four
receptor fields analyzed (all p < 0.05), with rats in
the control and DSAL groups always having more taste pores than
experimental rats (Tukey's honestly significant difference test,
p < 0.05). The post hoc test also revealed that
the DSAL group had statistically fewer taste pores in the vallate
papilla and geschmacksstreifen relative to controls
(p < 0.05). Other researchers have shown that
removal of the major salivary glands compromises the integrity of
vallate taste buds (Cano and Rodriguez-Echandia, 1980 ; Nanda and
Catalanotto, 1981 ), but decreases in taste bud number were not
reported. In a previous behavioral experiment with a larger sample
size, we found no effect of desalivation on the number of vallate taste
buds (Markison et al., 1995 ). Therefore, considering the small sample
in this study, as well as the lack of a consistent effect across
studies in vallate taste bud number, we recommend caution in concluding
that desalivation results in a loss of taste buds in these fields. In
any event, both CON and DSAL rats had substantially more taste buds
than rats in the other groups (Table 1).
Quinine-KCl Discrimination Performance
Surprisingly, transection of the GL had no effect on postsurgical
performance, whereas CTX significantly degraded performance on this
task (Fig. 2). Combined transection of
the GL and CT (GLX+CTX) appeared to have the same
effect on performance as CTX alone, whereas combined facial nerve
transection (7TH) had a statistically more pronounced
effect than CTX alone. Finally, combined transection of the GSP, CT,
and GL (TRIPLE) reduced postsurgical performance to 50%, a
result consistent with the conclusion that these rats could not
discriminate quinine from KCl. Matched t tests for each group (presurgical vs postsurgical percentage correct) revealed statistically significant decreases in performance in the CTX, GLX + CTX, 7TH, and TRIPLE groups (all p < 0.05). Separate
one-sample t tests indicated that the postsurgical
percentage correct in all groups differed from chance (50%) with one
exception: there was not evidence to conclude that the postsurgical
performance of the TRIPLE group was different from 50%.

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Figure 2.
Mean + SE percentage correct before
(filled bars) and after (hatched
bars) sham surgery (CON),
glossopharyngeal transection (GLX), removal of
the sublingual and submaxillary salivary glands (DSAL),
chorda tympani transection (CTX), combined GLX + CTX (GLX+CTX), combined CTX and transection of
the greater superficial petrosal (7TH), and
combined 7TH and GLX (TRIPLE). Because only trials on
which a lever press was made were included, 50% represents chance
responding (solid line). Asterisks
indicate a significant difference from presurgical percent correct
(matched t test, p < 0.05);
pound sign indicates statistically indistinguishable
from chance (Student's t test vs 50%,
p > 0.05).
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Additionally, a one-way ANOVA on the postsurgical percentage correct
revealed a significant main effect of surgical group (F(6,31) = 47.1; p < 0.0001).
Post hoc analysis with Tukey's honestly significant
difference test, with the statistical rejection criterion set at the
0.05 level, revealed three clusters of groups: the sham, GLX, and DSAL
groups formed one cluster; the CTX and GLX + CTX groups formed a
second; and the 7TH and TRIPLE groups formed a third cluster. The
groups within these statistically defined clusters did not differ from
one another but did differ from all groups in the other clusters.
When each rat was treated as a separate experiment, the same
conclusions could be drawn. These results are shown in Figures 3-5.
Although two rats in the control group had significantly lower postsurgical performance (Fig. 3, rats 14 and 35), the magnitude of
those differences were relatively small. Likewise, rat 30 in the DSAL
group had a slight decrease in postsurgical performance after surgery
(Fig. 4). Another rat in that group, however, showed a more substantial
decrease in postsurgical performance that appears to be atypical
compared with the other subjects in the DSAL group (rat 27). Note that
no rat in the GLX group showed any evidence of decreased performance
after neurotomy (Fig. 3).

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Figure 3.
Percentage correct before (filled
bars) and after (hatched bars) surgery for each
rat in the CONTROL (left panel)
and glossopharyngeal transection (GLX; right
panel) groups. Because only trials on which a lever
press was made were included, 50% represents chance responding
(solid line). Asterisks indicate a
significant difference from presurgical percent correct (normal
approximation to the binomial distribution, p < 0.05).
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Figure 4.
Percentage correct before (filled
bars) and after (hatched bars) surgery for each
rat in the partially desalivated (DSAL, left
panel), chorda tympani transected (CTX, center
panel) and combined CTX and glossopharyngeal
transection (GLX+CTX, right panel) groups.
Because only trials on which a lever press was made were included, 50%
represents chance responding (solid line).
Asterisks indicate a significant difference from
presurgical percent correct (normal approximation to the binomial
distribution, p < 0.05).
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Figure 5.
Percentage correct before (filled
bars) and after (hatched bars) surgery for each
rat in the combined greater superficial petrosal and chorda tympani
transected (7TH, left panel) and combined 7TH and
glossopharyngeal transection (TRIPLE) groups. Because
only trials on which a lever press was made were included, 50%
represents chance responding (solid line).
Asterisks indicate a significant difference from
presurgical percent correct (normal approximation to the binomial
distribution, p < 0.05); pound
signs indicate indistinguishable from chance
(p > 0.05, postsurgical percent correct vs
50%).
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Every single rat in the CTX and GLX + CTX groups demonstrated a
statistically significant deficit after neurotomy (Fig. 4), and the
decrease in percentage correct was substantial in each rat. Even more
pronounced decreases were seen in rats in the 7TH and TRIPLE groups
(Fig. 5). No rat in the TRIPLE group performed at >50.8% correct
after neurotomy; in this task, rats would be expected to do no <50%
because random lever pressing would still result in a correct choice on
half of the trials. Indeed, there was not statistical evidence to
reject the null hypothesis that any rat in the TRIPLE group (as well as
rats 24 and 37 in the 7TH group) performed different from 50% after
surgery.
It should be noted that, across rats, there did not seem to be
systematically greater deficits in responding to one of the taste
stimuli relative to the other (data not shown). In a previous discrimination experiment, we found that high doses of amiloride (>10
µM) added to NaCl and KCl test stimuli (0.05-0.2
M) severely impaired the ability of rats to discriminate
these two salts (Spector et al., 1996a ). Interestingly, rats routinely
pressed the lever associated with KCl regardless of whether the
stimulus was NaCl or KCl adulterated with amiloride. We concluded that
amiloride was predominantly affecting the taste quality of NaCl. In the current study, however, the effective nerve transections did not systematically disrupt responding to one stimulus over the other, so it
is not possible to conclude that the taste quality of quinine or KCl
was preferentially altered.
Water test
During the water test, the rats averaged 48.3% ± 0.79 correct
responses (Fig. 6), and an analysis of
each rat's performance indicated that no rat performed at >50%.
Thus, there was no evidence to conclude that any rat could perform
appropriately in this task in the absence of chemical cues.

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Figure 6.
Percentage correct for each subject in the water
control test (abbreviations as in Fig. 2). Asterisks
represent a significant difference from 50% (normal approximation to a
binomial distribution, p < 0.05).
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Additional testing
After the water test, sham rats were given five behavioral
sessions with the standard stimulus array. At first, the water test
appeared to disturb performance, but by the fifth day, all rats were
performing as well as they were during the postsurgical test. Over the
next 5 d, these rats were tested with a modified stimulus array,
as previously described. As can be seen in Figure 7, all rats continued to respond at a
high rate of correct responses to the two concentrations of quinine and
KCl but tended to press the quinine-associated lever whenever water was
presented. Indeed, it may be that water is more qualitatively similar
to quinine than KCl. Our main interest, however, was in how rats would
respond to the remaining discriminable taste solutions, because the
pattern of responses could reflect what would be seen if the effect of nerve transection were merely to reduce the perceived intensity of the
taste stimuli. Compromised rats in the nerve transection groups
frequently were disrupted at even the highest concentrations of taste
stimuli and did not preferentially press the quinine-associated lever
to low concentrations of both quinine and KCl. Thus, the CT and facial
nerve transection most likely induced disruptions in taste quality,
over and beyond any diminution of taste intensity.

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Figure 7.
Results of additional testing of control rats (see
Materials and Methods). Percentages of correct responses ± SE as
a function of stimulus with the normal stimulus array (i.e., the
postsurgical test, top panels) and the altered array
(lower panels) are shown. Note that the addition of a
stimulus that could not be discriminated on the basis of taste (water)
did not result in decreased performance to either quinine or KCl.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The use of the two-lever operant discrimination procedure provided
a direct test of the hypothesis that the GL was necessary for the rat
to distinguish quinine from KCl. Several lines of evidence led to the
hypothesis that transection of this nerve would cause measurable
impairments on this task: (1) of the major gustatory nerve branches,
the GL appears to be the most responsive to quinine; (2) unlike the CT,
this nerve contains fibers that respond to quinine with relatively
narrow tuning and thus could differentially respond to the test
stimuli; and (3) the GL innervates >60% of all rat taste buds.
Unexpectedly, however, transection of this nerve had no effect on
discrimination performance. In contrast, the CT was necessary for
normal quinine-KCl discrimination to be maintained. Moreover, combined
removal of the gustatory branches of the facial nerve (the CT and GSP)
nearly eliminated the rat's ability to discriminate quinine from
KCl.
Given that sublingual and submaxillary salivary gland removal did not
cause a similar degree of impairment, the consequence of CT transection
cannot be explained simply as a secondary effect of partial denervation
of these glands. Moreover, because the deficits seen in this group did
not resemble the pattern of results seen in control rats during
additional testing, it appears that CT transection produces deficits in
taste quality coding rather than merely reducing perceived intensity.
In addition, the fact that TRIPLE rats were unable to discriminate
quinine from KCl at the concentrations tested raises our confidence
that the rats were not using any nongustatory cues to perform
appropriately in this task. Specifically, olfactory or trigeminal cues
were not sufficient for the TRIPLE rats to perform at better than
chance levels (Fig. 5). With these considerations in mind, it appears that the gustatory input of the seventh, but not the ninth, cranial nerve is critical in the normal discrimination of quinine from KCl. How
can these unexpected results be reconciled with the known electrophysiological response properties of the gustatory nerves?
One possibility is based on human psychophysical reports of KCl as a
complex, salty-bitter stimulus (van der Klaauw and Smith, 1995 ).
Relative to the other gustatory nerves, the rat CT responds best to
salts, and the GL responds best to alkaloids such as quinine. If GL
transection were to remove the "bitterness" of both KCl and
quinine, then the stimuli would remain discriminable because KCl would
be rendered purely "salty," and quinine would be rendered nonbitter. Furthermore, CT transection might remove the saltiness of
the two compounds, rendering KCl purely bitter and thus more similar to
quinine.
Although intuitively appealing, this hypothesis is oversimplified and
receives little empirical support. The data most damaging to this
interpretation are those showing the effect of nerve transection on
NaCl versus KCl discrimination. By the same logic presented above, GL
transection should disrupt such a discrimination by rendering KCl as
purely salty, whereas CT transection should not, because it should
actually make KCl less like NaCl. Contrary to this prediction, several
experiments using a variety of behavioral techniques (including the
two-lever operant conditioning task used in the current study) have
demonstrated that CT transection, but not GL transection, impairs the
ability of rats to discriminate NaCl from KCl (Spector and Grill, 1992 ;
Markison et al., 1995 ; St. John et al., 1995 , 1997b ). Second, it is
difficult to endorse the premise that GL transection removes the
bitterness of taste stimuli given that it does not alter quinine
preference-aversion functions as measured by two-bottle preference
tests or brief-access licking tasks (Akaike et al., 1965 ; Yamamoto and
Asai, 1986 ; Grill et al., 1992 ; St. John et al., 1994 ). Third, as
mentioned earlier (see Results), CT transection did not preferentially
disrupt responding to KCl in this study, as would be expected if the
nerve section removed the saltiness of KCl (and did not affect the
nonsalty quinine). These considerations help underscore the danger in
interpreting rodent behavior in terms of human perceptual reports.
A more tenable basis for the discrepancy between the rodent
electrophysiology and behavior is that the nerves are relatively functionally specialized (Frank, 1991 ), as is more clearly the case in
the channel catfish and some other teleost fishes (Atema, 1971 ; Finger
and Morita, 1985 ; Caprio et al., 1993 ; Finger, 1997 ). In catfish, the
facial nerve innervates predominantly extraoral taste buds, whereas the
GL and vagus nerves innervate intraoral taste buds. These nerves
terminate in separate, highly specialized lobes in the brainstem. When
the facial system is disrupted, catfish cannot locate food, although
they can appropriately swallow or reject food placed in the oral cavity
depending on its chemical nature. When the glossopharyngeal-vagal
system is damaged, catfish can locate food but fail to initiate
swallowing reflexes (Atema, 1971 ; Caprio et al., 1993 ).
In the rat, the 7th, 9th, and 10th cranial nerves terminate in
partially overlapping but separate regions of the nucleus of the
solitary tract (Hamilton and Norgren, 1984 ), and there is growing
evidence that this relative segregation persists at more rostral levels
of the central gustatory system (Halsell et al., 1996 ; Halsell and
Travers, 1997 ). Such an anatomical organization might be expected to
subserve functional differences between the peripheral nerves. We
propose that sensory-discriminative taste function is based primarily
on the gustatory input of the seventh cranial nerve. That is, input
from the seventh nerve is channeled into neural circuits that serve to
identify taste stimuli. Although the functional role of GL-derived
taste input remains undetermined, we speculate, as have others, that it
may be more involved with protective oromotor rejection reflexes
(Travers et al., 1987 ; Frank, 1991 ; Grill et al., 1992 ; Grill and
Schwartz, 1992 ). Affective (i.e., hedonic) responses to taste stimuli
as well as nonspecific taste detection (presence or absence of any
chemical cue regardless of quality), functions that do not require high
resolution between chemical compounds, appear to be subserved by
patterns of convergent input from the CT, GSP, and GL, depending on the
taste stimulus (Pfaffmann, 1952 ; Yamamoto and Asai, 1986 ; Spector et
al., 1990b , 1993 , 1996b ; Slotnick et al., 1991 ; Grill and Schwartz,
1992 ; Grill et al., 1992 ; Cauthon et al., 1994 ; St. John et al., 1994 ; St. John and Spector, 1996 ). As mentioned, the gustatory input from the
10th cranial nerve in the rat is thought to be involved with the
protection of the airways. In support, behavioral evidence to date,
including the present study, suggests that rats may be aguesic to
sucrose and quinine (St. John et al., 1994 ; Spector et al., 1996b ) when
only the vagal taste receptors are left intact.
The supposition that the neural coding of the sensory features of a
taste stimulus that subserves stimulus identification depends primarily
on the input of the facial nerve is buttressed by the effects of
gustatory nerve transection on performance in behavioral tasks that
require the rat to compare sapid stimuli on the basis of quality. In
such tasks, GL transection has never been found to interfere with
performance (even in tasks involving quinine and other potent stimuli
for this nerve), whereas considerable impairments consistently follow
seventh nerve (or CT alone) transection (Table
2). It is true that partial competence in
taste discrimination tasks is sometimes demonstrated after combined
neurotomy of the CT and GSP, which suggests that the input of the GL
can support some sensory-discriminative taste function but only in a
highly compromised form. Furthermore, given that TRIPLE rats in the
current study did not perform at better than chance levels supports the view that the 10th nerve does not contribute much to coding the sensory
features of taste stimuli that signal quality.
The peripheral distribution of taste buds is consistent with the
hypothesized functional roles of the gustatory nerves. The position of
the taste buds innervated by the 10th nerve appears to be less than
optimal for taste stimulus sampling. In contrast, their location in the
laryngeal epithelium would seem well suited to protect the airways.
Likewise, taste buds specialized for the identification and
discrimination of taste solutions might be expected to lie on the
surfaces that first contact taste stimuli (e.g., the anterior tongue).
Although this anatomical reality is consistent with the hypothesized
functional role of the facial nerve, it raises the possibility that
rats in this experiment may have learned to discriminate quinine from
KCl on the basis of that information alone. If so, it is not surprising
that discriminative behavior was lost after complete or partial facial
nerve transection. What remains a question is whether rats, given
enough time, might eventually be able to "relearn" the
discrimination on the basis of posterior tongue input alone. Rats in
the CT and GLX + CTX group did show an improvement in discriminative
behavior over the 5 d postsurgical test, but rats in the 7TH group
did not (data not shown). Perhaps >5 d would be required, or perhaps
posterior tongue input cannot serve as the sole discriminative signal.
A more straightforward test of these possibilities than allowing a
longer postsurgical test interval would be to perform the facial nerve
transection first and to examine whether such rats could ever be
trained on a quinine versus KCl task.
Over and beyond the possibility that under some circumstances the GL
alone might provide a signal that qualitatively differentiates quinine
from KCl, there remains the paradox (based on the electrophysiology) that rats in this experiment did form a discrimination that was dependent on the facial nerve. Why does disruption of facial nerve input have such severe effects on the behavioral discrimination of
quinine from KCl, given that this nerve does not ostensibly contain
units that are differentially responsive to these compounds? Quinine-responsive fibers of the CT (H-units) also respond to nonsodium
salts such as KCl (Frank et al., 1983 ; Dahl et al., 1997 ). Because
H-units do not differentially respond to these stimuli (at
concentrations examined), it is surprising that this nerve provides
valuable information for such a behavioral discrimination. Nonetheless,
the behavioral results make it clear that the CT must contain neural
elements that are differentially responsive to the stimuli tested,
whether such differential responsiveness takes the form of a
spatial or temporal pattern (Nagai and Ueda, 1981 ; DiLorenzo,
1989 ; Erickson et al., 1994 ).
From a spatial coding perspective, it is possible that more specific
quinine-responsive units exist in the CT but have not been located
because of an unknown sampling bias. Other researchers have been
puzzled by the difficulty in locating neurons responsive to moderate
concentrations of quinine at several levels of the gustatory system
(Ogawa et al., 1968 , 1984 ; Frank et al., 1983 ; Ogawa and Hayama, 1984 ;
Nakamura and Norgren, 1991 ; Nishijo and Norgren, 1991 ; Halsell et al.,
1993 ; DiLorenzo and Monroe, 1995 ), in light of the strong activation of
c-fos protein (thought to be a marker of neuronal activity) and the
robust behavioral responses to far lower concentrations (Koh and
Teitelbaum, 1961 ; St. John et al., 1994 ; Yamamoto et al., 1994a ; Harrer
and Travers, 1996 ; St. John and Spector, 1996 ; Thaw, 1996 ). Similarly,
perhaps there are facial nerve units that respond to KCl but not to
quinine regardless of the bandwidth of their tuning. For example, only 53% of H-units in the Frank et al. (1983) study had a response to
quinine above the chosen criterion for activation, and this percentage
was based on the response to 0.02 M quinine, which is 1.3 log10 units higher than the highest concentration used in
the current behavioral study. Given that rats can detect concentrations 1000 times lower than 0.02 M, the peripheral gustatory
system must be capable of responding to concentrations far weaker than those typically used in electrophysiological studies (Koh and Teitelbaum, 1961 ; St. John and Spector, 1996 ; Thaw, 1996 ). The use of
lower concentrations might reveal greater fiber specificity than
previously suggested. Moreover, although the response properties of
single fibers in the CT have been extensively studied, those of the GSP
have yet to be comprehensively characterized.
The potential for differences in the functional roles of the gustatory
nerves has important implications for theories of taste quality coding.
These theories often assume that all taste-responsive units play an
equal role is quality coding, but in fact, this might not be the case
at some levels of the nervous system. For example, if GL input cannot
be shown to make a significant contribution to sensory-discriminative
function, then there would be little justification for incorporating
the taste response properties of its units into a model of quality
coding. That is not to say, of course, that GL input might not make a
significant (or even substantial) contribution to other aspects of
gustatory processing, which may be manifest in affective behavior or
cephalic phase responses to tastants. It should also be stressed that
whatever the functional roles of the gustatory nerves, they are not
necessarily conserved across all species of vertebrates or even
mammals. Accordingly, electrophysiological data from gustatory nerves
should be evaluated in the context of a variety of functions with
respect to the given species under examination.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Nov. 17, 1997; revised March 12, 1998; accepted March 13, 1998.
This work was supported by Grant R01-DC01628 from the National
Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders. A.C.S. is the
recipient of a Research Career Development Award (K04-DC00104) from the
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, and
S.J.S. is the recipient of a Graduate Research Fellowship from the
National Science Foundation. We thank Mircea Garcea, Nick Guagliardo,
Kim Robertson, Jessica Couch, and Brian Sauer for technical
assistance.
Parts of this paper were presented in a dissertation in partial
fulfillment of a Doctor of Philosophy degree from the University of
Florida and were also presented at the 12th International Symposium on
Olfaction and Taste, San Diego, CA, July 1997.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Alan C. Spector, Department
of Psychology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-2250.
Dr. St. John's present address: Department of Anatomy and
Neurobiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
21201.
 |
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