The Journal of Neuroscience, March 1, 2002, 22(5):1937-1941
Rats Fail to Discriminate Quinine from Denatonium: Implications
for the Neural Coding of Bitter-Tasting Compounds
Alan C.
Spector and
Stacy
L.
Kopka
Department of Psychology, University of Florida, Gainesville,
Florida 32611
Recent molecular findings indicate that many different
G-protein-coupled taste receptors that bind with "bitter-tasting"
ligands are coexpressed in single taste receptor cells in taste buds, leading to the prediction that mammals can respond behaviorally to
structurally diverse "bitter" tastants but cannot discriminate among them. However, recent in situ calcium-imaging
findings imply that rat taste receptor cells are more narrowly tuned to
respond to bitter-tasting compounds than had been predicted from
molecular findings, suggesting that these animals can discriminate
among these chemicals. Using an operant conditioning paradigm, we
demonstrated that rats cannot discriminate between two structurally
dissimilar bitter compounds, quinine hydrochloride and denatonium
benzoate, despite the fact that these tastants are thought to stimulate different taste receptor cells. These rats were nonetheless able to
show concentration-dependent avoidance responses to both compounds in
brief-access tests and to discriminate among other taste stimuli, including quinine versus KCl, denatonium versus KCl, and NaCl versus
KCl. Importantly, the concentrations were varied in the discrimination
tests to render intensity an irrelevant cue. We conclude that
denatonium and quinine produce a unitary taste sensation, leaving open
the likely possibility that other compounds fall into this class.
Although a broader array of compounds needs to be tested, our findings
lend support to the hypothesis that there is only one qualitative type
of bitterness. These results also highlight the need to confirm
predictions about the downstream properties of the gustatory system, or
any sensory system, based on upstream molecular and biophysical events.
Key words:
bitter taste; bitter discrimination; rat; psychophysics; quinine hydrochloride; denatonium benzoate; T2R receptor family; gustatory system
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/2251937-05$05.00/0