Go to:
Logótipo
Comuta visibilidade da coluna esquerda
Você está em: Start > Publications > View > Nicotine activates TRPM5-dependent and independent taste pathways
Publication

Publications

Nicotine activates TRPM5-dependent and independent taste pathways

Title
Nicotine activates TRPM5-dependent and independent taste pathways
Type
Article in International Scientific Journal
Year
2009
Authors
Albino Oliveira-Maia
(Author)
Other
The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. Without AUTHENTICUS Without ORCID
Scientific classification
CORDIS: Health sciences
Other information
Abstract (EN): The orosensory responses elicited by nicotine are relevant for the development and maintenance of addiction to tobacco products. However, although nicotine is described as bitter tasting, the molecular and neural substrates encoding the taste of nicotine are unclear. Here, rats and mice were used to determine whether nicotine activates peripheral and central taste pathways via TRPM5-dependent mechanisms, which are essential for responses to other bitter tastants such as quinine, and/or via nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs). When compared with wild-type mice, Trpm5/ mice had reduced, but not abolished, chorda tympani (CT) responses to nicotine. In both genotypes, lingual application of mecamylamine, a nAChR-antagonist, inhibited CT nerve responses to nicotine and reduced behavioral responses of aversion to this stimulus. In accordance with these findings, rats were shown to discriminate between nicotine and quinine presented at intensity-paired concentrations. Moreover, rat gustatory cortex (GC) neural ensemble activity could also discriminate between these two bitter tastants. Mecamylamine reduced both behavioral and GC neural discrimination between nicotine and quinine. In summary, nicotine elicits taste responses through peripheral TRPM5-dependent pathways, common to other bitter tastants, and nAChR-dependent and TRPM5-independent pathways, thus creating a unique sensory representation that contributes to the sensory experience of tobacco products.
Language: Portuguese
Type (Professor's evaluation): Scientific
Documents
We could not find any documents associated to the publication.
Related Publications

Of the same authors

Food reward in the absence of taste receptor signaling (2008)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Ivan Araújo; Albino Oliveira-Maia; Tatyana Sotnikova; Raul Gainetdinov; Marc Caron; Miguel Nicolelis; Sidney Simon

Of the same journal

Repetition learning is neither a continuous nor an implicit process (2023)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Philipp Musfelda; Alessandra S. Souza; Klaus Oberauer
Relational mobility predicts social behaviors in 39 countries and is tied to historical farming and threat (2018)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Robert Thomson; Masaki Yuki; Thomas Talhelm; Joanna Schug; Mie Kito; Arin H. Ayanian; Julia C. Becker; Maja Becker; Chi-yue Chiu; Hoon-Seok Choi; Carolina M. Ferreira; Marta Fülöp; Pelin Gul; Ana Maria Houghton-Illera; Mihkel Joasoo; Jonathan Jong; Christopher M. Kavanagh; Dmytro Khutkyy; Claudia Manzi; Urszula M. Marcinkowska...(mais 7 authors)
A global view on how local muscular fatigue affects human performance (2020)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Márcio F. Goethel; Mauro Gonçalves; Cayque Brietzke; Adalgiso C. Cardozo; João P. Vilas-Boas; Ulysses F. Ervilha
A global experiment on motivating social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic (2022)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Psychological Science Accelerator Self-Determination Theory Collaboration; Samuel Lins; Isabel Rocha Pinto; e outros
Recommend this page Top
Copyright 1996-2025 © Faculdade de Direito da Universidade do Porto  I Terms and Conditions  I Acessibility  I Index A-Z
Page created on: 2025-09-13 at 09:54:25 | Privacy Policy | Personal Data Protection Policy | Whistleblowing | Electronic Yellow Book