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