Chemical Senses Flashcards
Chemoreceptive Senses
– olfaction (smell) and gustation (taste)
o Taste – plays vital role in food selection
Sweet and umami (mono-sodium glutamate) are associated with nutritious food
Bitter associated with presence of toxins and are avoided
o Taste and smell are closely linked but involve different receptors and receptive processes
May suggest an overlap in central processing
Gustation Characteristics
o Taste buds are segregated into 4 groups on specific regions of the tongue
Anterior posterior: sweet, salty, sour, bitter
Individual taste cells are relatively selective to one particular taste but can respond to more than one modality of taste
o 3 types of taste cells (light, dark, intermediate) – specialized epithelial cells (NOT NEURONS)
Regeneration can occur from basal cells (renewed every ~25 days)
Gustation Transduction
– taste buds contain microvilli which contain taste receptors
o Bitter & Sweet ligands – use G-protein coupled membrane receptors
Bitter ligand (transducin) – releases Ca+ from intracellular stores via IP3 pathway
Sweet ligand (gustducin) – activates cAMP second messenger that closes K+ channels and depolarizes the cell voltage gated Ca+ open Ca+ influx
o Sour & Salt – ionic ligands (Na+ and H+) alter ion channels depolarizes the cell voltage gated Ca+ open Ca+ influx neurotransmitter release
Sour – H+ closes K+ channels
Salt – enters via leaky channels and directly cause cell depolarization
o Umami (deliciousness) – associated with glutamate and other nucleotides
Receptors are located at the back of the pharynx
Theories of Gustation Coding
– how we organize multiple taste cell input
o Labeled-line Coding – each nerve fiber is activated/perceived by a specific stimuli (ex: sucrose = sweet tasting); sweet fiber/nerve gets activated then it recognizes the taste as sweet even though other fibers can get activated by other tastes; they are most sensitive to a particular one
Still get a mixed signal because the nerve fiber itself branches and innervates a few different taste cells
o Across-fiber Coding – in order to detect a taste you have to look at and sum all the fibers of an individual nerve and the taste is determined accordingly
Gustation Projections
o Tongue, soft palate and glottis solitary nucleus of brainstem VPM of thalamus OR hypothalamus OR amygdala VPM of thalamus projects to Insula and Frontal cortex
Taste afferents from midbrain are involved in viscera reflexes (secretion of GI juices)
Hypothalamus – center for hunger/satiety
Amygdala – regulatory center for feelings/emotions
o Primary sensory input to cortex travels via: carry information to nucleus of the solitary tract
Facial nerve (VII) – anterior 2/3 of tongue anterior region of nucleus of solitary tract
Glossopharyngeal nerve (IX) –back of tongue middle region of nucleus of solitary tract
Vagus nerve (X) – soft palate and mouth posterior region of nucleus of solitary tract
• Gagging reflex – detects water & closes epiglottis to prevent going into lungs
o Trigeminal Nerve – innervates the oral, nasal, and ocular cavities; gets stimulated by spice
Mechanism: via TPRV1 Receptor – activated by capsaicin, heat, or protons
Olfaction Characteristics
o Anosmic – inability to smell
o More to do with motivation goes straight to cortex
o Receptors are confined to 5cm2 of the olfactory mucosa and lie deep within the nasal cavity
Receptors organized based on 3 family of genes
o Greater range of primary olfactory sensitivity (1,000s) than that for taste (5)
Subdivided into 7 primary qualities of smell: peppermint, musck, floral, ethereal, pungent, putrid, and camphoreaceous
Olfaction: Form, Function, Transduction Mechanism
o Sniffing directs air onto olfactory mucosa odorants absorbed into mucous layer overlying the receptors diffusion through mucosa brings odorants into contact w/ olfactory cilia/receptors
o Activation of G protein second messenger systems that increase cAMP levels and cause Ca+ influx and depolarization; initiating action potential, which is propagated to the olfactory bulb
Decrease in chloride channels (Cl- outward flow)
Olfactory bulb sits superior to the cribiform plate with afferent fibers connecting the bulb to the olfactory cilia and cell on inferior side of cribiform plate
o Olfactory epithelium is highly vascularized why drugs are better when snorted
o Spacial coding – olfactory bulb transduces information to the cortex through synchronous firing
Different odorants that arrive will activate different neurons and odorants A+B arriving synchronously activate a specific neuron indicating that small
Laminar Organization of the olfactory epithelium and topographic projections to the olfactory bulb
o Functional mapping of specific odors to specific regions within the olfactory tract
o Epithelium organized into 4 zones; send projections to their respective zones in olfactory bulb
Multi-Layered Olfactory Bulb
o Neural axons that reach olfactory bulb are separated specific to its glomerulus
Complex smell results in multiple odorants being distinguished by their own glomerulus
Co-activation of particular glomeruli encode information for a unique smell
o Glomeruli – present at the glomerular layer – segregation of signals in olfactory bulb occurs here
o Periglomerular cell – innervates neighboring glomeruli; activation of one glomeruli can suppress activity of other glomeruli
o Mitral cell (mitral cell layer) and tufted cell (external plexiform layer) have large neurons that project information to brain via lateral olfactory tract
Olfactory Projection
o Receptors olfactory bulb lateral olfactory tracts (olfactory nerve CN 1) olfactory cortex
Olfactory bulb also sends projections to amygdala assigns feelings/emotions
• Very fast - doesn’t go to primary sensory nuclei
o Information from one side of olfactory bulb projects to other side thus allowing for modifying/suppressing output from the adjacent side
Localization of smell by comparing sensory reception of bi-directional projections
o Orbitalfrontal cortex – where we have convergence of taste (from thalamus) and smell info
Vermonasal System
–Pheromone Receptors – Sex and Social Behavior
o Receptors located near olfactory neurons in nasal cavity
o Signals to accessory olfactory bulb; tract mainly goes to amygdala
Papillae
– small projections all the tongue that detect food textures and contain taste buds
o Circumvallate papillae – posterior – taste buds on side of deep invaginations
Glossopharyngeal nerve
o Folliate papillae – side and middle – taste buds on side of deep invaginations
More prominent than fungiform papillae
o Fungiform papillae – interior of tongue – taste buds on bottom of shallow invaginations