Literature DB >> 11894099

An amino-acid taste receptor.

Greg Nelson1, Jayaram Chandrashekar, Mark A Hoon, Luxin Feng, Grace Zhao, Nicholas J P Ryba, Charles S Zuker.   

Abstract

The sense of taste provides animals with valuable information about the nature and quality of food. Mammals can recognize and respond to a diverse repertoire of chemical entities, including sugars, salts, acids and a wide range of toxic substances. Several amino acids taste sweet or delicious (umami) to humans, and are attractive to rodents and other animals. This is noteworthy because L-amino acids function as the building blocks of proteins, as biosynthetic precursors of many biologically relevant small molecules, and as metabolic fuel. Thus, having a taste pathway dedicated to their detection probably had significant evolutionary implications. Here we identify and characterize a mammalian amino-acid taste receptor. This receptor, T1R1+3, is a heteromer of the taste-specific T1R1 and T1R3 G-protein-coupled receptors. We demonstrate that T1R1 and T1R3 combine to function as a broadly tuned L-amino-acid sensor responding to most of the 20 standard amino acids, but not to their D-enantiomers or other compounds. We also show that sequence differences in T1R receptors within and between species (human and mouse) can significantly influence the selectivity and specificity of taste responses.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11894099     DOI: 10.1038/nature726

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  372 in total

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6.  Cooking clue to human dietary diversity.

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Review 7.  Homeostatic regulation of protein intake: in search of a mechanism.

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8.  Biting off more than you can chew: sexual selection on the free amino acid composition of the spermatophylax in decorated crickets.

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9.  Gustatory neural responses to umami taste stimuli in C57BL/6ByJ and 129P3/J mice.

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10.  Regulator of G-protein signaling-21 (RGS21) is an inhibitor of bitter gustatory signaling found in lingual and airway epithelia.

Authors:  Staci P Cohen; Brian K Buckley; Mickey Kosloff; Alaina L Garland; Dustin E Bosch; Gang Cheng; Harish Radhakrishna; Michael D Brown; Francis S Willard; Vadim Y Arshavsky; Robert Tarran; David P Siderovski; Adam J Kimple
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2012-10-24       Impact factor: 5.157

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