| Literature DB >> 12844351 |
Hiroaki Matsunami1, Hubert Amrein.
Abstract
The olfactory systems of insects and mammals have analogous anatomical features and use similar molecular logic for olfactory coding. The molecular underpinnings of the chemosensory systems that detect taste and pheromone cues have only recently been characterized. Comparison of these systems in Drosophila and mouse uncovers clear differences and a few surprising similarities.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12844351 PMCID: PMC193622 DOI: 10.1186/gb-2003-4-7-220
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Figure 1The location of chemosensory organs in the mouse and Drosophila. (a) A sensory neuron in the olfactory epithelium of mice expresses one of about 1,000 olfactory receptors. Neurons in the apical and basal layers of the vomeronasal organ express distinct, unrelated classes of G-protein-coupled pheromone receptors (V1Rs in the apical and V2Rs in the basal layer). In addition, a small family of MHC class I-like molecules is coexpressed with V2Rs in neurons of the basal layer. The taste cells in the tongue, palate and pharynx express other classes of GPCRs, one encoding sweet-taste receptors (T1Rs) and one encoding receptors for bitter compounds (T2Rs). Note that V1Rs and T2Rs are related to each other, as are V2Rs and T1Rs, respectively. (b) The olfactory neurons of Drosophila are located in two pairs of appendages in the head, the third antennal segment and the maxillary palps, and each neuron expresses very few, possibly just one, of the 61 olfactory receptor genes identified so far. The gustatory or taste sensory neurons are located in numerous organs, including the two labial palps on the head, internal sensory clusters in the pharynx (not shown), all the legs and the anterior wing margin. Each neuron expresses a few, possibly just one, gustatory receptor gene. A few gustatory receptor genes are also expressed in olfactory neurons of the antenna and maxillary palps.
Taste and pheromone receptor gene (sub-)families in mice and Drosophila
| Receptor | Number of intact genes | Conservation* within each family | Sites of expression | Known ligands (examples) | Structural notes | |
| Mouse/ human | T1R | 3 (human) 3 (mouse) | 30-40% | Taste cells in the tongue; T1R1 plus T1R3 or T1R2 plus T1R3 are preferentially coexpressed, with few cells expressing all three genes | Sweet chemicals (T1R2 plus T1R3) L-amino acids, umami chemicals (T1R1 plus T1R3) | Similar to V2R (20-30% identical) |
| T2R | 28 (human); approximately 40 (mouse) | 25% to more than 80% | Taste cells in the tongue; most cells express many, if not all, T2R genes | Bitter compounds, such as cycloheximide (mouse T2R5), salicin (human T2R16), and PTC (human T2R38) | Similar to V1R (15-20% identical) | |
| V1R | 5 (human) 137 (mouse) | 25% to nearly 100% | Basal layer in the vomeronasal organ; probably one V1R gene expressed per cell | 2-heptanone (V1Rb1), 6-hydroxy-6-methyl-3-heptanone, n-pentylacetate, and isobutylamine | Similar to T2R (15-20% identical); important for maternal aggression | |
| V2R | None in human; approximately 140 in mouse | 25% to nearly 100% | Apical layer in the vomeronasal organ; probably one V2R gene expressed per cell | None identified | Similar to T1R (20-30% identical); forms a complex with MHC class Ib and β2-microglobulin; may be required for aggression between males | |
| MHC 1b | None in human; 9 expressed in the mouse | 40% to more than 80% | Apical layer in the vomeronasal organ; one or a few MHC 1b genes expressed per cell; coexpressed with a V2R gene | None (in the VNO) | Forms a complex with β2-microglobulin and V2Rs; may be required for aggression between males | |
| Fly | GR | 69 | Approximately 15-75% | Spatially defined in one or several taste organs (labellum, labral and cibarial sense organs, legs, wings, and female genitalia) | Sugars and presumably other classes of compounds, including pheromones | Distantly related to olfactory receptor genes (Or83b); gustatory receptor probably recognize the whole spectrum of small soluble ligands; up to 20 subfamilies (with 1-8 genes each) |
| GR_S† | 8 | 44-75% | Foreleg and labellum (Gr5a), possibly other taste sensory organs | Trehalose (Gr5a) | The knockout fly has lower sensitivity to trehalose; member of a subfamily of 7 genes |
*The numbers in this column refer to amino-acid sequence identity in mice and amino-acid sequence similarity in Drosophila, respectively. †Indicates proposed rather than functionally established subfamilies of gustatory receptor genes that might function as sweet (S) receptors. This information is based on the functional characterization of a single receptor in this subfamily.