Literature DB >> 28070928

Convergent gustatory and viscerosensory processing in the human dorsal mid-insula.

Jason A Avery1,2, Stephen J Gotts3, Kara L Kerr1,4, Kaiping Burrows1, John E Ingeholm3, Jerzy Bodurka1, Alex Martin3, W Kyle Simmons1,5.   

Abstract

The homeostatic regulation of feeding behavior requires an organism to be able to integrate information from its internal environment, including peripheral visceral signals about the body's current energy needs, with information from its external environment, such as the palatability of energy-rich food stimuli. The insula, which serves as the brain's primary sensory cortex for representing both visceral signals from the body and taste signals from the mouth and tongue, is a likely candidate region in which this integration might occur. However, to date it has been unclear whether information from these two homeostatically critical faculties is merely co-represented in the human insula, or actually integrated there. Recent functional neuroimaging evidence of a common substrate for visceral interoception and taste perception within the human dorsal mid-insula suggests a model whereby a single population of neurons may integrate viscerosensory and gustatory signals. To test this model, we used fMRI-Adaptation to identify whether insula regions that exhibit repetition suppression following repeated interoception trials would then also exhibit adapted responses to subsequent gustatory stimuli. Multiple mid and anterior regions of the insula exhibited adaptation to interoceptive trials specifically, but only the dorsal mid-insula regions exhibited an adapted gustatory response following interoception. The discovery of this gustatory-interoceptive convergence within the neurons of the human insula supports the existence of a heretofore-undocumented neural pathway by which visceral signals from the periphery modulate the activity of brain regions involved in feeding behavior. Hum Brain Mapp 38:2150-2164, 2017.
© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  fMRI; fMRI-adaptation; gustation; insular cortex; interoception

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28070928      PMCID: PMC5575915          DOI: 10.1002/hbm.23510

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp        ISSN: 1065-9471            Impact factor:   5.038


  49 in total

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4.  Activity of Insula to Basolateral Amygdala Projecting Neurons is Necessary and Sufficient for Taste Valence Representation.

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7.  Taste Quality Representation in the Human Brain.

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Review 8.  Roles for the gut microbiota in regulating neuronal feeding circuits.

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