| Literature DB >> 32218129 |
Elena von Molitor1, Katja Riedel2, Mathias Hafner1, Rüdiger Rudolf1,3, Tiziana Cesetti1.
Abstract
The five basic taste modalities, sweet, bitter, umami, salty and sour induce changes of Ca2+ levels, pH and/or membrane potential in taste cells of the tongue and/or in neurons that convey and decode gustatory signals to the brain. Optical biosensors, which can be either synthetic dyes or genetically encoded proteins whose fluorescence spectra depend on levels of Ca2+, pH or membrane potential, have been used in primary cells/tissues or in recombinant systems to study taste-related intra- and intercellular signaling mechanisms or to discover new ligands. Taste-evoked responses were measured by microscopy achieving high spatial and temporal resolution, while plate readers were employed for higher throughput screening. Here, these approaches making use of fluorescent optical biosensors to investigate specific taste-related questions or to screen new agonists/antagonists for the different taste modalities were reviewed systematically. Furthermore, in the context of recent developments in genetically encoded sensors, 3D cultures and imaging technologies, we propose new feasible approaches for studying taste physiology and for compound screening.Entities:
Keywords: calcium; gustation; imaging; optical biosensors; tastants; taste signaling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32218129 PMCID: PMC7180777 DOI: 10.3390/s20071811
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Schematic overview of cells, tissues and organs involved in taste perception. In the periphery, primary taste transduction uses different receptors and intra- and intercellular pathways (indicated) that occur in taste cells of type I–III (upper right). These are organized in taste buds (upper left), which are organized in circumvallate, foliate or fungiform papillae (center) of the tongue (lower left). From there, sensory information is passed on by glossopharyngeal, chorda tympani and vagus nerves (lower right) to the brain (right). Here, signals first arrive at the nucleus of the solitary tract in the brain stem, from where they get relayed to the thalamus and then to the gustatory cortex for final processing.
Figure 2Taste transduction of the five basic taste modalities. Schematic overview of the currently known principal signaling pathways involved in primary taste transduction occurring in taste cells (type as indicated) and their output to neighboring taste cells or gustatory nerve fibers (lower part). The use of molecular fluorescent biosensors for specific research questions, as described in the main text, is indicated here by yellow boxes. For detailed descriptions of signaling pathways and the use of biosensors, please refer to the main text. Elusive aspects are indicated by question marks. Abbreviations of signaling molecules: 5HT: serotonin, AC: adenylate cyclase, CALHM: calcium homeostasis modulator channel, ENaC: epithelial sodium channel, IP3: inositol-3-phophate, IP3R: inositol-3-phosphate receptor, Kir2.1: inward-rectifier potassium ion channel 2.1, P2X/P2Y: purinergic receptors, PDE: phosphodiesterase, PKA: protein kinase A, PKD1L: polycystic-kidney-disease-like ion channel; PLC: phospholipase C, TRPM5: receptor potential M5 channel, V1R: vanilloid receptor 1, VGCC: voltage-gated calcium channel, VGKC: voltage-gated potassium channel, VGSC: voltage-gated sodium channel, αGus: α-subunit of the G-protein gustducin.
Figure 3Biological models taking advantage of optical biosensors to study taste signaling. Schematic overview of the four major types of test systems used so far to investigate taste perception. Frequently applied molecular optical biosensors are depicted with green letters, curly red lines indicate local application of tastants. For further details, please refer to the main text.
Fluorescent metal ion dyes used in taste research. Different indicator dyes have been used to study taste signaling in tissue/cell preparations. The readout was based on different microscopy techniques.
| Cell/Tissue | Species | Imaging | Sensor | Detect | Stimuli | Microscopy Technique | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dissociated taste cells | Hamster | Ex vivo | BCECF-AM | pH | Sour | Conventional | [ |
| Single fungiform papilla | Rat | [ | |||||
| Slices | Mouse | BCECF-D/AM | Ca2+, pH | Confocal | [ | ||
| Epithelium | Mouse | CaGD | Ca2+ | Salt | [ | ||
| Dissociated cells, slices | Mouse | Sour, kokumi bitter, umami, K+ | [ | ||||
| Slices | Rat | Sweet umami bitter, salt, sour | [ | ||||
| Isolated taste buds | Rat | CaG-AM | Sour | Conventional | [ | ||
| Isolated taste buds, slices | Mouse | Fura-2 | Adenosine | [ | |||
| Dissociated cells, isolated taste buds, slices | Mouse | GABA | Confocal | [ | |||
| Dissociated cells | Mouse | Fura-2 | Sour | Not stated | [ | ||
| Dissociated cells, isolated taste buds | Mouse | ATP | Conventional | [ | |||
| Dissociated cells, cell aggregates | Rat | Bitter | [ | ||||
| Dissociated cells | Mouse | Bitter, umami, sweet, | Confocal | [ | |||
| Dissociated cells, isolated taste buds | Mouse | Glutamate | [ | ||||
| Dissociated cells | Mouse GAD67-GFP | IBMX, Forskolin | Conventional | [ | |||
| Dissociated cells | Mouse | K+ | [ | ||||
| Dissociated cells | Mouse | Bitter, | [ | ||||
| Dissociated cells, isolated taste buds | Mouse | Oxytocine | Not stated | [ | |||
| Dissociated cells, isolated taste buds | Rat | Sweet, Forskolin | Conventional | [ | |||
| Dissociated cells | Mouse/Mudpuppy | Bitter | [ | ||||
| Dissociated cells | Mouse/Human | Fatty acid | [ | ||||
| FACS isolated CD36 pos. cells | Mouse | Primary | Fura-2-AM | Fatty acid, | Confocal | [ | |
| Primary culture of taste cells | Human | Sweet, bitter | Plate reader | [ | |||
| Dissociated cells | Mouse | Ex vivo | Fura-2 | Ca2+, | Bitter, sweet, umami | Confocal | [ |
| Slices | Mouse | GCaMP3 in type II and III cells | Ca2+ | Salt + | [ | ||
| Tongue | Mouse | In vivo | CaGD | Sweet, salt, sour, bitter | Two-photon | [ | |
| 3D culture (organoids) | Mouse | 2D cell culture | Fura-2 | Sweet, salt, sour, bitter | Conventional | [ | |
| Isolated taste bud | Chicken | Ex vivo | Fluo-4-AM | Bitter, umami | Confocal | [ | |
| Dissociated cells, isolated taste buds | Mouse | Fluo-4M | Ca2++ uncaging | ATP | Conventional | [ |
Biosensors used to study taste in the brain. Taste bud are innervated by sensory neurons that convey the information to the CNS. This has been studied with live imaging microscopy in vivo with mostly genetically encoded Ca2+ sensors. Abbreviations: NTS: solitary tract, PBN: parabranchial nucleus, GC: gustatory cortex, genic.gangl: geniculate ganglion, Tr.: transgenic.
| Region | Species | Transgenic Model | Tracing | Sensor | Detect | Stimuli | Microscopy Technique | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genic.gangl. | Mouse | Tr. mouse | Fura-2/Fluoro-Gold | Ca2+ | 5HT | Confocal | [ | |
| Tr. mouse | GCaMP3 | Sweet, bitter, umami, salt, sour | [ | |||||
| Tr. mouse | AVV-GCaMP3 | Two-photon | [ | |||||
| NTS | Tr. mouse |
| Sweet, bitter | Conventional | [ | |||
| PBN | Mouse | AAV1-Cre-GCaMP6s | AAV8-Cre-synaptophysin-mCherry | GCaMP6s | Ca2+ | Bitter | Miniaturized | [ |
| Brain stem | Zebra fish | Tr. fish | GCaMP5 | Ca2+ | Sweet, bitter, umami, sour | Two-photon | [ | |
| GC | Mouse | AVV1-GCaMP6s | AVV1-mCherry/microruby dextran | GCaMP6s | Sweet, bitter, salt, sour | [ | ||
| AAV2/1-GCaMP6s | CAV2-Cre in hCAR x dTomato mice | Bitter | [ | |||||
| Mouse | AVV2-GFP | GCaMP6s | Sweet, bitter, umami, salt | [ |
Overview of recombinant systems that were used to study taste receptor function and new agonists/antagonists. Listed are different stimuli, which were investigated with Ca2+ sensors in host cells expressing recombinant proteins of the taste signaling machinery.
| Host Cell | Stimuli | Ca2+ Sensor | Readout | Introduced Genes | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HEK293 | Bitter | Fura-2 | Microscopy | Gα15+T2R3-5-10-16 | [ |
| Fura-AM | Gα16gust44/ Gα16gust37+T2R5-16 | [ | |||
| Plate reader | Gα16gust44+T2R46 | [ | |||
| Gα16gust44+T2R46-43-31 | [ | ||||
| Fluo-AM | Gα16gust44+T2R14 | [ | |||
| Gα16gust44+variants of T2R16 | [ | ||||
| Gα16gust44+T2R43-44-4-46-50 | [ | ||||
| Gα16gust44+T2R31 | [ | ||||
| Gα16gust44+T2R16 | [ | ||||
| Gα16gust44+T2R43-44 | [ | ||||
| Gα15T2R16 | [ | ||||
| Fluo-4 | Gα16gust44+hT2R31 | [ | |||
| Gα16gust44+T2Rs (25 different types) | [ | ||||
| Sweet | Fura-AM | V1R | [ | ||
| Fluo-AM | Gα15+T1R2+T1R3 | [ | |||
| Gα16gust44+fT1R2+T1R3 | [ | ||||
| Fura-2 | Gα16gust44+T1R2/R3 or T2R44 | [ | |||
| Microscopy | Gα15+T1R2+T1R3 | [ | |||
| Sweet, umami | Fluo-AM | Gα15+T1R2+T1R3 | [ | ||
| Acid | Fura-2-AM | PKD1L3+PKD2L1 | [ | ||
| [ | |||||
| Fura-2 | [ | ||||
| Fluo-AM | [ | ||||
| Kokumi | Fluo-8, Flamindo (for cAMP) | CaSR | [ |
Overview of reporter genes used to study taste signaling in specific cell populations. Different reporter genes were expressed under the control of diverse promoters of genes involved in the taste signaling cascade.
| Promoter | Reporter Gene | Sensor | Readout | Stimuli | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gustducin | lacZ | No Ca2+ imaging | Ca2+ | Microscopy | Bitter | [ |
| GFP | No Ca2+ imaging | [ | ||||
| Fura-2 | [ | |||||
| PLCβ2 | CaOD | [ | ||||
| KCl | [ | |||||
| PLCβ2, GAD | Sweet, bitter, umami, sour, salt | [ | ||||
| Sweet, bitter, umami | [ | |||||
| Sweet, bitter, umami, ACh | [ | |||||
| PLCβ2, GAD | Fura-2-AM | Oxytocin | [ | |||
| T1R3 | Glutamate | [ | ||||
| IP3R | Bitter, KCl | [ | ||||
| TRPM5 | Fura-2-AM | KCl | [ | |||
| TRPM5 | CFP | Fluo-5F | Ca2+ | [ | ||
| T2R32 | GFP Sapphire | CaGD | KCl | [ | ||
| PKD2L1 | YFP | Carboxi-DFFDA + H+ uncaging | pH | Sour | [ | |
| Fura-2-AM | pH, Ca2+ | [ | ||||
| GAD | GFP | No Ca2+ imaging | Ca2+ | [ | ||
| [ | ||||||
| Fura-2 | [ | |||||
| IBMX-forskolin | [ | |||||
| PYY | No Ca2+ imaging | Bitter, lipids, sour, sweet, bitter, umami, salt | [ | |||
Biosensor cells that can be used to study neurotransmitter release from taste cells. Upon sensing neurotransmitters, BC evoke intracellular Ca2+ transients that can be detected with Ca2+-sensor dyes. Abbreviations: 5HT: serotonin, NA: noradrenaline, Ach: achetylcholine.
| BC | Ca2+ Sensor | Readout | Stimuli | Receptor | Neurotransmitter | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHO | Fura-2-AM | Microscopy | KCl, sour, sweet, bitter, ATP | 5HT2c | 5HT | [ |
| 5HT2c or | 5HT | [ | ||||
| Adenosine | [ | |||||
| Calcitonin gene-related peptide | NA | [ | ||||
| KCl, sour, sweet, bitter | 5HT2c | NA | [ | |||
| Sweet, bitter, KCl | P2X2/P2X3 | ATP | [ | |||
| KCl, sour, sweet, bitter | GABAB+ Gαqo5 | GABA | [ | |||
| Sweet, umami, bitter | M3r | ACh | [ | |||
| KCl, taste mix, substance P | P GABAB+ Gαqo5 or 2X2/P2X3 | GABA, ATP | [ | |||
| COS-1 | Fluo-4 | Bitter, sour, depolarization, ACh, 5HT, NA, glutamate | P2Y endogenous | ATP | [ |
Figure 4Use of a 3D culture with immortalized human tongue cells expressing a GECI to study Ca2+ responses upon perfusion of a bitter compound. Dynarray chips (300 Microns) were filled with 5000 HTC-8-G-GECO cells/cavity and cultured for three (A–C) or seven days (D,E). (A) Bright-field image. (B) Representative confocal fluorescence image of one optical plane at 30 µm from the top of the chip. Upon fixation, cells were labelled with markers for f-actin (phalloidin, red) and nuclei (DAPI, blue). (C) Confocal micrograph showing a side view of a chip cavity. Before microscopy, the chip was PFA-fixed and sliced. (D) Representative time course of HTC-8-G-GECO fluorescence changes (ΔF/F0, normalized to the time before compound perfusion). The chip was mounted in an Ibidi perfusion slide, stabilized with gelatine pads (Scaffolene, from Freudenberg) and then perfused with salicine (20 mM) (all procedures analogous to [179]). Traces show G-GECO fluorescence changes as a function of time, the time period of salicine perfusion is indicated by a grey bar. (E) Examples of pseudo-colored confocal images during perfusion in control (left panel) and in salicine solutions (middle and right panels). Blue and yellow/red cues indicate low and high G-GECO fluorescence intensities, respectively. Time points of image acquisition correspond to graph in (D). Images were acquired with an inverted Leica TCS SP8 confocal microscope. Scale bars in (A–C) and (E), 100 µm. (Unpublished data E.M. and T.C.)