Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Living taste cells produced outside the body

Living taste cells produced outside the body

February 27, 2006

Breakthrough will lead to new insights about sense of taste

Researchers from the Monell Chemical Senses Center have succeeded in growing mature taste receptor cells outside the body and for the first time have been able to successfully keep the cells alive for a prolonged period of time. The establishment of a viable long-term model opens a range of new opportunities to increase scientists' understanding of the sense of taste and how it functions in nutrition, health and disease.




"We have an important new tool to help discover molecules that can enhance or block different kinds of tastes," explains principle investigator Nancy Rawson, PhD, a cellular biologist. "In addition, the success of this technique may provide hope for people who have lost their sense of taste due to radiation therapy or tissue damage, who typically lose weight and become malnourished. This system gives us a way to test for drugs that can promote recovery."

The findings are reported in an online issue of Chemical Senses.

Taste receptor cells are located in taste buds on the tongue and in the throat. These cells contain the receptors that detect taste stimuli: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami (savory). Each taste receptor cell lives for only about 10-14 days, after which it is replaced. The new taste cells develop from a population of undifferentiated precursors known as basal cells.

Understanding of the process of taste cell differentiation, growth and turnover has been hampered by the inability of researchers to keep taste cells alive outside the body in controlled laboratory conditions.

To address this long-standing problem, the Monell researchers utilized a novel approach. Instead of starting with mature taste cells, they obtained basal cells from rat taste buds and placed these cells in a tissue culture system containing nutrients and growth factors. In this environment, the basal cells divided and differentiated into functional taste cells.

The new cells, which were kept alive for up to two months, were similar to mature taste cells in several key respects. A variety of methods were used to show that the cultured cells contain unique marker proteins characteristic of mature functioning taste receptor cells. In addition, functional assays revealed that the cultured cells responded to either bitter or sweet taste stimuli with increases of intracellular calcium, another property characteristic of mature taste cells.

Lead author Hakan Ozdener, MD, PhD, observes, "Although scientists have tried for many years to maintain taste cells in a long-term culture system, it was commonly believed that these cells could not be kept alive for longer than about 10 days. Now, we have demonstrated that taste cells can be generated in vitro and maintained for a prolonged period of time."

The taste cell culture system provides new insight into how basal cells turn into functional taste cells. Although previous dogma had held that induction was somehow dependent on interactions with the nervous system, the current findings suggest otherwise. Ozdener explains, "By producing new taste cells in an in vitro system, our results demonstrate that direct stimulation from nerves is not necessary to generate taste cells from precursors."

By using the cultured taste cells, researchers now have more precise control over the cell's surrounding environment, as well as better access to subcellular mechanisms, allowing them to ask certain questions that could not previously be addressed.

For instance, cultured cells can be used to study how taste stimuli interact to enhance good tastes or suppress unpleasant tastes. Similarly, new molecules, including potential artificial sweeteners or bitter blockers, can be evaluated to see if they interact with taste receptors to activate the cell.

Another important avenue for research aims to help people who have lost their sense of taste from radiation or diseases. Identification of factors that promote taste cell regeneration and growth may provide new avenues of treatment for these patients.

Researchers also hope to gain insight into how taste cell function changes across the lifespan, from infancy and childhood through old age.

Although the current experiments utilized rat taste cells, Ozdener, Rawson, and colleagues intend to use taste cell biopsies from humans to try to grow human taste cells.

Monell Chemical Senses Center



Related Taste Cells Current Events and Taste Cells News Articles Taste Cells Current Events and Taste Cells News RSS Taste Cells Current Events and Taste Cells News RSS
Airway cells use 'tasting' mechanism to detect and clear harmful substances
The same mechanism that helps you detect bad-tasting and potentially poisonous foods may also play a role in protecting your airway from harmful substances, according to a study by scientists at the University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine.

Flies prefer fizzy drinks
While you may not catch a fly sipping Perrier, the insect has specialized taste cells for carbonated water that probably encourage it to binge on food with growing microorganisms.

Researchers find new taste in fruit flies: carbonated water
That fruit fly hovering over your kitchen counter may be attracted to more than the bananas that are going brown; it may also want a sip of your carbonated water.

Discovery of 'sugar sensor' in intestine could benefit diabetes
Diabetes patients could benefit from new research at the University of Liverpool that has identified a molecule in the intestine that can 'taste' the sugar content of the diet.

Your gut has taste receptors
Researchers in the Department of Neuroscience at Mount Sinai School of Medicine have identified taste receptors in the human intestines.

Researchers identify the cells and receptor for sensing sour taste
In the last seven years, Howard Hughes Medical Institute researcher Charles S. Zuker and Nicholas J.P. Ryba at the National Institutes of Health have worked together to identify the cells, receptors and signaling mechanisms for three of the five tastes humans can sense - sweet, bitter, and umami (the taste of monosodium glutamate).

How taste response is hard-wired into the brain
Instantly reacting to the sweet lure of chocolate or the bitter taste of strychnine would seem to demand that such behavioral responses be so innate as to be hard-wired into the brain.

Parasites trigger healthy eating in caterpillars
Some parasites trigger their own destruction by altering their hosts' behavior, researchers at The University of Arizona and Wesleyan University report in Nature.
More Taste Cells Current Events and Taste Cells News Articles
Experimental Cell Biology of Taste and Olfaction: Current Techniques and Protocols

Experimental Cell Biology of Taste and Olfaction: Current Techniques and Protocols
by Andrew I. Spielman (Author), Joseph G. Brand (Author)

Experimental Cell Biology of Taste and Olfaction examines and adapts methods from a variety of established fields, such as neurophysiology, receptor biochemistry and cellular imaging to provide comprehensive coverage of current techniques and protocols in chemosensory cell biology. Written for both newcomers and established scientists, this volume offers numerous tips for problem solving and suggests ways to avoid the most common, and costly, mistakes made by researchers.This book covers general aspects such as tissue collection and preparation, as well as specific, up-to-date methods used in taste and olfactory morphology, immunology, biochemistry, biophysics, electrophysiology and molecular biology. The explosion of knowledge and the increased interest in these areas make this book an...

Daffy Duck: A Taste of Catnip Single Film Cell

Daffy Duck: A Taste of Catnip Single Film Cell

This is an original film cell from the movie listed above. Each cell is guaranteed to be original and comes with a Certificate of Authenticity. The cell you receive will be guaranteed to be from the movie but since each film cell is different we cannot guarantee it will be the actual one shown. Each cell comes protected in its own protective sleeve to prevent damage or scratching.

  Science Magazine 5 April 1991: Mediation of Responce to Calcuim in Taste Cells; Mapping the Code
by American Association For The Advancement of Science (Author)



Chemosensory Systems in Mammals, Fishes, and Insects (Results and Problems in Cell Differentiation)

Chemosensory Systems in Mammals, Fishes, and Insects (Results and Problems in Cell Differentiation)
by Wolfgang Meyerhof (Editor), Sigrun Korsching (Editor)

The sense of smell has varied roles in locating food, detecting predators, navigating, and communicating social information, whereas the taste system is focused on decision-making in food intake. The last decade has witnessed massive advances in understanding the molecular logic of chemosensory information processing, and the results for taste sensation were found to differ in interesting ways from those for smell sensation. The 12 chapters of this book cover the current knowledge about the chemosensory systems in mammalian, fish and insect models. The advantages of the different model systems are emphasized. The genomic characteristics and evolution of olfactory and gustatory receptor gene families are analyzed, rules for odorant receptor gene choice and axonal projection of the...

  The Human Body,(20 Vols):Brain,Mind,Respiration,Nervous System,Frontiers of Medicine,Genetics & Heredity,Kidneys,Reproduction,Endocrine System,Sourcebook,Digestion,Blood,Skeleton,Cell,Eye,Muscles,Skin,Growth & Development,Heart,&Hearing,Taste & Smell (The Human Body, 1-20)
by Torstar (Author), Roy B. Pinchot (Editor), Judith Gersten (Editor)

The Human Body in 20 separate volumes.

  Alternative fuel vehicles 'taste great, less filling': unique autos may not be ready for public for 10 years.(Transportation): An article from: San Diego Business Journal
by Lisa Kovach (Author)

This digital document is an article from San Diego Business Journal, published by CBJ, L.P. on September 20, 2004. The length of the article is 936 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Alternative fuel vehicles 'taste great, less filling': unique autos may not be ready for public for 10 years.(Transportation)
Author: Lisa Kovach
Publication: San Diego Business Journal (Magazine/Journal)
Date: September 20, 2004
Publisher: CBJ, L.P.
Volume: 25 Issue: 38 Page: 11(2)

Distributed by Thomson...

  Taste and SCC: low SCC in fluid milk can lead to more premiums, more sales.(somatic cell count): An article from: Dairy Today
by Meg Gaige (Author)

This digital document is an article from Dairy Today, published by Farm Journal Media on January 1, 2004. The length of the article is 731 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Taste and SCC: low SCC in fluid milk can lead to more premiums, more sales.(somatic cell count)
Author: Meg Gaige
Publication: Dairy Today (Magazine/Journal)
Date: January 1, 2004
Publisher: Farm Journal Media
Volume: 20 Issue: 1 Page: 24

Distributed by Thomson...

  Taste organ in the bullhead (Teleostei) (Advances in anatomy, embryology, and cell biology)
by Klaus Reutter (Author)



© 2009 BrightSurf.com