| March 16, 2000
Media Contact: Kim
McDonald (858) 534-7572
IDENTIFICATION OF
BITTER-TASTE GENES PROVIDES INSIGHT INTO THE ORGANIZATION OF THE TASTE
SYSTEM
Scientists at the University of
California, San Diego and their colleagues at the National Institute
of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) have identified a new
family of genes that encode proteins that function as bitter taste
receptors.
The achievement, which is
reported in two articles in the March 17 issue of the journal Cell by
the researchers, who are also Howard Hughes Medical Institute
investigators, provides important insights into the organization of
the taste system.
"We've been trying for the
past four years to understand how the taste system works, focusing
primarily on sweet and bitter signaling," says Charles S. Zuker,
a professor of biology at UCSD. Now, the researchers have conducted a
series of experiments that they say demonstrates that this family of
genes indeed contains human and rodent taste receptors.
"We now have the means to
really start to investigate how taste works, not just in the tongue,
but also what happens in the brain," says Nicholas Ryba of NIDCR.
The research group includes
Zuker and colleagues Ken Mueller, Jayaram Chandrashekar and Wei Guo of
UCSD; Elliot Adler, Mark Hoon and Ryba of the NIDCR; and Luxin Feng of
Aurora Biosciences in La Jolla, Calif.
In 1999, a team led by Zuker
and Ryba reported the discovery of two genes, T1R1 and T1R2, which had
most of the characteristics expected of taste receptor genes. The
genes resembled other known sensory receptor genes and were expressed
in the appropriate places inside taste receptor cells on the tongue
and palate. But Zuker and Ryba hypothesized that two receptors seemed
far too few to handle the huge number of chemicals that produce sweet
and bitter substances. What's more, T1R1 and T1R2 generally were not
found in the same places as gustducin, a coupling protein critical in
sending the bitter signal from taste buds to the brain.
"That meant that we were
missing the family of taste receptors that coupled with gustducin,"
say study co-authors Mueller and Adler, "so we set out to
identify those receptors." In their latest studies, the
researchers focused on a specific interval of DNA on one human
chromosome that was known to be associated with the ability to taste
the bitter compound PROP (6-n-propylthiouracil). They identified a
likely looking receptor sequence in that stretch of DNA, and showed
that it belonged to a family of some 80 genes, which they dubbed T2Rs.
Like T1R1 and T1R2, the T2R genes were selectively expressed in taste
receptor cells, but there was even better news.
"If you look at the
expression of this new family, you find that every cell that expresses
one of these receptors is a gustducin-expressing cell," says
Zuker.
Next, the researchers screened
libraries of mouse genes in a search for the mouse versions of the new
gene family. Mice are useful in studying taste because strains have
been bred with the inborn ability to taste or not taste certain bitter
substances. Studies of these mice have pinpointed a cluster of gene
positions on mouse chromosome six that are associated with the tasting
of a number of bitter substances. When Zuker's and Ryba's group mapped
the mouse versions of their new gene family to mouse chromosomes,
"Bingo, a whole set of them sat right on top of that bitter
cluster!" says Zuker.
Everything so far hinted that
T2Rs were bitter taste receptors, but the researchers still did not
have definitive proof. "To get that, we needed to show that when
we put in a bitter compound, the compound binds to the receptor, and
that triggers activity in the receptor cells," Zuker explains.
That's difficult to do in a living system, so the researchers
engineered laboratory-cultured cells to "report" activity
when properly triggered.
"We were able to show that
three of the receptors - two mouse and one human - specifically
signaled in response to bitter taste," says Chandrashekar, the
first author of one of the Cell articles. One of the mouse receptors
responded to cyclohexamide, a bitter compound for which there are
mouse "taster" and "nontaster" strains. "It
turns out that the receptor gene from the nontasters differed from
that in the tasters," representing two alternate forms, or
alleles, of the gene, says Zuker. When the researchers compared
engineered cells containing the nontaster allele to those containing
the taster allele, "we saw a corresponding shift in their
sensitivity to cyclohexamide."
The new work helps explain, on
a molecular level, the "logic" behind the taste system and
how it differs from the olfactory system. The olfactory system is
designed to recognize a wide range of odors and to discriminate one
odor from another - an essential ability if one is to avoid such
inappropriate responses as mistaking a mate for a snack. The
organization of the olfactory system reflects this need, with each
olfactory neuron expressing only one of the 1,000 or so olfactory
receptor genes.
Taste is a different matter,
especially where bitter compounds are concerned. Virtually every
naturally occurring toxin tastes bitter, "so bitterness clearly
evolved with the sole purpose of warning you against the ingestion of
toxic substances," says Zuker. The important thing is to
recognize and reject anything bitter, not to get hung up on
distinctions among different compounds. Indeed, experimental evidence
indicates that humans are unable to discriminate one bitter substance
from another.
"This imposes an
interesting contrast with the olfactory system, and we now have found
the logic behind it," says Hoon. Every cell that expresses genes
in the T2R family expresses nearly all the genes in that family.
"So rather than having one receptor per cell, like olfaction, you
have many. This dramatically increases the repertoire of bitter things
you can taste, but since the receptors are all in the same cell and
the cell simply fires when activated, you do not discriminate."
Zuker is satisfied that the T2R
family of genes represents at least a subset of bitter taste
receptors, but there's more work to be done: tracing pathways from
receptor cells to the brain, generating "knockout" mice that
lack T2Rs and studying their taste deficits, and searching for more
gustducin-linked receptors. "This study will help scientists
decipher the mechanisms behind how humans taste and allow them to
discover ways to modulate the sense of taste so as to enhance the
human taste experience," he says. |