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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 274: R1324-R1330, 1998;
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Vol. 274, Issue 5, R1324-R1330, May 1998

Enhanced responses of the chorda tympani nerve to nonsugar sweeteners in the diabetic db/db mouse

Yuzo Ninomiya, Toshiaki Imoto, Akira Yatabe, Sanae Kawamura, Kiyohito Nakashima, and Hideo Katsukawa

Department of Oral Physiology, Chemistry and Pediatric Dentistry, Asahi University School of Dentistry, Motosu, Gifu 501-02; and Department of Physiology, Tottori University School of Medicine, Tottori 683, Japan

    ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Genetically diabetic db/db mice show greater neural and behavioral responses to sugars than lean control mice. The present study examined chorda tympani responses of db/db mice to nonsugar sweeteners and their inhibition by a sweet response inhibitor, gurmarin. The results showed that responses to sucrose, saccharin, glycine, L-alanine, and D-tryptophan, but not to D-phenylalanine, were ~1.5 times greater in db/db mice than in control mice. Treatment of the tongue with gurmarin suppressed responses to these sweeteners in db/db and control mice, but the extent of suppression was considerably smaller in db/db mice. The magnitudes of gurmarin-sensitive components of the response to sweeteners in db/db mice were not significantly different from those in control mice, whereas the magnitudes of gurmarin-insensitive components in db/db mice were about twice as large as those in control mice. These results suggest that the enhancement of chorda tympani responses in db/db mice to sucrose and other nonsugar sweeteners may occur through gurmarin-insensitive membrane components.

genetically diabetic mice; enhanced sweet taste responses; gurmarin-insensitive taste receptor

    INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

THE db/db mouse is known as a genetic model of non-insulin-dependent diabetes, in which a single gene defect (db gene) leads to the expression of diabetes with preceding hyperinsulinemia, hyperglycemia, and extreme obesity (2, 3). Our previous studies (19, 21) demonstrated that the db/db mice showed greater relative responses and lower thresholds of the chorda tympani nerve to sugars than lean control mice. The db/db mice did not differ from controls in responses to other basic taste substances (NaCl, HCl, and quinine HCl), suggesting a specific increase in response to sugars. The greater gustatory neural responses of db/db mice to sugars started to show at 7-10 days of age, at which time their insulin hypersecretion in response to glucose stimulation also starts (1). This indicates that hyperresponsiveness to sugar stimulation simultaneously appears on both taste and pancreatic B cells at this early stage. However, the mechanisms underlying genetic induction of the high sugar sensitivities in these cells have not yet been investigated.

In the present study, to investigate characteristics of the receptor system responsible for the high sugar sensitivities of the db/db mouse, we examined whether the chorda tympani responses of db/db mice to various nonsugar sweeteners, which would not be recognized by pancreatic B cells, would also be greater than those of control and whether the enhanced components of sweeteners responses in db/db mice would be suppressed by a new sweet response inhibitor, gurmarin (11, 15). The results suggested that greater sensitivities in db/db mice appeared not only to sugars but also to nonsugar sweeteners, except D-phenylalanine, and the enhanced sweetener responses probably occurred through gurmarin-insensitive membrane components.

    MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Subjects

Genetically diabetic mice. Diabetic and nondiabetic male littermates were obtained from mating pairs of the C57BL/KsJ-db/db mouse strain originally supplied from the Jackson Laboratories (Bar Harbor, ME). In this strain, the closely linked mutant fur color gene, misty (m), has been incorporated into stocks for maintenance of db in repulsion (db+/m+) to facilitate identification of heterozygotes for breeding. Therefore, adult diabetic mice with a black fur color (db+/db+: 8-20 wk of age, 50-62 g body wt) and nondiabetic mice with a gray (misty) fur color (m+/m+: 8-20 wk of age, 23-34 g body wt) were selectively obtained from the stock. Diabetic mice with db/db genotype are referred to as db/db mice, whereas nondiabetic control mice with +/+ genotype are referred to as control mice.

Measurement of blood glucose levels of diabetic and nondiabetic mice. Before the start of experiments, the blood glucose level of each mouse was measured by using a blood glucose autoanalyzer (Reflorax; Manheim-Toho). The blood of the animal was taken from the tail vein. The obtained blood glucose levels were 11.0 ± 0.98 mmol/l (n = 15) in control mice and 36.1 ± 6.7 mmol/l (n = 12) in db/db mice.

Electrophysiological Experiment

Recording of the mouse chorda tympani responses. Mice were anesthetized by an intraperitoneal injection of pentobarbital sodium (40-50 mg/kg body wt) and maintained at a surgical level of anesthesia with supplemental injections. The trachea was cannulated, and the mouse was then fixed in the supine position with a head holder to allow dissection of the chorda tympani nerve. The hypoglossal nerve was transected bilaterally to prevent inadvertent tongue movements. The right chorda tympani nerve was exposed at its exit from the lingual nerve by removal of the internal pterygoid muscle. The chorda tympani nerve was then dissected free from surrounding tissues and cut near its entrance to the bulla. For whole nerve recording, the entire nerve was placed on a silver wire electrode. An indifferent electrode was positioned nearby in the wound. Neural responses resulting from chemical stimulation of the tongue were fed into an amplifier (Iyodenshikogaku K-1) and displayed on an oscilloscope screen (Nihon Kohden VC-10). Whole nerve responses were integrated and displayed on a recorder (Nihon Kohden WS-641G). The time constant of the integrator was 1.0 s.

Chemical stimulation. The anterior one-half of the mouse's tongue was enclosed in a flow chamber made of silicone rubber (14). Solutions were delivered into the flow chamber by gravity flow and flowed over the tongue for a controlled period. Solutions used for chemical stimuli were as follows: 3.0 mM-1.0 M sucrose, 0.1 mM-0.02 M saccharin sodium, 3.0 mM-1.0 M glycine, 3.0 mM-1.0 M L-alanine, 0.1 mM-0.03 M D-tryptophan, 1.0 mM-0.1 M D-phenylalanine, 0.1 M NH4Cl, 0.1 M NaCl, 0.01 M HCl, and 0.02 M quinine HCl (all supplied from Nakarai Chemical, Osaka, Japan). The first six chemicals, which taste sweet to humans, were behaviorally categorized in the same group ("sweet group") in this strain of mice by using a conditioned taste-aversion paradigm (Y. Ninomiya and K. Nakashima, unpublished observation). These chemicals were dissolved in distilled water at 24°C. During chemical stimulation of the tongue, test solution flowed for ~30 s at the same flow rate as the distilled water used for rinsing the tongue (0.5 ml/s). The tongue was rinsed during an interval of ~1 min between successive stimulations. The stability of each preparation was monitored by the periodic application of 0.1 M NH4Cl. A recording was considered to be stable when the 0.1 M NH4Cl response magnitudes at the beginning and end of each stimulation series deviated by no more than 15%. Only responses from stable recordings were used in the data analysis.

To examine gurmarin inhibition of responses, the tongue was treated with 1.0-100 µg/ml (~0.24-23.8 µM) gurmarin dissolved in 5 mM phosphate buffer (pH 6.8) for 10 min in the same manner as that described in our previous reports (15, 16). Gurmarin, a peptide consisting of 35 amino acids (molecular weight of 4,209), was obtained from the leaves of the Indian plant Gymnema sylvestre by using procedures previously reported (11). Our previous study (15) showed that the time course of recovery from suppression after gurmarin varies considerably among sweeteners (the suppressed responses to fructose and saccharin started to recover within 30 min after gurmarin, whereas those to sucrose and glucose remained suppressed for >1 h). Therefore, to maintain stable levels of the gurmarin inhibition, the tongue was repeatedly treated with gurmarin for 1 min with a 5-min intertreatment interval during recording of taste responses. Adaptation of the tongue to the buffer without gurmarin by itself had no effect on the magnitude of response.

Data analysis. In the analysis of whole nerve responses, the magnitude of the integrated response at 20 s after stimulus onset was measured. Relative response magnitude for each stimulus was calculated when the response magnitude to 0.1 M NH4Cl was taken as a unity (1.0), and this was used for statistical analysis.

    RESULTS
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Enhancement of Chorda Tympani Responses of the db/db Mice to Sweeteners

Figure 1 shows integrated responses of the chorda tympani nerve to 11 taste stimuli in the db/db and control mice. In both db/db and control mice, responses to NH4Cl, NaCl, HCl, and quinine HCl showed the initial dynamic phase followed by the steady phase. Magnitudes of responses to these stimuli were similar between the two groups of mice. In contrast, magnitudes of responses to sweeteners, except D-phenylalanine, were prominently larger in the db/db mouse than the control mouse. As shown in Table 1, relative magnitudes of responses to the five sweeteners in db/db mice were 1.4-1.6 times greater than those in control mice with statistical significances (t-test, P < 0.05-0.001), whereas no such difference was observed in responses to NaCl, HCl, quinine HCl, and D-phenylalanine. The order of the response magnitude among the six sweeteners in db/db mice was not different from that in control mice: 0.02 M saccharin > 0.3 M sucrose > 0.3 M glycine = 0.3 M L-alanine > 0.03 M D-tryptophan > 0.1 M D- phenylalanine.


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Fig. 1.   Sample recordings of integrated responses of the chorda tympani nerve of control (+/+) and diabetic (db/db) mice to 10 taste stimuli. Qui, quinine HCl; Suc, sucrose; Sac, saccharin Na; Gly, glycine; L-Ala, L-alanine; D-Try, D-tryptophan; D-Phe, D-phenylalanine.

                              
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Table 1.   Relative response magnitudes of the chorda tympani nerve of db/db and +/+ mice to 10 taste stimuli when response magnitude to NH4 Cl was taken as unity

Concentration-response relationships for six sweeteners in db/db and control mice are shown in Fig. 2. At all concentrations tested, relative magnitudes of responses to sucrose, saccharin, glycine, L-alanine, and D-tryptophan were significantly greater in db/db than in control mice (t-test, P < 0.05-0.001). No such difference was observed in responses to D-phenylalanine [ANOVA, F(1,10) = 0.699, P > 0.05]. Therefore, D-phenylalanine may be an exception, a sweetener to which responses are not enhanced in db/db mice. Table 2 shows the dissociation constant (Kd value) and the maximum response (Vmax value) for each stimulus in control and db/db mice measured by using data of the four highest concentrations of each stimulus. Except for D-phenylalanine, db/db mice showed lower Kd values (ranging from 38.5 to 52.9% of that of control mice) and higher Vmax values than control mice for the other five sweeteners (ranging from 117.4 to 132.2% of that of control mice).


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Fig. 2.   Concentration-response relationships of the chorda tympani nerve of control (open circle ) and db/db (bullet ) mice for 6 sweeteners. Relative responses represented are means ± SD. Data were obtained from 6 or 7 mice. A: sucrose; B: saccharin; C: glycine; D: L-alanine; E: D-tryptophan; F: D-phenylalanine.

                              
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Table 2.   Kd and Vmax obtained from the kinetic analysis of concentration-response relationships for 6 sweeteners in db/db and +/+ mice

Inhibition of Gurmarin on Responses to Sweeteners in db/db and Control Mice

Figure 3 shows sample records of the integrated responses to six sweeteners and NH4Cl before and after the lingual treatment with 100 µg/ml (~23.8 M) gurmarin for 10 min in db/db and control mice. In both db/db and control mice, responses to the six sweeteners were suppressed by gurmarin, whereas no suppression was observed in response to NH4Cl. Although data were not shown, responses to the other basic taste stimuli, NaCl, HCl, and quinine HCl, were not inhibited by gurmarin, suggesting the specificity of the inhibitory effect of gurmarin on sweeteners, as previously reported (11, 15). As shown in Table 3, except for D-phenylalanine, the normalized responses (percent responses: control = 100) to the other five sweeteners after gurmarin were larger in db/db than in control mice (see also Fig. 6B). The mean (±SD) of percent responses to the five sweeteners after 100 µg/ml gurmarin was 66.0 ± 5.1% in db/db mice, which was significantly larger than that in control mice (52.0 ± 4.5%, t-test, P < 0.01).


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Fig. 3.   Sample recordings of integrated responses of the chorda tympani nerve of control (+/+) and db/db mice to 0.1 M NH4Cl and 6 sweeteners before and after the lingual treatment with 100 µg/ml gurmarin.

                              
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Table 3.   Normalized control responses of the chorda tympani nerve of db/db and +/+ mice to 6 sweeteners after the lingual treatment with 100 µg/ml gurmarin

The concentration dependence of the effect of gurmarin also suggests that the relative magnitudes of gurmarin suppression of responses to sucrose are larger in control than in db/db mice (Fig. 4). Significant suppression of sucrose responses by gurmarin was observed at 3 µg/ml (~0.7 µM) or more in control and 30 µg/ml (~7.1 µM) or more in db/db mice (t-test, P < 0.05). In both strains, the magnitude of gurmarin inhibition of sucrose responses reached a plateau (percent responses of control: 50.8 ± 7.2% for control mice and 73.4 ± 5.7% for db/db mice) at 30 µg/ml (~7.1 µM). Percent responses after each concentration of 3-100 µg/ml gurmarin in the two strains were significantly different (t-test, P < 0.05-0.01).


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Fig. 4.   Normalized response (percent response, control = 100%, before gurmarin) of the chorda tympani nerve of control (open circle ) and db/db (bullet ) mice to 0.3 M sucrose after treatment with gurmarin at different concentrations. Effect of gurmarin at each concentration was tested by using 4-8 mice. Percent responses represented are means ± SD. Significant difference from control was tested with data of relative magnitudes of responses when the magnitude of responses to 0.1 M NH4Cl was taken as unity (1.0): t-test, * P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01; *** P < 0.001.

Gurmarin-Sensitive and -Insensitive Components of Responses to Sweeteners

Figure 5 shows concentration-response relationships for sucrose of the gurmarin-sensitive and -insensitive components. The gurmarin-sensitive component of the response to each stimulus was obtained by subtracting the residual response after gurmarin (100 µg/ml) from the response before gurmarin. The gurmarin-insensitive component of each stimulus is the residual response after gurmarin. It is noted that gurmarin-insensitive components of sucrose responses in db/db mice are much larger (2.0-9.2 times) than those in control mice [ANOVA, F(1,12) = 118.74, P < 0.001, and t-test at each concentration, P < 0.001], whereas no significant difference between the two groups is observed in gurmarin-sensitive components [F(1,12) = 1.55, P > 0.05]. The Kd and Vmax values of gurmarin-sensitive components of sucrose responses in db/db mice were ~61.7 mM and 0.44, respectively, which were not greatly different from those in control mice (~84.0 mM and 0.53). In contrast, much larger differences between the two mouse strains were observed in the Kd and Vmax values of the gurmarin-insensitive components. The Kd value in db/db mice was 44.3% (~55.4 mM) of that of control mice (~125.0 mM), whereas the Vmax value in db/db mice (1.22) was about two times greater than that of control mice (0.60). Furthermore, the gurmarin-insensitive components of responses to nonsugar sweeteners, except D-phenylalanine are ~1.6-2.0 times greater in db/db than control mice (Fig. 6, t-test, P < 0.01-0.001), whereas the gurmarin-sensitive components were not different between the two groups (t-test, P > 0.05). These results suggest that the differences found in chorda tympani responses to sweeteners between db/db and control mice are derived mainly from the gurmarin-insensitive components of responses.


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Fig. 5.   Concentration-response relationships of gurmarin-sensitive (A) and -insensitive (B) components to sucrose in control (open circle ) and db/db (bullet ) mice. Gurmarin-sensitive component of response to each stimulus was obtained by subtraction of the residual response after gurmarin (100 µg/ml) from the response before gurmarin. Gurmarin-insensitive component to each stimulus is the residual response after gurmarin. Relative responses represented are means ± SD. Data were obtained from 7 mice.


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Fig. 6.   Gurmarin-sensitive (A) and -insensitive (B) components of responses of control (open bars) and db/db (filled bars) mice to 6 sweeteners. Relative responses represented are means ± SD. Data were obtained from 6 or 7 mice. Significant difference in response components for each stimulus between control and db/db mice was tested: t-test, ** P < 0.01; *** P < 0.001.

    DISCUSSION
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Larger Chorda Tympani Responses of db/db Mice to Nonsugar Sweeteners

The present study revealed that db/db mice had larger responses of the chorda tympani nerve than control mice not only to sucrose but also to the nonsugar sweeteners, except D-phenylalanine. Responses to the other basic taste stimuli, NaCl, HCl, and quinine HCl, were not different between the two strains, as reported previously (19), suggesting a specific increase in responses to sweet substances in db/db mice (the specificity observed in responses to D-phenylalanine is discussed later). The order of the relative magnitude of responses to six sweeteners tested in db/db mice was not different from that in control mice. This indicates that receptor sensitivities to sweet substances may be generally enhanced in db/db mice. Our previous study (19) demonstrated that in correspondence to peripheral neural responses db/db mice showed higher behavioral preferences to sugars in the two-bottle test than control mice. Similarly, our recent behavioral study (6) using the two-bottle test showed that preference scores for saccharin but not for D-phenylalanine were larger in db/db than in control mice. Because the intake for these nonsugar sweeteners must not be on a caloric basis, differential behavioral preferences to these sweeteners could at least partially be due to the observed differential gustatory neural sensitivities to them.

Inhibition of Chorda Tympani Responses to Sweeteners by Gurmarin and Gurmarin-Sensitive and -Insensitive Response Components

Although chorda tympani responses of db/db mice to all sweeteners tested were significantly suppressed by 100 µg/ml gurmarin, the degree of suppression was smaller and the threshold of gurmarin inhibition was higher than that in control mice. As shown in Fig. 5, the gurmarin inhibition on sucrose responses reached the maximum at 30 µg/ml in both strains. Therefore, differences in the percent suppression cannot be due to concentration of gurmarin tested (100 µg/ml). Thus the results may imply relatively low sensitivity of the receptor system of db/db mice to gurmarin. However, comparison of magnitudes of the gurmarin-sensitive and -insensitive components of responses showed that 100 µg/ml gurmarin suppressed almost equal amounts of responses to various sweeteners in db/db and control mice (Fig. 6). No significant difference was observed in the magnitude of gurmarin-sensitive components to various sweeteners in two strains. This suggests that gurmarin might fully block the activity of gurmarin-sensitive sweet receptor system in both strains at concentrations of 30 µg/ml or more. Because the remaining gurmarin-insensitive responses to sweeteners probably are much larger in db/db than control mice, this would result in the observed smaller percent suppression in db/db mice. The kinetic analysis of the concentration-response relationship for sucrose further suggests that differences in the Kd and Vmax values for sucrose responses between control (~125.3 mM and 1.21) and db/db mice (~48.3 mM and 1.60) may be solely due to differences in the values for gurmarin-insensitive components between the two strains [control mice, ~125.0 mM and 0.60 (+0.53 of the gurmarin-sensitive component); db/db mice, ~55.4 mM and 1.22 (+0.44 of the gurmarin-sensitive component)].

Existence of two different receptor systems for sweeteners, gurmarin-sensitive and -insensitive ones, has been strongly suggested by two major findings in our previous studies in mice (15, 16). One is the strain difference in gurmarin inhibition. Chorda tympani responses to sweet substances in C57BL mice were suppressed by gurmarin to ~50% of control, whereas no such inhibition was observed in BALB mice (15). The other is the nerve-specific inhibition of gurmarin. Even in C57BL mice, responses of the glossopharyngeal nerve innervating taste buds in the circumvallate and foliate papillae were not suppressed by gurmarin (16). These strain and nerve specificities observed in inhibition of sweet responses by gurmarin were very similar to those found in inhibition of salt responses by amiloride, a sodium channel blocker (18, 20). It has been shown that the lingual treatment with a proteolytic enzyme, pronase, specifically and totally suppressed chorda tympani responses to various sweeteners ("sweet response component") in rats (9) and sweet perception in humans (9). In mice, for most sweeteners tested, their residual responses after gurmarin treatment (~50% of control) were, therefore, further suppressed to baseline levels by pronase (16, 21). This indicates that the sweet response component for the sweeteners in mice occurs through both gurmarin-sensitive and -insensitive receptor components.

The present study showed that chorda tympani responses to D-phenylalanine, unlike the other sweeteners, did not differ between db/db and control mice. In our previous studies in C57BL mice, it was found that responses to D-phenylalanine were suppressed by gurmarin and pronase to similar extents (~50% of control) (15, 17), and unlike those to the other various sweeteners the residual responses to D-phenylalanine after gurmarin were not suppressed by further treatment with pronase. This suggests that the sweet response component to D-phenylalanine would occur exclusively through the gurmarin-sensitive sweet receptors. No significant difference in response to D-phenylalanine between db/db and control mice observed in this study may, therefore, give another indication of no difference in gurmarin sensitivity in the two strains.

As mentioned above, sweetener responses of the mouse glossopharyngeal nerve were gurmarin insensitive. Our recent preliminary study showed that relative magnitudes of responses of the glossopharyngeal nerve to sucrose and saccharin were also larger in db/db than in control mice (Y. Ninomiya, M. Inoue, and T. Imoto, unpublished observation). Taken together, the results of this study suggest that the observed enhancement of sweetener sensitivities in db/db mice would occur through the gurmarin-insensitive component of sweet receptor systems.

What Is the Major Determinant for Enhanced Sweet Responses in db/db Mice?

Previous studies have demonstrated that streptozotocin- and alloxan-induced diabetic mice and rats showed no detectable difference in chorda tympani responses to sugars compared with the control animals (8, 15). This suggests that diabetic status itself would not be the primary influence on the neural responses to sugars. Moreover, it was found that the db/db mice at 7-9 days of age already have higher chorda tympani responses to sugars, comparable with those in the adult db/db mice (15). At this age, db/db mice also started to show insulin hypersecretion in response to glucose stimulation (1), although the pathophysiological states of db/db mice, such as obesity, hyperglycemia, or transient hyperinsulinemia, become clearly evident at 3-5 wk of age (2, 3). If there is a common mechanism for the hyperresponsiveness in the two different cell types, that would not be at the recognition site for stimulants, because the proposed mechanism of glucose recognition is different between the two types of cells (13). The taste cell is thought to recognize glucose at its receptor site, whereas the pancreatic B cell is believed to metabolize glucose for signal production for insulin release. Consistently, the present results indicate that greater responses in db/db mice appeared not only to sugars but also to nonsugar sweeteners, which would not be recognized by pancreatic B cells. The factor responsible for hyperresponsiveness to sugar would be more likely involved in the intracellular transduction mechanisms.

Recently, it was found that db/db mice have defects at the receptor for the ob gene product leptin, which is an important circulating signal for the regulation of body weight (a weight-reducing factor) (22). In db/db mice, the leptin receptor is abnormally spliced and is missing the cytoplasmic region responsible for signal transduction (12). The leptin receptor resembles class 1 cytokine receptors, such as the gp130 signal-transducing component of the interleukin-6 receptor, the granulocyte colony-stimulating factor receptor, and the leukemia inhibitory factor receptor (5), and is expressed in various tissues, including adipose tissue, hypothalamus, choroid plexus, lung, kidney, liver, and muscle (10). More recently, it has been reported that the full-length leptin receptor, which is believed to transmit the leptin signal, is expressed in pancreatic islets (4), and leptin suppressed insulin secretion of the pancreatic B cells by the activation of ATP-sensitive K+ channels in mice (7). Therefore, it is possible that the leptin receptor is also expressed in taste cells and that the circulating leptin modifies activities of taste cells through the receptor. If the increasing level of leptin would decrease activities of taste cells in normal control mice, lack of signal transduction for leptin in db/db mice may increase their activities and lead to hyperresponsiveness to sugars. The results obtained from this study lead to further speculation that the db gene may express the leptin receptor specifically in taste cells possessing gurmarin-insensitive sweet receptors. Investigations on possible expression of leptin receptor and modifying effects of leptin in taste cells are now in progress. Future extensive studies on the action of the db gene may lead to an answer to these questions.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Dr. Bruce P. Bryant for valuable comments and suggestions on the manuscript.

    FOOTNOTES

This work was supported by Grant-in-Aid 09470407 and 09557147 for Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan.

Address for reprint requests: Y. Ninomiya, Dept. of Oral Physiology, Asahi Univ. School of Dentistry, Hozumi, Motosu, Gifu 501-02, Japan.

Received 1 October 1997; accepted in final form 22 January 1998.

    REFERENCES
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

1.   Basabe, J. C., L. M. Karabatas, M. Arata, O. H. Pivetto, and J. C. Cresto. Secretion and effect of somatostatin in early stages of the diabetic syndrome in C57BL/KsJ-mdb mice. Diabetologia 29: 485-488, 1986[Medline].

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12.   Lee, G. H., R. Proenca, J. M. Montez, K. M. Carroll, J. G. Darvishzadeh, J. I. Lee, and J. M. Friedman. Abnormal splicing of the leptin receptor in diabetic mice. Nature 379: 622-625, 1996.

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AJP Regul Integr Compar Physiol 274(5):R1324-R1330
0363-6119/98 $5.00 Copyright © 1998 the American Physiological Society



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