The turnover and re-establishment of peripheral taste synapses is vital to maintain connectivity between the primary taste receptor cells and the gustatory neurons which relay taste information from the tongue to the brain. Despite the importance of neuron-taste cell reconnection, mechanisms governing synapse assembly and the specificity of synaptic connections is largely unknown. Here we use the expression of presynaptic proteins, CALHM1 and Bassoon, to probe whether nerve fiber connectivity is an initiating factor for the recruitment of presynaptic machinery in different populations of taste cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMammalian taste buds are highly regenerative and can restore themselves after normal wear and tear of the lingual epithelium or following physical and chemical insults, including burns, chemotherapy, and nerve injury. This is due to the continual proliferation, differentiation, and maturation of taste progenitor cells, which then must reconnect with peripheral gustatory neurons to relay taste signals to the brain. The turnover and re-establishment of peripheral taste synapses are vital to maintain this complex sensory system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Previous studies indicate that taste dysfunction occurs early in the development of Alzheimer's disease. It is debatable whether the deficit in taste is due primarily to peripheral sensory mechanisms or to central processing, or a combination of the two.
Objective: The aim of our current study is to combine behavior and histological data in APP/PS1 transgenic mice to determine whether APP/PS1 transgenic mice show deficits in unconditioned taste preference and avoidance behaviors and whether taste impairments are due to defects in the peripheral taste system and/or problems with central processing of taste information.