Sodium taste regulates salt intake. The amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) is the Na sensor in taste cells mediating attraction to sodium salts. However, cells and intracellular signaling underlying sodium taste in taste buds remain long-standing enigmas. Here, we show that a subset of taste cells with ENaC activity fire action potentials in response to ENaC-mediated Na influx without changing the intracellular Ca concentration and form a channel synapse with afferent neurons involving the voltage-gated neurotransmitter-release channel composed of calcium homeostasis modulator 1 (CALHM1) and CALHM3 (CALHM1/3). Genetic elimination of ENaC in CALHM1-expressing cells as well as global CALHM3 deletion abolished amiloride-sensitive neural responses and attenuated behavioral attraction to NaCl. Together, sodium taste is mediated by cells expressing ENaC and CALHM1/3, where oral Na entry elicits suprathreshold depolarization for action potentials driving voltage-dependent neurotransmission via the channel synapse. Thus, all steps in sodium taste signaling are voltage driven and independent of Ca signals. This work also reveals ENaC-independent salt attraction.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2020.03.006 | DOI Listing |
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