AI Article Synopsis

  • Food is a multisensory experience, relying on visuals, taste, smell, and, surprisingly, texture to assess nutritional value and safety.
  • Despite being overlooked, texture offers crucial information about food's physical properties, like hardness and liquidity.
  • Recent findings show that some sensory neurons are not limited to specific stimuli; instead, they can respond broadly, indicating greater sensory complexity than previously thought.

Article Abstract

Food presents a multisensory experience, with visual, taste, and olfactory cues being important in allowing an animal to determine the safety and nutritional value of a given substance. Texture, however, remains a surprisingly unexplored aspect, despite providing key information about the state of the food through properties such as hardness, liquidity, and granularity. Food perception is achieved by specialised sensory neurons, which themselves are defined by the receptor genes they express. While it was assumed that sensory neurons respond to one or few closely related stimuli, more recent findings challenge this notion and support evidence that certain sensory neurons are more broadly tuned. In the Drosophila taste system, gustatory neurons respond to cues of opposing hedonic valence or to olfactory cues. Here, we identified that larvae ingest and navigate towards specific food substrate hardnesses and probed the role of gustatory organs in this behaviour. By developing a genetic tool targeting specifically gustatory organs, we show that these organs are major contributors for evaluation of food hardness and ingestion decision-making. We find that ablation of gustatory organs not only results in loss of chemosensation, but also navigation and ingestion preference to varied substrate hardnesses. Furthermore, we show that certain neurons in the primary taste organ exhibit varied and concurrent physiological responses to mechanical and multimodal stimulation. We show that individual neurons house independent mechanisms for multiple sensory modalities, challenging assumptions about capabilities of sensory neurons. We propose that further investigations, across the animal kingdom, may reveal higher sensory complexity than currently anticipated.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3002730DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Food is a multisensory experience, relying on visuals, taste, smell, and, surprisingly, texture to assess nutritional value and safety.
  • Despite being overlooked, texture offers crucial information about food's physical properties, like hardness and liquidity.
  • Recent findings show that some sensory neurons are not limited to specific stimuli; instead, they can respond broadly, indicating greater sensory complexity than previously thought.
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