Responses to Binary Mixtures of Amino Acids in the Facial Taste System of the Channel Catfish

1994 ◽  
pp. 750-750
Author(s):  
K. Ogawa ◽  
J. Caprio
1997 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiesheng Kang ◽  
John Caprio

Kang, Jiesheng and John Caprio. In vivo response of single olfactory receptor neurons of channel catfish to binary mixtures of amino acids. J. Neurophysiol. 77: 1–8, 1997. For the first time in any vertebrate, in vivo responses of single olfactory receptor neurons to odorant mixtures were studied quantitatively. Extracellular electrophysiological response of 54 single olfactory receptor neurons from 23 channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus, to binary mixtures of amino acids and to their components were recorded simultaneously with the electroolfactogram (EOG). For 57% (73 of 128) of the tests, no significant change (N) from spontaneous activity occurred. Responses to the remaining 55 tests of binary mixtures were excitatory (E; 13%) or suppressive (S; 30%). No response type was associated with any specific mixture across the neurons sampled. Eighty-six percent of the responses of catfish olfactory receptor neurons to binary mixtures were classifed similar to at least one of the component responses, a percentage comparable (i.e., 89%) with that observed for single olfactory bulb neurons in the same species to equivalent binary mixtures. The responses of single olfactory receptor neurons to component-similar binary mixtures (i.e., component responses were both E, both S, and both N, respectively) were generally (80% of 59 tests) classified similar to the responses to the components. For E+N and S+N binary mixtures, the N component often (66% of 58 tests) reduced or concealed (i.e., “masked”) the excitatory and suppressive responses, respectively. For the majority (6 of 11 tests) of E+S binary mixtures, null activity resulted. Responses to the remaining five tests were either excitatory ( n = 3) or suppressive ( n = 2).


1999 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 564-569 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Ogawa ◽  
J. Caprio

We investigated the neural processing of binary gustatory mixtures of amino acids by the facial taste system of the channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus. In vivo electrophysiological recordings indicated that the magnitude of both integrated and single-unit facial taste responses to binary mixtures of amino acids was greatest if the components bound to independent receptor sites. Facial taste responses were obtained from 32 multiunit and 55 single taste fiber preparations to binary mixtures of amino acids whose components bind to independent taste receptor sites (group I) or to the same or highly cross-reactive taste receptor sites (group II). All component stimuli were adjusted in concentration to provide approximately equal response magnitude as determined by either the height of the integrated multiunit taste response or by the number of action potentials generated/3 s of response time/single taste fiber. The mixture discrimination index (MDI), defined as the response to the mixture divided by the average of the responses to the component stimuli, was calculated for each test of a binary mixture. MDIs of group I binary mixtures for both the integrated multiunit and single fiber data were significantly greater than those for either the control or group II binary mixtures. In a subset of multiunit recordings, the MDIs of a group I binary mixture across three log units of stimulus concentration were similar and significantly greater than those of a group II binary mixture. Analysis of the single fiber data also indicated that the MDIs of group I binary mixtures were significantly larger than those of group II binary mixtures for both alanine-best and arginine-best taste fibers; however, the MDIs of group I binary mixtures calculated from recordings from arginine-best taste fibers were significantly greater than those recorded from alanine-best taste fibers.


1991 ◽  
Vol 98 (4) ◽  
pp. 699-721 ◽  
Author(s):  
J S Kang ◽  
J Caprio

In vivo electrophysiological recordings from populations of olfactory receptor neurons in the channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus, clearly showed that both electro-olfactogram and integrated neural responses of olfactory receptor cells to complex mixtures consisting of up to 10 different amino acids were predictable with knowledge of (a) the responses to the individual components in the mixture and (b) the relative independence of the respective receptor sites for the component stimuli. All amino acid stimuli used to form the various mixtures were initially adjusted in concentration to provide approximately equal response magnitudes. Olfactory receptor responses to both multimixtures and binary mixtures were recorded. Multimixtures were formed by mixing equal aliquots of 3-10 different amino acids. Binary mixtures were formed by mixing equal aliquots of two equally stimulatory solutions. Solution 1 contained either one to nine different neutral amino acids with long side-chains (LCNs) or one to five different neutral amino acids with short side-chains (SCNs). Solution 2, comprising the binary mixture, consisted of only a single stimulus, either a LCN, SCN, basic, or acidic amino acid. The increasing magnitude of the olfactory receptor responses to mixtures consisting of an increasing number of neutral amino acids indicated that multiple receptor site types with highly overlapping specificities exist to these compounds. For both binary mixtures and multimixtures composed of neutral and basic or neutral and acidic amino acids, the receptor responses were significantly enhanced compared with those mixtures consisting of an equal number of only neutral amino acids. These results demonstrate that receptor sites for the basic and acidic amino acids, respectively, are highly independent of those for the neutral amino acids, and suggest that a mechanism for synergism is the simultaneous activation of relatively independent receptor sites by the components in the mixture. In contrast, there was no evidence for the occurrence of mixture suppression.


1995 ◽  
Vol 74 (4) ◽  
pp. 1435-1443 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Kang ◽  
J. Caprio

1. For the first time in any vertebrate, responses of single olfactory bulb neurons to odorant mixtures were studied quantitatively in the channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus. 2. Extracellular electrophysiological responses of 61 single olfactory bulb neurons from 36 channel catfish to binary mixtures of amino acids and to their components were recorded simultaneously with the electro-olfactogram (EOG). Tested were a total of 297 mixture trials consisting of 18 different stimulus pairs formed from 8 amino acids. 3. For 42% (126 of the 297) of the tests, no significant change (N) from spontaneous activity occurred. Responses to the remaining 171 tests of binary mixtures were excitatory (E; 29%) or suppressive (S; 29%). No response type was associated with any specific mixture across the neurons sampled. 4. Mixture interactions that changed response types (E or S) from those observed to the individual components were rare, because 89% of the responses of single olfactory bulb neurons to the tested binary mixtures were classified similarly as the responses to at least one of the components. 5. Responses of single olfactory bulb neurons were generally predictable for binary mixtures whose component responses were classified as both E, both S, and both N. For binary mixtures whose component responses were classified differently (e.g., one component evoked excitatory responses and the other evoked suppressive responses), the predictability of the response was dependent on the specific mixture type.


1999 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. 1603-1607 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Ogawa ◽  
J. Caprio

Citrate ions enhance taste responses to amino acids in the largemouth bass. The glossopharyngeal (IX) taste system of the largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides, is highly selective to amino acids and is poorly responsive to trisodium citrate; however, IX taste responses to specific concentrations of l- andd-arginine and l-lysine but notl-proline were enhanced by citrate but not sodium ions. Binary mixtures of l-arginine (3 × 10−4M and 10−3 M) or d-arginine (10−3M) + trisodium citrate (10−3 M; pH 7–9) resulted in enhanced taste activity, whereas binary mixtures of higher concentrations (10−2 M and 10−1 M) ofl- or d-arginine + 10−3 M trisodium citrate were not significantly different from the response to the amino acid alone. Under continuous adaptation to 10−3M citrate, taste responses to l-arginine were also enhanced at the identical concentrations previously indicated, but responses to 10−2 M and 10−1 Ml-arginine were significantly suppressed. Under continuous adaptation to 10−2 M l-arginine, taste responses to 10−2 M, 10−1 M, and 100 M citrate were significantly enhanced. Cellular concentrations of both citrate and amino acids in prey of the carnivorous largemouth bass are sufficient for this taste-enhancing effect to occur naturally during consummatory feeding behavior. Citrate acting as a calcium chelator is presented as a possible mechanism of action for the enhancement effect.


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