Sweet and umami tastes are elicited by sweet and umami receptors on the tongue and palate epithelium,respectively.However,the molecular machinery allowing the taste reaction remains incompletely understood.Through a p...Sweet and umami tastes are elicited by sweet and umami receptors on the tongue and palate epithelium,respectively.However,the molecular machinery allowing the taste reaction remains incompletely understood.Through a phosphoproteomic approach,we identified the key proteins that trigger taste mechanisms based on phosphorylation cascades.Ryanodine receptor isoform 1(RYR1)was further verified by sensory and behavioral assays.We propose a model of RYR1-mediated sweet/umami signaling in which the RYR1 channel,which mediates Ca^(2+)release from the endoplasmic reticulum,is closed by dephosphorylation in bud tissue after sweet/umami treatment.The alteration in Ca^(2+)content in the cytosol induces transient membrane depolarization and generates a cell current for taste signal transduction.We demonstrate that RYR1 is a new channel involved in the regulation of sweet/umami signal transduction and propose a“metabolic clock”notion based on sweet/umami sensing.Our study provides a valuable foundation for a system-level understanding of the taste perception mechanism.展开更多
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(31972198,31622042,31901813,31671857,31901782).
文摘Sweet and umami tastes are elicited by sweet and umami receptors on the tongue and palate epithelium,respectively.However,the molecular machinery allowing the taste reaction remains incompletely understood.Through a phosphoproteomic approach,we identified the key proteins that trigger taste mechanisms based on phosphorylation cascades.Ryanodine receptor isoform 1(RYR1)was further verified by sensory and behavioral assays.We propose a model of RYR1-mediated sweet/umami signaling in which the RYR1 channel,which mediates Ca^(2+)release from the endoplasmic reticulum,is closed by dephosphorylation in bud tissue after sweet/umami treatment.The alteration in Ca^(2+)content in the cytosol induces transient membrane depolarization and generates a cell current for taste signal transduction.We demonstrate that RYR1 is a new channel involved in the regulation of sweet/umami signal transduction and propose a“metabolic clock”notion based on sweet/umami sensing.Our study provides a valuable foundation for a system-level understanding of the taste perception mechanism.