RRC ID 59113
Author Li Q, DeBeaubien NA, Sokabe T, Montell C.
Title Temperature and Sweet Taste Integration in Drosophila.
Journal Curr Biol
Abstract Sugar-containing foods offered at cooler temperatures tend to be less appealing to many animals. However, the mechanism through which the gustatory system senses thermal input and integrates temperature and chemical signals to produce a given behavioral output is poorly understood. To study this fundamental problem, we used the fly, Drosophila melanogaster. We found that the palatability of sucrose is strongly reduced by modest cooling. Using Ca2+ imaging and electrophysiological recordings, we demonstrate that bitter gustatory receptor neurons (GRNs) and mechanosensory neurons (MSNs) are activated by slight cooling, although sugar neurons are insensitive to the same mild stimulus. We found that a rhodopsin, Rh6, is expressed and required in bitter GRNs for cool-induced suppression of sugar appeal. Our findings reveal that the palatability of sugary food is reduced by slightly cool temperatures through different sets of thermally activated neurons, one of which depends on a rhodopsin (Rh6) for cool sensation.
Volume 30(11)
Pages 2051-2067.e5
Published 2020-6-8
DOI 10.1016/j.cub.2020.03.066
PII S0960-9822(20)30436-X
PMID 32330421
PMC PMC7329267
MeSH Animals Cold Temperature* Drosophila Proteins / metabolism Drosophila melanogaster / physiology* Female Gene Expression Male Neurons / physiology* Rhodopsin / metabolism Taste Perception / physiology*
IF 9.601
Times Cited 0
Resource
Drosophila DGRC#109600