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  • Title: Neural representation of salts in the rat solitary nucleus: brain stem correlates of taste discrimination.
    Author: St John SJ, Smith DV.
    Journal: J Neurophysiol; 2000 Aug; 84(2):628-38. PubMed ID: 10938291.
    Abstract:
    One mechanism of salt taste transduction by gustatory receptor cells involves the influx of cations through epithelial sodium channels that can be blocked by oral application of amiloride. A second mechanism is less clearly defined but seems to depend on electroneutral diffusion of the salt through the tight junctions between receptor cells; this paracellular pathway is insensitive to amiloride. Because the first mechanism is more sensitive to sodium salts and the second to nonsodium salts, these peripheral events could underlie the ability of rats to discriminate sodium from nonsodium salts on the basis of taste. Behavioral experiments indicate that amiloride, at concentrations that are tasteless to rats, impairs a rat's ability to discriminate NaCl from KCl and may do so by making both salts taste like KCl. In the present study, we examined the neural representation of NaCl and KCl (0.05-0.2 M), and mixtures of these salts with amiloride (0, 3, and 30 microM), to explore the neural correlates of this behavioral result. NaCl and KCl were represented by distinct patterns of activity in the nucleus of the solitary tract. Amiloride, in a concentration-dependent manner, changed the pattern for NaCl to one more characteristic of KCl, primarily by reducing activity in neurons responding best to NaCl and sucrose. The effect of amiloride concentration on the response to 0.1 M NaCl in NaCl-best neurons was virtually identical to its effect on behavioral discrimination performance. Modeling the effects of blocking the amiloride-insensitive pathway also resulted in highly similar patterns of activity for NaCl and KCl. These results suggest that activity in both the amiloride-sensitive and -insensitive pathways is required for the behavioral discrimination between NaCl and KCl. In the context of published behavioral data, the present results suggest that amiloride-sensitive activity alone is not sufficient to impart a unique signal for the taste of sodium salts.
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