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Glia-like taste cells mediate an intercellular mode of peripheral sweet adaptation

Authors
Park, Gha YeonLee, GeehyunYoon, JongminHan, JisooChoi, PyonggangKim, MinjaeLee, SunghoPark, ChaeriWu, ZhaofaLi, YulongChoi, Myunghwan
Issue Date
Jan-2025
Publisher
Cell Press
Citation
Cell, v.188, no.1
Journal Title
Cell
Volume
188
Number
1
URI
http://scholarworks.bwise.kr/kbri/handle/2023.sw.kbri/1242
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2024.10.041
ISSN
0092-8674
1097-4172
Abstract
The sense of taste generally shows diminishing sensitivity to prolonged sweet stimuli, referred to as sweet adaptation. Yet, its mechanistic landscape remains incomplete. Here, we report that glia-like type I cells provide a distinct mode of sweet adaptation via intercellular crosstalk with chemosensory type II cells. Using the microfluidic-based intravital tongue imaging system, we found that sweet adaptation is facilitated along the synaptic transduction from type II cells to gustatory afferent nerves, while type I cells display temporally delayed and prolonged activities. We identified that type I cells receive purinergic input from adjacent type II cells via P2RY2 and provide inhibitory feedback to the synaptic transduction of sweet taste. Aligning with our cellular-level findings, purinergic activation of type I cells attenuated sweet licking behavior, and P2RY2 knockout mice showed decelerated adaptation behavior. Our study highlights a veiled intercellular mode of sweet adaptation, potentially contributing to the efficient encoding of prolonged sweetness.
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