Abstract

Monosodium L-glutamate (MSG) and 5'-ribonucleotides elicit umami taste in humans and probably in some species of animals. Previous studies suggest that taste-mGluR4 and NMDA receptor may be involved in taste transduction for umami, but behavioral responses in rats do not support the involvement of NMDA receptor. In the present study, behavioral similarities and differences among MSG, mGluR4 agonist L(+)-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyrate (L-AP4), and NMDA receptor agonist N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) were compared in C57BL mice by using a conditioned taste aversion paradigm. Mice conditioned to avoid either MSG or 10 mM L-AP4 appeared to avoid MSG, disodium 5'-inosinate (IMP), a mixture of MSG and IMP, and L-AP4, but not NMDA. Aversive conditioning to either sucrose or NMDA was generalized only to a mixture of MSG+IMP or NaCl. However, aversive conditioning to L-AP4 at 1 mM was generalized to NMDA and the umami substances. Lick rates for L-AP4 increased by mixing with (RS)-alpha-cycloprophy-4-phosphonophenylglycine (mGluR4 antagonist) when animals were conditioned to avoid MSG or L-AP4. Lick rates for NMDA also either decreased or increased by mixing with glycine (NMDA receptor coagonist) or D(-)-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (NMDA receptor antagonist) when animals were conditioned to avoid L-AP4 or NMDA. In sucrose-conditioned mice. gurmarin (a sweet inhibiting peptide) suppressed the avoidance of sucrose and a mixture of MSG and IMP, but not L-AP4 and NMDA. The results suggest the possibility that to C 57BL mice MSG may taste similar to L-AP4 but different from NMDA, although both types of glutamate receptors as well as gurmarin-sensitive sweet receptor may be involved in perception of umami taste.

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