Abstract
Recently, we have shown that brush cells of the trachea are cholinergic and affect respiration upon stimulation with cycloheximide, a bitter tasting substance. Here, using mice expressing eGFP under the control of the promoter of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), we show the presence of identical solitary cholinergic villin-positive brush cells also in the mouse auditory tube. They also express the vesicular ACh transporter and proteins of the taste transduction pathway (α-gustducin and PLCβ2). Messenger RNA for bitter taste receptor (Tas2R) 105 and Tas2R108 involved in perception of the bitter substances cycloheximide and denatonium as well as in perception of acyl-homoserine lactones, bacterial quorum-sensing molecules, were detected in the respiratory epithelium. Using a transgenic mouse that expresses eGFP under the control of the promotor for the α3-subunit of the nicotinic ACh receptor, we identified direct contacts between α3+ neuronal fibres and brush cells in the auditory tube resembling those observed in the trachea. A subpopulation of these fibres is CGRP-immunoreactive. Functional analyses were performed in the trachea using a newly established model for investigation of respiration in spontaneously breathing anesthetized mice. DMPP, a nicotinic agonist, caused a drop in respiratory rate that was augmented by inhibition of nicotinic receptors with mecamylamine. Acyl-homoserine lactone elicited an epithelium-dependent drop in respiratory rate which was abolished by pretreatment with mecamylamine.
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