Abstract

We used alpha-gustducin, a type II taste-cell-specific G protein, to investigate the onset of taste transduction and its relation to the development of the soft palate (SP) and fungiform (FF) papillae taste buds in the mouse. Paraffin wax embedded sections were prepared from the SP and anterior region of the tongue of the mouse from birth until postnatal day (PD) 63. No alpha-gustducin-immunoreactive cells were observed on the day of birth. One day later, alpha-gustducin was immunolocalised in taste buds with pores with a relatively higher frequency recorded in the SP as compared with the FF papillae. The immunoreactive cells were spindle shaped with elongated processes extending from the base to the pore of the taste buds. On PD 7, the number of taste buds containing alpha-gustducin-immunoreactive cells in the SP was three times greater than that of FF papillae. Our results indicate that taste transduction is essentially acquired from the time of birth. Moreover, the onset of taste transduction by the SP taste buds developed earlier than that achieved by taste buds in the FF papillae.

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