Abstract

Kokumi taste is a well-accepted and characterised taste modality and is described as a sensation of enhancement of sweet, salty, and umami tastes. The Calcium Sensing Receptor (CaSR) has been designated as the putative kokumi taste receptor for humans, and a number of kokumi-active ligands of CaSR have been discovered recently with activity confirmed both in vivo and in vitro. Domestic cats (Felis catus) are obligate carnivores and accordingly, their diet is abundant in proteins, peptides, and amino acids. We hypothesised that CaSR is a key taste receptor for carnivores, due to its role in the detection of different peptides and amino acids in other species. Using in silico, in vitro and in vivo approaches, here we compare human CaSR to that of a model carnivore, the domestic cat. We found broad similarities in ligand specificity, but differences in taste sensitivity between the two species. Indeed our in vivo data shows that cats are sensitive to CaCl2 as a kokumi compound, but don’t show this same activity with Glutathione, whereas for humans the reverse is true. Collectively, our data suggest that kokumi is an important taste modality for carnivores that drives the palatability of meat-derived compounds such as amino acids and peptides, and that there are differences in the perception of kokumi taste between carnivores and omnivores.

Highlights

  • Kokumi taste is a well-accepted and characterised taste modality and is described as a sensation of enhancement of sweet, salty, and umami tastes

  • In order to confirm that cats express Calcium Sensing Receptor (CaSR). In their taste tissue, we used biopsies of cat circumvallate papillae (CV) to perform an RT-PCR analysis (Fig. 1). With this analysis we confirmed the expression of CaSR in the CV, with no expression being observed in epithelial tongue tissue without visible papillae. (See Supplementary Data, Fig. 1 for full-length gels)

  • In order to understand how similar cat CaSR (cCaSR) and human CaSR (hCaSR) are from an evolutionary perspective, we generated a phylogenetic tree of all available mammalian CaSR sequences and found them to display high sequence identity (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Kokumi taste is a well-accepted and characterised taste modality and is described as a sensation of enhancement of sweet, salty, and umami tastes. Kokumi is a well-accepted taste sensation in Asian cuisine and was first characterised as a separate taste modality by Ueda and c­ olleagues[6,7] It is described as a sensation of enhancement of sweet, salty and umami ­tastes[5,8] when associated with specific compounds, or a mouthful, thick, delicious ­taste[9]. The same study confirmed that mCaSR was activated by specific kokumi compounds and induced the release of intracellular ­Ca2+, similar to other Class C GPCR taste receptors such as the umami ­receptor[10]. Taken all together, this evidence strongly suggests that CaSR is a putative receptor for kokumi taste in mammals

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