Abstract

Feeding is essential for survival and taste greatly influences our feeding behaviors. Palatable tastes such as sweet trigger feeding as a symbol of a calorie-rich diet containing sugar or proteins, while unpalatable tastes such as bitter terminate further consumption as a warning against ingestion of harmful substances. Therefore, taste is considered a criterion to distinguish whether food is edible. However, perception of taste is also modulated by physiological changes associated with internal states such as hunger or satiety. Empirically, during hunger state, humans find ordinary food more attractive and feel less aversion to food they usually dislike. Although functional magnetic resonance imaging studies performed in primates and in humans have indicated that some brain areas show state-dependent response to tastes, the mechanisms of how the brain senses tastes during different internal states are poorly understood. Recently, using newly developed molecular and genetic tools as well as in vivo imaging, researchers have identified many specific neuronal populations or neural circuits regulating feeding behaviors and taste perception process in the central nervous system. These studies could help us understand the interplay between homeostatic regulation of energy and taste perception to guide proper feeding behaviors.

Highlights

  • Recent Advances in Neural Circuits for Taste Perception in HungerReviewed by: Graham William Knott, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland

  • Food intake is essential for survival and the neural processes mediating hunger information guide animals to initiate appetitive food seeking and subsequent consummatory feeding

  • We will briefly introduce studies on taste perception in the peripheral and central nervous system, and focus on the recent findings about the neural circuits related to the modulation of sweet or bitter taste in hunger and how they are involved in feeding

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Summary

Recent Advances in Neural Circuits for Taste Perception in Hunger

Reviewed by: Graham William Knott, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland. Feeding is essential for survival and taste greatly influences our feeding behaviors. Perception of taste is modulated by physiological changes associated with internal states such as hunger or satiety. Using newly developed molecular and genetic tools as well as in vivo imaging, researchers have identified many specific neuronal populations or neural circuits regulating feeding behaviors and taste perception process in the central nervous system. These studies could help us understand the interplay between homeostatic regulation of energy and taste perception to guide proper feeding behaviors

INTRODUCTION
TASTE SENSATION FROM THE TONGUE TO THE BRAIN
Taste and Internal States
THE ROLE OF TASTE PERCEPTION IN FEEDING BEHAVIOR
TASTE PERCEPTION AND INTERNAL STATE
BRAIN REGIONS SHOWING
MOTIVATIONAL AND ANTICIPATORY PROCESS BEFORE THE START OF FEEDING
TASTE PERCEPTION DURING FEEDING
TASTE AND INTERNAL STATE MODULATION FOR THE TERMINATION OF FEEDING
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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