Abstract

Taste buds disappear after denervation and reappear after nerve regeneration. Sensory neurons are responsible since reinnervation by motor or autonomic fibers of peripheral nerve fail to induce bud regeneration. However, we do not know whether some neurons in all sensory ganglia can support buds or whether gustatory (i.e., taste bud inducing) neurons are localized to specific cranial ganglia. The present study was therefore pefrormed to determine whether neurons in transplanted spinal ganglia could support taste buds similarly to those in transplanted cranial ganglia. Grafts of lumbar or vagal nodose ganglia were combined with grafts of tongue's vallate papillae in the anterior chamber of rats' eyes and the papillae examined for taste buds 35 days later. Neurons were present in all transplanted ganglia, and all papillae reinnervated by them contained regenerated taste buds. Nerve fibers could be traced from the transplanted ganglia to the epithelium of the tongue grafts which bore the regenerated taste buds. Papillae transplanted without ganglia lacked buds. These findings indicate that some neurons in all sensory ganglia can induce taste bud formation. The present results could occur if gustatory neurons are intrinsically present in all sensory ganglia, but an alternative interpretation is that the tongue grafts transformed some neurons into gustatory neurons and, hence, that neuronal plasticity is involved.

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