Abstract: | There are two known sodium transduction pathways in the rat gustatory system. The transcellular pathway is blocked by amiloride, and the paracellular pathway is limited by the anion gluconate. The contribution of each pathway to sodium detection was assessed. Sodium gluconate (NaGlu) and NaCl thresholds did not differ, implying that the paracellular pathway is not necessary for normal sodium detection. Adding 100 μM amiloride raised both NaCl and NaGlu thresholds but did not abolish all performance to NaGlu, indicating that some chemical cue was present at high concentrations. Rats were also exposed to one of three NaCl diets (0.12%. 1.0%, or 6.0% NaCl) through maternal and ad lib intake from Embryonic Day 1 through testing in adulthood. No differences across dietary groups were found for NaCl or NaGlu threshold with or without amiloride. Thus, this developmental dietary treatment does not appear to affect taste sensitivity to sodium subserved through either transduction pathway. Collectively, these data suggest that the transcellular transduction pathway is both necessary and sufficient for normal sodium detection. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |