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Taste Receptors (TR1 & TR2) a-Gustducin, and CaSR Antibodies
Higher vertebrates are believed to
possess at least five basic tastes: Sweet, bitter, sour, salty, and
unami (the taste of monosodium glutamate). Taste receptor cells that may
selectively reside in various parts of the tongue and respond to
different tastants and perceive these taste modalities. Taste receptor
cells are organized into taste buds that extend into different papillae
in the tongue epithelium. Circumvallate papillae are found at the very
back of the tongue, contain hundreds to thousands of taste buds, and are
particularly sensitive to biter substances. Foliate papillae are found
at the posterior lateral edge of the tongue, contain dozens to hundreds
of taste buds, and are sensitive to sour and bitter. Fungiform papillae
are found at the front of the tongue, contain a few taste buds, and
specialize in sweet taste.
The taste buds may contain 50-150 cells,
including precursor cells, support cells, and taste receptor cells.
Receptors cells are innervated at their base by afferent nerve endings
that transmit information to the taste centers of the cortex through
synapses in the in the brain stem and thalamus. At the molecular level,
sour and salty tastants modulate taste function by direct entry of H+
and Na+ ions through specialized membrane ion channels on the apical
surface of the cells. In the case of sour compounds, taste cell
depolarization may be due to the result of H+ blockage of K+ channels.
Salty taste seems to be mediated by the entry of Na+ via
amiloride-sensitive Na+ channel. Sweet, bitter and unami transduction is
believed to mediated by G protein coupled receptors.
G proteins are heterotrimeric GTP
binding proteins that couple receptors to effector in many diverse
signal transduction processes. The alpha-subunit of G proteins confers
most of the specialty of interaction between receptors and the effector.
Recently, a novel G protein a-subunit, termed
alpha-Gustducin,
has been cloned from taste tissue. It is expressed in taste buds of all
taste papillae (circumvallate, foliate, and fungiform). It is not
expressed in non-sensory proteins of the tongue or other tissues.
Gustducin is involved in bitter and sweet transduciton, since gustducin
knockout mice show decreased sensitivity to sweet and bitter tastants.
Gustducin encodes a 354 aa protein with close resemblance to transducins
(rod and cone photoreceptor G proteins). Rat gustducin has ~80% homology
with bovine a-transducin.
Recently, two novel taste
receptors, TR1
and TR2,
have been cloned with distinct topographical distribution in taste
receptor cells and taste buds. TRs are members of a new group of 7 TM
domain containing GPCR distantly related to the
Ca+-sensing receptor (CaSR),
a family of putative hormone receptor (V2R), and metabotropic glutamate
receptors. All of these proteins share low but distinct sequence
homology and distinguished form the other GPCRs by the presence of very
long N-terminal extracellular domain - a putative ligand-binding site.
TR1 (rat 840 aa) and TR2 (rat 843 aa)
share ~40% homology with each other, and ~30% with CaSR, and 22-30% with
V2R pheromone receptors and mGLURs. TR1 and TR2 show a differential
expression taste cells. TR1 is rare in taste buds of circumvallate
papillae but is expressed in all fungiform taste buds. In contrast, TR2
is almost undetectable in fungiform papillae but is expressed in all
circumvallate taste buds. This differential expression is also found in
the palate. TR1 is expressed in all gesenchmackstreifen taste buds,
while TR2 is rare in these cells. No correlation can be found with
respect to the expression of Gustducin- TR1 and TR2 are expressed both
Gustducin positive and negative cells.
ADI has
produced highly specific rabbit
antibodies to rat TR1, TR2-7, alpha-Gustducin using peptide
sequences specific to each protein. These antibodies should be useful in
studying taste transduciton.
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Items |
Antigen peptide location |
Antibody
Host |
Ab
Crossreactivity |
Neat
Antisera Cat #
(100 ul) |
Aff. Pure Ab
Cat #
(100 ug) |
* Control
Peptide Cat#
(100 ug) |
|
TR1 |
r, 24 aa ~CT |
Rb |
m, r, h |
TR11-S |
TR11-A |
TR11-P |
|
TR2 |
r, 19 aa ~CT |
Rb |
r, h |
TR21-S |
TR21-A |
TR21-P |
|
Gustducin |
r, 20 aa ~CT |
Rb |
m, r |
GUST11-S |
GUST11-A |
GUST11-P |
|
CaSR |
h,
20 aa ~CT |
Rb
|
h,
m, r |
CASR11-S |
CASR11-A |
CASR11-P |
|
Control Rabbit IgG
(non-immune) |
For
controls in Western, ELISA, etc |
20009-1
( 1mg) |
m=mouse; r=rat; h=human; ch=chicken; f=frog; ~CT or
~NT=near C or N-terminus. EC=Extracellular; CP=Cytoplasmic domain;
"Neat Antisera" are the
unpurified antiserum and it is suitable for ELISA and Western.
"Affinity pure"
antibodies have been over the antigen-affinity column and
recommended for immunohistochemical applications.
"Control peptides" can
not be used for Western as they are very short peptides. They are
intended for ELISA or antibody competition studies.(unconjugated, free,
antigenic peptides), because of their small size, are not recommended
for Western. They should be used in ELISA/antibody blocking studies.
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