A candidate taste receptor gene near a sweet taste locus

JP Montmayeur, SD Liberles, H Matsunami… - Nature …, 2001 - nature.com
Nature neuroscience, 2001nature.com
The mechanisms underlying sweet taste in mammals have been elusive. Although
numerous studies have implicated G proteins in sweet taste detection, the expected G
protein-coupled receptors have not been found. Here we describe a candidate taste
receptor gene, T1r3, that is located at or near the mouse Sac locus, a genetic locus that
controls the detection of certain sweet tastants. T1R3 differs in amino acid sequence in
mouse strains with different Sac phenotypes ('tasters' versus' nontasters'). In addition, a …
Abstract
The mechanisms underlying sweet taste in mammals have been elusive. Although numerous studies have implicated G proteins in sweet taste detection, the expected G protein-coupled receptors have not been found. Here we describe a candidate taste receptor gene, T1r3, that is located at or near the mouse Sac locus, a genetic locus that controls the detection of certain sweet tastants. T1R3 differs in amino acid sequence in mouse strains with different Sac phenotypes ('tasters' versus' nontasters'). In addition, a perfect correlation exists between two different T1r3 alleles and Sac phenotypes in recombinant inbred mouse strains. The T1r3 gene is expressed in a subset of taste cells in circumvallate, foliate and fungiform taste papillae. In circumvallate and foliate papillae, most T1r3-expressing cells also express a gene encoding a related receptor, T1R2, raising the possibility that these cells recognize more than one ligand, or that the two receptors function as heterodimers.
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