Glucose transporters and ATP-gated K+ (KATP) metabolic sensors are present in type 1 taste receptor 3 (T1r3)-expressing taste cells
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Edited* by Linda M. Bartoshuk, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, and approved February 9, 2011 (received for review January 10, 2011)

Abstract
Although the heteromeric combination of type 1 taste receptors 2 and 3 (T1r2 + T1r3) is well established as the major receptor for sugars and noncaloric sweeteners, there is also evidence of T1r-independent sweet taste in mice, particularly so for sugars. Before the molecular cloning of the T1rs, it had been proposed that sweet taste detection depended on (a) activation of sugar-gated cation channels and/or (b) sugar binding to G protein-coupled receptors to initiate second-messenger cascades. By either mechanism, sugars would elicit depolarization of sweet-responsive taste cells, which would transmit their signal to gustatory afferents. We examined the nature of T1r-independent sweet taste; our starting point was to determine if taste cells express glucose transporters (GLUTs) and metabolic sensors that serve as sugar sensors in other tissues. Using RT-PCR, quantitative PCR, in situ hybridization, and immunohistochemistry, we determined that several GLUTs (GLUT2, GLUT4, GLUT8, and GLUT9), a sodium–glucose cotransporter (SGLT1), and two components of the ATP-gated K+ (KATP) metabolic sensor [sulfonylurea receptor (SUR) 1 and potassium inwardly rectifying channel (Kir) 6.1] were expressed selectively in taste cells. Consistent with a role in sweet taste, GLUT4, SGLT1, and SUR1 were expressed preferentially in T1r3-positive taste cells. Electrophysiological recording determined that nearly 20% of the total outward current of mouse fungiform taste cells was composed of KATP channels. Because the overwhelming majority of T1r3-expressing taste cells also express SUR1, and vice versa, it is likely that KATP channels constitute a major portion of K+ channels in the T1r3 subset of taste cells. Taste cell-expressed glucose sensors and KATP may serve as mediators of the T1r-independent sweet taste of sugars.
Footnotes
Author contributions: K.K.Y., S.K.S., R.K., T.A.G., and R.F.M. designed research; K.K.Y., S.K.S., R.K., and T.A.G. performed research; K.K.Y., S.K.S., T.A.G., and R.F.M. analyzed data; and K.K.Y., S.K.S., T.A.G., and R.F.M. wrote the paper.
Conflict of interest statement: R.F.M. has a personal financial interest in the form of stock ownership in the Redpoint Bio company and is an inventor on patents and patent applications that have been licensed to the Redpoint Bio company. No other authors have conflicts.
↵*This Direct Submission article had a prearranged editor.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1100495108/-/DCSupplemental.