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Publication : Depletion of bitter taste transduction leads to massive spermatid loss in transgenic mice.

First Author  Li F Year  2012
Journal  Mol Hum Reprod Volume  18
Issue  6 Pages  289-97
PubMed ID  22266327 Mgi Jnum  J:330485
Mgi Id  MGI:6867904 Doi  10.1093/molehr/gas005
Citation  Li F, et al. (2012) Depletion of bitter taste transduction leads to massive spermatid loss in transgenic mice. Mol Hum Reprod 18(6):289-97
abstractText  Bitter taste perception is an important sensory input warning against the ingestion of toxic and noxious substances. Bitter receptors, a family of ~30 highly divergent G-protein-coupled receptors, are exclusively expressed in taste receptor cells that contain the G-protein alpha-subunit gustducin, bind to alpha-gustducin in vitro, and respond to bitter tastes in functional expression assays. We generated a taste receptor type 2 member 5 (T2R5)-Cre/green fluorescent protein reporter transgenic mouse to investigate the tissue distribution of T2R5. Our results showed that Cre gene expression in these mice was faithful to the expression of T2R5 in taste tissue. More surprisingly, immunostaining and X-gal staining revealed T2R5 expression in the testis. Ablation of T2R5 + cells led to a smaller testis and removed the spermatid phase from most of the seminiferous tubules. The entire taste transduction cascade (alpha-gustducin, Ggamma13, phospholipase Cbeta2) was detected in spermatogenesis, whereas transient receptor potential, cation channel subfamily M member 5 (Trpm5), was observed only in the later spermatid phase. In short, our results indicate that the taste transduction cascade may be involved in spermatogenesis.
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