The coding of valence and identity in the mammalian taste system
Li Wang,
Sarah Gillis-Smith,
Yueqing Peng,
Juen Zhang,
Xiaoke Chen,
C. Daniel Salzman,
Nicholas J. P. Ryba and
Charles S. Zuker ()
Additional contact information
Li Wang: Columbia University
Sarah Gillis-Smith: Columbia University
Yueqing Peng: Columbia University
Juen Zhang: Columbia University
Xiaoke Chen: Columbia University
C. Daniel Salzman: Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University
Nicholas J. P. Ryba: National Institutes of Health
Charles S. Zuker: Columbia University
Nature, 2018, vol. 558, issue 7708, 127-131
Abstract:
Abstract The ability of the taste system to identify a tastant (what it tastes like) enables animals to recognize and discriminate between the different basic taste qualities1,2. The valence of a tastant (whether it is appetitive or aversive) specifies its hedonic value and elicits the execution of selective behaviours. Here we examine how sweet and bitter are afforded valence versus identity in mice. We show that neurons in the sweet-responsive and bitter-responsive cortex project to topographically distinct areas of the amygdala, with strong segregation of neural projections conveying appetitive versus aversive taste signals. By manipulating selective taste inputs to the amygdala, we show that it is possible to impose positive or negative valence on a neutral water stimulus, and even to reverse the hedonic value of a sweet or bitter tastant. Remarkably, mice with silenced neurons in the amygdala no longer exhibit behaviour that reflects the valence associated with direct stimulation of the taste cortex, or with delivery of sweet and bitter chemicals. Nonetheless, these mice can still identify and discriminate between tastants, just as wild-type controls do. These results help to explain how the taste system generates stereotypic and predetermined attractive and aversive taste behaviours, and support the existence of distinct neural substrates for the discrimination of taste identity and the assignment of valence.
Date: 2018
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0165-4
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