Pharyngeal sense organs drive robust sugar consumption in Drosophila
Pharyngeal sense organs drive robust sugar consumption in Drosophila
The fly pharyngeal sense organs lie at the transition between external and internal nutrient-sensing mechanisms. Here we investigate the function of pharyngeal sweet gustatory receptor neurons, demonstrating that they express a subset of the nine previously identified sweet receptors and respond to stimulation with a panel of sweet compounds. We show that pox-neuro (poxn) mutants lacking taste function in the legs and labial palps have intact pharyngeal sweet taste, which is both necessary and sufficient to drive preferred consumption of sweet compounds by prolonging ingestion. Moreover, flies putatively lacking all sweet taste show little preference for nutritive or non-nutritive sugars in a short-term feeding assay. Together, our data demonstrate that pharyngeal sense organs play an important role in directing sustained consumption of sweet compounds, and suggest that post-ingestive sugar sensing does not effectively drive food choice in a simple short-term feeding paradigm.
- University of California System United States
- UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE
- University of British Columbia Canada
- University of British Columbia Finland
- University of California, Riverside United States
Neurons, Non-Nutritive Sweeteners, Neurosciences, Nerve Tissue Proteins, Feeding Behavior, Taste Buds, Food Preferences, Taste, Mutation, Animals, Drosophila Proteins, Paired Box Transcription Factors, Pharynx, Drosophila, Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease, Nutritive Sweeteners, Nutrition
Neurons, Non-Nutritive Sweeteners, Neurosciences, Nerve Tissue Proteins, Feeding Behavior, Taste Buds, Food Preferences, Taste, Mutation, Animals, Drosophila Proteins, Paired Box Transcription Factors, Pharynx, Drosophila, Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease, Nutritive Sweeteners, Nutrition
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