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1 icient in the gustducin alpha-subunit (alpha-gustducin).
2 mmunoreactivity to an antibody against alpha-gustducin.
3 a bitter-responsive receptor that activates gustducin.
4 racellular facet, bridging the receptor with gustducin.
5 s and the tastant-associated G protein alpha-gustducin.
6 sucralose internalized T1R2, T1R3 and alpha-gustducin.
7 ptor antagonist lactisole or siRNA for alpha-gustducin.
8 ngual taste cells and strongly express alpha-gustducin.
9 t not in knockout mice lacking T1R3 or alpha-gustducin.
10 Mouse intestinal L cells also express alpha-gustducin.
11 ussis toxin and by genetic deletion of alpha-gustducin.
12 all, bitter-responsive cells expressed alpha-gustducin.
13 (SNAP-25), and to a lesser extent with alpha-gustducin.
14 reduced by 70% in mutant mice lacking alpha-gustducin.
15 ing the molecular markers Vimentin and alpha-Gustducin.
16 antigen, whether or not they expressed alpha-gustducin.
17 ate specific tastant-dependent activation of gustducin, a G protein implicated in bitter signaling.
18 press T2R "bitter-taste" receptors and alpha-gustducin, a G protein involved in chemosensory transduc
19 subset of type II cells that contains alpha-gustducin, a G-protein involved in bitter transduction,
20 butions of these antigens with that of alpha-gustducin, a G-protein subunit implicated in responses t
25 eins derived from visual transducin or taste gustducin alpha subunits, but no other Galpha HD protein
27 weet and amino acid taste receptors, and the gustducin alpha-subunit GNAT3 leads to male-specific ste
34 generated a dominant-negative form of alpha-gustducin and expressed it as a transgene from the alpha
36 entiated light cells that also express alpha-gustducin and may be involved in intercellular interacti
38 nds on an interaction with the C terminus of gustducin and requires G-protein betagamma subunits to p
44 pressed in bovine taste tissue and that both gustducin and transducin, in the presence of bovine tast
45 eptors are coupled through G-proteins, alpha-gustducin and transducin, to activate phospholipase C be
46 taste transduction cascade involving Galpha-gustducin and transient receptor potential melastatin 5.
47 s of single and double KO mice lacking alpha-gustducin and/or alpha(t-rod) confirmed the involvement
49 AS2R14 in complex with its signaling partner gustducin, and bound to flufenamic acid (FFA), a clinica
50 a2 (PLCbeta2) or the G-protein subunit alpha-gustducin, and serotonin (5HT) as markers of type I, II,
51 s sweet taste receptors, the taste G protein gustducin, and several other taste transduction elements
52 s sweet taste receptors, the taste G protein gustducin, and several other taste transduction elements
54 nd their associated heterotrimeric G protein gustducin are involved in sugar and amino acid sensing i
55 al and genetic studies have implicated alpha-gustducin as a key component in the transduction of both
56 l experiments, expression of wild-type alpha-gustducin as a transgene in alpha-gustducin-null mice fu
57 All Lewis(b)-positive cells expressed alpha-gustducin, but only a fraction of alpha-gustducin-positi
58 the activation in response to denatonium of gustducin by presumptive bitter-responsive receptors pre
59 tivity should be reflected in the numbers of gustducin-containing cells in different taste bud popula
61 troduced into the C-terminal region of alpha-gustducin critical for receptor interaction rendered the
62 eceptor subunit T1R3 and the taste G protein gustducin, expressed in enteroendocrine cells, underlie
63 ssion was found exclusively in the G-protein gustducin-expressing bitter receptor cells, while TNF wa
64 fungiform taste buds contained twice as many gustducin-expressing cells (6.8/taste bud) as those of t
65 mal vallate papilla had a mean of 8.37 alpha-gustducin-expressing cells and 5.22 A-expressing cells p
67 w-affinity sweet taste receptor, stimulating gustducin G protein (G(Gust)) signaling in the presence
68 t family considered to be a component of the gustducin G-protein heterotrimer involved in bitter and
69 cin Galpha (Galphat) and the closely related gustducin (Galphag), but not Galphai1, Galphas, or Galph
71 from the upstream region of the mouse alpha-gustducin gene acts as a fully functional promoter to ta
72 ving that the targeted deletion of the alpha-gustducin gene caused the taste deficits of the null mic
73 h "knock-out" animals deficient in the alpha-gustducin gene clearly demonstrate that gustducin is an
74 hancer from the distal portion of the murine gustducin gene that, in combination with the minimal pro
75 with taste-signaling molecules such as alpha-gustducin, Ggamma13, phospholipase C-beta2 (PLC-beta2) a
83 lls that contain the G protein alpha subunit gustducin, implying that they function as gustducin-link
84 ha(t-rod) confirmed the involvement of alpha-gustducin in bitter (quinine and denatonium) and sweet (
85 d sweet compounds, the precise role of alpha-gustducin in bitter and sweet taste is presently unclear
86 t involvement of the G-protein subunit alpha-gustducin in bitter taste transduction in taste cells ha
88 mmunoreactivity to antisera directed against gustducin in taste buds of rat circumvallate papilla.
91 on taste-bud cells that also expressed alpha-gustducin in the order: foliate and vallate papillae > n
92 te and demonstrated the involvement of alpha-gustducin in umami [monosodium glutamate (MSG), monopota
93 ng paper, we demonstrate that T2Rs couple to gustducin in vitro, and respond to bitter tastants in a
94 t compounds, and to elicit the nature of the gustducin-independent pathways, we generated a dominant-
101 lpha-gustducin gene clearly demonstrate that gustducin is an essential molecule for tasting certain b
104 These data support the hypothesis that alpha-gustducin is involved in the transduction of both sweet-
107 ioral sensitivity to bitter stimuli in alpha-gustducin knock-out mice thus appears to be the conseque
110 g regulatory proteins expressed in the alpha-gustducin lineage of taste cells mediate these responses
112 cted results with knockout mice suggest that gustducin may be directly involved in both bitter and sw
115 patterns of GAD with the TRC protein markers gustducin, neural cell adhesion molecule, protein gene p
117 ed small intestine and intestinal villi from gustducin null mice displayed markedly defective glucago
119 small bowel and intestinal villi from alpha-gustducin null mice showed markedly defective GLP-1 secr
120 t alpha-gustducin restored responsiveness of gustducin null mice to both bitter and sweet compounds,
122 type alpha-gustducin as a transgene in alpha-gustducin-null mice fully restored responsiveness to bit
123 and sweet taste responsiveness of the alpha-gustducin-null mice suggests that other guanine nucleoti
125 ivity for the taste cell-specific G protein, gustducin, occurs in a subset ofrENaC positive taste cel
126 as a normal number of cells expressing alpha-gustducin or the A antigen in regenerated taste buds; in
130 a common second-messenger cascade involving gustducin, phospholipase C beta2, and the transient rece
131 bitter taste signaling cascade (i.e., TAS2R-gustducin-phospholipase Cbeta [PLCbeta]- inositol 1,4,5-
132 ste buds of the fungiform papillae had fewer gustducin-positive cells (3.1/taste bud) than those of o
135 r to target lacZ transgene expression to the gustducin-positive subset of taste receptor cells (TRCs)
136 transgene expression was driven by an alpha-gustducin promoter coupling BDNF expression to the postn
137 d expressed it as a transgene from the alpha-gustducin promoter in both wild-type and alpha-gustducin
140 Nevertheless, some taste cells lacking alpha-gustducin responded to bitter stimuli, suggesting that o
142 mutant transgene inhibited endogenous alpha-gustducin's interactions with taste receptors, i.e., it
143 nses to bitter and sweet compounds via alpha-gustducin's regulation of phosphodiesterase (PDE) and Gb
145 rs neuronal cell adhesion molecule and alpha-gustducin, suggesting that both the taste receptor cells
146 a2+ channels, K(+)ATP channels and the alpha-gustducin taste pathway do not appear to be involved.
147 e human L cell line NCI-H716 expresses alpha-gustducin, taste receptors, and several other taste sign
148 bitter taste, apparently unrelated to alpha-gustducin, that increase cyclic AMP or inositol 1,4,5 tr
150 e colocalized with each other and with alpha-gustducin, transducin or phospholipase C beta2 to differ
152 eciprocal regulation of T1R2, T1R3 and alpha-gustducin versus T1R1, transducin and phospholipase C be
153 from the GUS(8.4) promoter and of endogenous gustducin was coordinately lost after nerve section and
154 d with antibodies against Vimentin and alpha-Gustducin were easily identified and counted under a lig