PARABRACHIAL NEURAL CODING OF TASTE STIMULI IN AWAKE RATS.
HISAO NISHIJO AND RALPH NORGREN.
Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Toyama Medical and
Pharmaceutical University, Toyama 930-01, Japan and Department of Behavioral
Science, College of Medicine, The Pennsylvania State University, Hershey, PA
17033, U.S.A.
APStracts 4:123N, 1997.
ABSTRACT
In awake, behaving rats, the activity of 74 single neurons in the pontine
parabrachial nucleus (PBN) was recorded in response to sapid stimulation by 15
chemicals. Of these, 44 taste cells were tested with all 15 stimuli. Based on
their responsiveness to 4 standard stimuli, these neurons were categorized as
follows -- 23 NaCl-best, 15 sucrose-best, 5 citric acid-best, and 1 quinine
HCl-best. Several forms of multivariate analyses indicated that the taste
responses matched both the behavioral responses to and, less well, the
chemical structure of, the sapid stimuli. A hierarchical cluster analysis of
the neurons substantially confirmed the best-stimulus categorization, but
separated the NaCl-best cells into those that responded more to Na+-containing
salts and those that responded more to Cl--containing salts. The cells that
responded best to the Na+ moiety actually were somewhat more correlated with
the sucrose-best cells than with those that responded to the Cl--containing
stimuli. Citric acid-best neurons and the lone quinine-best unit formed a
single cluster of neurons that responded well to acids, as well as to NH4Cl
and, to a lesser extent, NaNO3. A factor analysis of the neuronal response
profiles revealed that 3 factors accounted for 78.8% of the variance in the
sample. Similar analyses of the stimuli suggested that PBN neurons respond to
4 or 5 sets of stimuli related by their chemical makeup or by human
psychophysical reports. The capacity of rats to make these discriminations has
been documented by other behavioral studies in which rodents generalize across
sapid chemicals within each of 5 stimulus categories. Furthermore, a
simulation analysis of the neural data replicated behavioral results that used
amiloride, a Na+ channel blocker, in which rats generalized NaCl to non-Na+,
Cl--salts. Thus, using a variety of analyses, in awake rats, the activity of
PBN taste neurons tracks their behavioral responses to a variety of chemical
stimuli.
Received 18 February 1996; accepted in final form 3 July 1997.
APS Manuscript Number J140-7.
Article publication pending J. Neurophysiol.
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1997 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 24 July 1997