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J Neurophysiol (August 6, 2008). doi:10.1152/jn.90534.2008
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Submitted on May 6, 2008
Revised on July 31, 2008
Accepted on August 3, 2008

Mitochondrial calcium buffering contributes to the maintenance of basal calcium levels in mouse taste cells

Kyle Hacker1 and Kathryn F Medler1*

1 University at Buffalo

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: kmedler{at}buffalo.edu.

Taste stimuli are detected by taste receptor cells present in the oral cavity using diverse signaling pathways. Some taste stimuli are detected by G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) that cause calcium release from intracellular stores while other stimuli depolarize taste cells to cause calcium influx through voltage gated calcium channels (VGCCs). While taste cells use two distinct mechanisms to transmit taste signals, increases in cytosolic calcium are critical for normal responses in both pathways. This creates a need to tightly control intracellular calcium levels in all transducing taste cells. To date, however, the mechanisms used by taste cells to regulate cytosolic calcium levels have not been identified. Studies in other cell types have demonstrated that mitochondria can be important calcium buffers, even during small changes in calcium loads. In this study, we used calcium imaging to characterize the role of mitochondria in buffering calcium levels in taste cells. We discovered that mitochondria make important contributions to the maintenance of resting calcium levels in taste cells by routinely buffering a constitutive calcium influx across the plasma membrane. This is unusual because in other cell types mitochondrial calcium buffering primarily affects large evoked calcium responses. We also found that the amount of calcium that is buffered by mitochondria varies with the signaling pathways used by the taste cells. A TRP channel, likely TRPV1 or a taste variant of TRPV1, contributes to the constitutive calcium influx.




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