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A High Throughput In Vivo Assay for Taste Quality and Palatability

Taste quality and palatability are two of the most important properties measured in the evaluation of taste stimuli. Human panels can report both aspects, but are of limited experimental flexibility and throughput capacity. Relatively efficient animal models for taste evaluation have been developed,...

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Autores principales: Palmer, R. Kyle, Long, Daniel, Brennan, Francis, Buber, Tulu, Bryant, Robert, Salemme, F. Raymond
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3741146/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23951319
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072391
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author Palmer, R. Kyle
Long, Daniel
Brennan, Francis
Buber, Tulu
Bryant, Robert
Salemme, F. Raymond
author_facet Palmer, R. Kyle
Long, Daniel
Brennan, Francis
Buber, Tulu
Bryant, Robert
Salemme, F. Raymond
author_sort Palmer, R. Kyle
collection PubMed
description Taste quality and palatability are two of the most important properties measured in the evaluation of taste stimuli. Human panels can report both aspects, but are of limited experimental flexibility and throughput capacity. Relatively efficient animal models for taste evaluation have been developed, but each of them is designed to measure either taste quality or palatability as independent experimental endpoints. We present here a new apparatus and method for high throughput quantification of both taste quality and palatability using rats in an operant taste discrimination paradigm. Cohorts of four rats were trained in a modified operant chamber to sample taste stimuli by licking solutions from a 96-well plate that moved in a randomized pattern beneath the chamber floor. As a rat’s tongue entered the well it disrupted a laser beam projecting across the top of the 96-well plate, consequently producing two retractable levers that operated a pellet dispenser. The taste of sucrose was associated with food reinforcement by presses on a sucrose-designated lever, whereas the taste of water and other basic tastes were associated with the alternative lever. Each disruption of the laser was counted as a lick. Using this procedure, rats were trained to discriminate 100 mM sucrose from water, quinine, citric acid, and NaCl with 90-100% accuracy. Palatability was determined by the number of licks per trial and, due to intermediate rates of licking for water, was quantifiable along the entire spectrum of appetitiveness to aversiveness. All 96 samples were evaluated within 90 minute test sessions with no evidence of desensitization or fatigue. The technology is capable of generating multiple concentration–response functions within a single session, is suitable for in vivo primary screening of tastant libraries, and potentially can be used to evaluate stimuli for any taste system.
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spelling pubmed-37411462013-08-15 A High Throughput In Vivo Assay for Taste Quality and Palatability Palmer, R. Kyle Long, Daniel Brennan, Francis Buber, Tulu Bryant, Robert Salemme, F. Raymond PLoS One Research Article Taste quality and palatability are two of the most important properties measured in the evaluation of taste stimuli. Human panels can report both aspects, but are of limited experimental flexibility and throughput capacity. Relatively efficient animal models for taste evaluation have been developed, but each of them is designed to measure either taste quality or palatability as independent experimental endpoints. We present here a new apparatus and method for high throughput quantification of both taste quality and palatability using rats in an operant taste discrimination paradigm. Cohorts of four rats were trained in a modified operant chamber to sample taste stimuli by licking solutions from a 96-well plate that moved in a randomized pattern beneath the chamber floor. As a rat’s tongue entered the well it disrupted a laser beam projecting across the top of the 96-well plate, consequently producing two retractable levers that operated a pellet dispenser. The taste of sucrose was associated with food reinforcement by presses on a sucrose-designated lever, whereas the taste of water and other basic tastes were associated with the alternative lever. Each disruption of the laser was counted as a lick. Using this procedure, rats were trained to discriminate 100 mM sucrose from water, quinine, citric acid, and NaCl with 90-100% accuracy. Palatability was determined by the number of licks per trial and, due to intermediate rates of licking for water, was quantifiable along the entire spectrum of appetitiveness to aversiveness. All 96 samples were evaluated within 90 minute test sessions with no evidence of desensitization or fatigue. The technology is capable of generating multiple concentration–response functions within a single session, is suitable for in vivo primary screening of tastant libraries, and potentially can be used to evaluate stimuli for any taste system. Public Library of Science 2013-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3741146/ /pubmed/23951319 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072391 Text en © 2013 Palmer et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Palmer, R. Kyle
Long, Daniel
Brennan, Francis
Buber, Tulu
Bryant, Robert
Salemme, F. Raymond
A High Throughput In Vivo Assay for Taste Quality and Palatability
title A High Throughput In Vivo Assay for Taste Quality and Palatability
title_full A High Throughput In Vivo Assay for Taste Quality and Palatability
title_fullStr A High Throughput In Vivo Assay for Taste Quality and Palatability
title_full_unstemmed A High Throughput In Vivo Assay for Taste Quality and Palatability
title_short A High Throughput In Vivo Assay for Taste Quality and Palatability
title_sort high throughput in vivo assay for taste quality and palatability
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3741146/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23951319
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072391
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