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Taste messenger.


It can be hard to imagine life without a sense of taste. Ice cream would feel cold and smooth without the sweetness. Peanut butter would seem sticky and thick without the nuttiness. Apples would be crispy crisp·y  
adj. crisp·i·er, crisp·i·est
1. Firm but easily broken or crumbled; crisp.

2. Having small curls, waves, or ripples.
 and juicy without the tartness.

Scientists have long known that different foods stimulate taste buds taste buds taste nplGeschmacksknospen pl  in our mouths in different ways. Taste buds then send messages along nerves to the brain about the food's flavor.

What's been missing for scientists, however, is an understanding of how these messages about taste get from taste buds in the tongue to the body's nervous system.

Now, researchers from Colorado State University Colorado State University, at Fort Collins; land-grant with state and federal support; chartered 1870, opened 1879 as an agricultural college, assumed present name in 1957. There is a veterinary teaching hospital, an agricultural campus, and a research campus.  in Fort Collins and elsewhere say that they have found the flavor messenger. A molecule called adenosine adenosine /aden·o·sine/ (ah-den´o-sen) a purine nucleoside consisting of adenine and ribose; a component of RNA. It is also a cardiac depressant and vasodilator used as an antiarrhythmic and as an adjunct in myocardial perfusion imaging  5'-triphosphate (ATP ATP: see adenosine triphosphate.
ATP
 in full adenosine triphosphate

Organic compound, substrate in many enzyme-catalyzed reactions (see catalysis) in the cells of animals, plants, and microorganisms.
) seems to be the missing link.

ATP normally works to store and transport energy within cells. Scientists had noticed that ATP occasionally also works as a neurotransmitter neurotransmitter, chemical that transmits information across the junction (synapse) that separates one nerve cell (neuron) from another nerve cell or a muscle. Neurotransmitters are stored in the nerve cell's bulbous end (axon). , a molecule that sends messages from one nerve cell nerve cell
n.
1. See neuron.

2. The body of a neuron without its axon and dendrites.
 to another. In some cases, for example, it takes information about the amount of oxygen in your blood and tells your nerves what it has found.

To see whether ATP could also carry information about flavor, the scientists first studied taste buds that had been taken out of normal mice. When stimulated with flavored liquids, the buds released ATP.

Next, the team worked with mutated mice that were unable to transport ATP into cells. The nerves in these mice reacted to touch, but did not respond to flavor chemicals.

Finally, the researchers put mice in cages with two water bottles. One bottle held water. The other held different types of flavored liquids. The results showed that normal mice liked some of the flavored drinks better than water. Some, they liked less. The mutated mice, on the other hand, couldn't tell the difference between water and the flavored liquids. They drank any one liquid as often as the others.

The findings suggest that ATP is the reason that you can tell the difference between chocolate pudding and mud. Life without it as a taste messenger would be a lot less interesting.

http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/articles/20051207/Note3.asp
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Author:Sohn, Emily
Publication:Science News for Kids
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 7, 2005
Words:357
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