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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The Lipid-Sensor Candidates CD36 and GPR120 Are Differentially Regulated by Dietary Lipids in Mouse Taste Buds: Impact on Spontaneous Fat Preference

Patricia Passilly-degraceDany GaillardMichael ChevrotPhilippe BesnardCéline MartinJean-françois Merlin

subject

CD36 AntigensMaleTasteChemoreceptorAnatomy and PhysiologyRodentCD36Blotting Westernlcsh:MedicineGene ExpressionReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionReceptors G-Protein-CoupledFood PreferencesMicebiology.animalIntegrative PhysiologyGene expressionAnimalsObesityReceptorlcsh:ScienceGeneBiologyNutritionMice KnockoutMultidisciplinarybiologylcsh:RGPR120Taste BudsDietary FatsImmunohistochemistrySensory SystemsCircadian RhythmBiochemistrybiology.proteinMedicinelipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)lcsh:QResearch Article

description

BACKGROUND: Recent studies in rodents and humans suggest that the chemoreception of long-chain fatty acids (LCFA) in oral cavity is involved in the spontaneous preference for fatty foods and might contribute to the obesity risk. CD36 and GPR120 are LCFA receptors identified in rodent taste bud cells. The fact that CD36 or GPR120 gene inactivation leads to a decrease in the preference for lipids raises the question of the respective role(s) played by these gustatory lipid-sensor candidates. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using a combination of biochemical, nutritional and behavioural studies in wild-type, CD36(+/-)and CD36(-/-) mice, it was found that: 1°) CD36 and GPR120 display different diurnal rhythms in the gustatory circumvallate papillae, CD36 mRNA levels being down-regulated during the dark period in contrast to GPR120, 2°) this change is due to food intake and strictly dependent of the presence of lipids in the diet, 3°) CD36 protein levels are also rapidly but transiently decreased by the food intake, a two-fold drop in CD36 protein levels being found 1 h after refeeding, followed by a progressive return to the pre-prandial values, 4°) this down-regulation, which has a post-transcriptional origin, seems sufficient to alter the spontaneous fat preference, independently to change in the GPR120 gene expression. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: In contrast to GPR120, CD36 appears to be a food-sensitive lipid sensor in the gustatory circumvallate papillae. Lipid-mediated change in lingual CD36 expression might modulate the motivation for fat during a meal, initially high and then gradually decreasing secondary to the food intake. This short-term lipid-mediated effect is reminiscent of sensory-specific satiety. These findings, which highlight the role played by CD36 in the oro-sensory perception of dietary lipids, raise the possibility of novel pharmacological strategies to modify attraction for fatty foods and decrease obesity risks.

10.1371/journal.pone.0024014http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3162022