Cruz A, Green B G
The John B. Pierce Laboratory, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06519, USA.
Nature. 2000 Feb 24;403(6772):889-92. doi: 10.1038/35002581.
The first electrophysiological recordings from animal and human taste nerves gave clear evidence of thermal sensitivity, and studies have shown that as many as half of the neurons in mammalian taste pathways respond to temperature. Because temperature has never been shown to induce sensations of taste, it has been assumed that thermal stimulation in the gustatory system is somehow nulled. Here we show that heating or cooling small areas of the tongue can in fact cause sensations of taste: warming the anterior edge of the tongue (chorda tympani nerve) from a cold temperature can evoke sweetness, whereas cooling can evoke sourness and/or saltiness. Thermal taste also occurs on the rear of the tongue (glossopharyngeal nerve), but the relationship between temperature and taste is different there than on the front of the tongue. These observations indicate the human gustatory system contains several different types of thermally sensitive neurons that normally contribute to the sensory code for taste.
对动物和人类味觉神经的首次电生理记录清楚地证明了热敏感性,并且研究表明,哺乳动物味觉通路中多达一半的神经元对温度有反应。由于温度从未被证明能诱发味觉,因此人们认为味觉系统中的热刺激在某种程度上被抵消了。在这里,我们表明加热或冷却舌头的小区域实际上会引起味觉:将舌头(鼓索神经)的前缘从低温加热会唤起甜味,而冷却则会唤起酸味和/或咸味。热味觉也出现在舌头后部(舌咽神经),但那里温度与味觉的关系与舌头前部不同。这些观察结果表明,人类味觉系统包含几种不同类型的热敏感神经元,它们通常有助于味觉的感觉编码。