Kasahara T, Iwasaki K, Sato M
Physiol Behav. 1987;39(5):619-24. doi: 10.1016/0031-9384(87)90162-4.
To measure the hedonic effectiveness of some D-amino acids two-bottle preference tests were carried out on ddy mice, and subsequently conditioned taste aversion (CTA) experiments were performed to determine to what degree hedonic responses to D- and L-amino acids are related to sweet taste in mice. Mice showed preferences for D-Trp, D-His, and D-Leu over certain concentration ranges, but were behaviorally neutral to D-Ser and D-Val up to 0.1 M. The preference magnitudes for D-amino acids increased with increasing molecular weight (MW) or the bulk of the side chain. CTA experiments using 0.2 M sucrose as a conditioning stimulus and 4 D- and 6 L-amino acids as test stimuli indicated that generalization of sucrose taste became stronger with increasing MW of D-amino acids and decreasing MW of L-amino acids. There was a highly significant positive correlation between the degree of generalization of sucrose taste and the preference magnitude for D- and L-amino acids. The results indicate that preferences for D- and L-amino acids in mice result from sweet taste produced by these chemicals. Comparison of the results with the human psychophysical data reveal similarity between humans and ddy mice in taste sensitivity to amino acids.