Chemostimuli for guanylyl cyclase-D-expressing olfactory sensory neurons promote the acquisition of preferences for foods adulterated with the rodenticide warfarin
Many animals have the ability to acquire food preferences from conspecifics via social signals. For example, the coincident detection of a food odor by canonical olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) and agonists of the specialized OSNs expressing the receptor guanylyl cyclase GC-D (GC-D+ OSNs) will prom...
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doaj-1b4cab6187ee4ec498a49da74708f4342020-11-24T23:23:09ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neuroscience1662-453X2015-07-01910.3389/fnins.2015.00262156302Chemostimuli for guanylyl cyclase-D-expressing olfactory sensory neurons promote the acquisition of preferences for foods adulterated with the rodenticide warfarinKevin Robert Kelliher0Steven D. Munger1Steven D. Munger2University of BridgeportUniversity of FloridaUniversity of FloridaMany animals have the ability to acquire food preferences from conspecifics via social signals. For example, the coincident detection of a food odor by canonical olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) and agonists of the specialized OSNs expressing the receptor guanylyl cyclase GC-D (GC-D+ OSNs) will promote a preference in recipient rodents for similarly odored foods. It has been hypothesized that these preferences are acquired and maintained regardless of the palatability or quality of the food. We assessed whether mice could acquire and maintain preferences for food that had been adulterated with the anticoagulant rodenticide warfarin. After olfactory investigation of a saline droplet containing either cocoa (2%, w/w) or cinnamon (1%, w/w) along with a GC-D+ OSN-specific chemostimulus (either of the guanylin-family peptides uroguanylin and guanylin; 1–50 nM), C57BL/6J mice exhibited robust preferences for unadulterated food containing the demonstrated odor. The peptide-dependent preference was observed even when the food contained warfarin (0.025% w/w). Repeated ingestion of warfarin-containing food over four days did not disrupt the preference, even though mice were not re-exposed to the peptide stimulus. Surprisingly, mice continued to prefer warfarin-adulterated food containing the demonstrated odor when presented with a choice of warfarin-free food containing a novel odor. Our results indicate that olfactory-mediated food preferences can be acquired and maintained for warfarin-containing foods and suggest that guanylin peptides may be effective stimuli for promoting the ingestion of foods or other edibles with low palatability or potential toxicity.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2015.00262/fullLearningMouseGC-DGuanylinuroguanylin |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Kevin Robert Kelliher Steven D. Munger Steven D. Munger |
spellingShingle |
Kevin Robert Kelliher Steven D. Munger Steven D. Munger Chemostimuli for guanylyl cyclase-D-expressing olfactory sensory neurons promote the acquisition of preferences for foods adulterated with the rodenticide warfarin Frontiers in Neuroscience Learning Mouse GC-D Guanylin uroguanylin |
author_facet |
Kevin Robert Kelliher Steven D. Munger Steven D. Munger |
author_sort |
Kevin Robert Kelliher |
title |
Chemostimuli for guanylyl cyclase-D-expressing olfactory sensory neurons promote the acquisition of preferences for foods adulterated with the rodenticide warfarin |
title_short |
Chemostimuli for guanylyl cyclase-D-expressing olfactory sensory neurons promote the acquisition of preferences for foods adulterated with the rodenticide warfarin |
title_full |
Chemostimuli for guanylyl cyclase-D-expressing olfactory sensory neurons promote the acquisition of preferences for foods adulterated with the rodenticide warfarin |
title_fullStr |
Chemostimuli for guanylyl cyclase-D-expressing olfactory sensory neurons promote the acquisition of preferences for foods adulterated with the rodenticide warfarin |
title_full_unstemmed |
Chemostimuli for guanylyl cyclase-D-expressing olfactory sensory neurons promote the acquisition of preferences for foods adulterated with the rodenticide warfarin |
title_sort |
chemostimuli for guanylyl cyclase-d-expressing olfactory sensory neurons promote the acquisition of preferences for foods adulterated with the rodenticide warfarin |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Neuroscience |
issn |
1662-453X |
publishDate |
2015-07-01 |
description |
Many animals have the ability to acquire food preferences from conspecifics via social signals. For example, the coincident detection of a food odor by canonical olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) and agonists of the specialized OSNs expressing the receptor guanylyl cyclase GC-D (GC-D+ OSNs) will promote a preference in recipient rodents for similarly odored foods. It has been hypothesized that these preferences are acquired and maintained regardless of the palatability or quality of the food. We assessed whether mice could acquire and maintain preferences for food that had been adulterated with the anticoagulant rodenticide warfarin. After olfactory investigation of a saline droplet containing either cocoa (2%, w/w) or cinnamon (1%, w/w) along with a GC-D+ OSN-specific chemostimulus (either of the guanylin-family peptides uroguanylin and guanylin; 1–50 nM), C57BL/6J mice exhibited robust preferences for unadulterated food containing the demonstrated odor. The peptide-dependent preference was observed even when the food contained warfarin (0.025% w/w). Repeated ingestion of warfarin-containing food over four days did not disrupt the preference, even though mice were not re-exposed to the peptide stimulus. Surprisingly, mice continued to prefer warfarin-adulterated food containing the demonstrated odor when presented with a choice of warfarin-free food containing a novel odor. Our results indicate that olfactory-mediated food preferences can be acquired and maintained for warfarin-containing foods and suggest that guanylin peptides may be effective stimuli for promoting the ingestion of foods or other edibles with low palatability or potential toxicity. |
topic |
Learning Mouse GC-D Guanylin uroguanylin |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2015.00262/full |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kevinrobertkelliher chemostimuliforguanylylcyclasedexpressingolfactorysensoryneuronspromotetheacquisitionofpreferencesforfoodsadulteratedwiththerodenticidewarfarin AT stevendmunger chemostimuliforguanylylcyclasedexpressingolfactorysensoryneuronspromotetheacquisitionofpreferencesforfoodsadulteratedwiththerodenticidewarfarin AT stevendmunger chemostimuliforguanylylcyclasedexpressingolfactorysensoryneuronspromotetheacquisitionofpreferencesforfoodsadulteratedwiththerodenticidewarfarin |
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