Electrophysiological Studies of a Water Receptor Associated With the Taste Sensilla of the Blowfly
Open Access
- 1 January 1962
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 45 (3) , 487-500
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.45.3.487
Abstract
Electrophysiological evidence is given that water is the specific stimulus for a fourth sensory cell associated with the taste sensilla of the blowfly. Water elicited impulses from a single cell which responded in two distinct phases an initial rapid rate of discharge followed by a lesser, sustained steady rate. The latter, in the case of sucrose solutions, was inhibited in direct proportion to the log of the osmotic pressure over a 104 range of pressures. Other non-electrolytes inhibited, but the effect could not be simply correlated with parameters of the solutions. Electrolytes inhibited the water response more sharply and at lower concentrations. The inhibition in all cases was not dependent on impulses in the other sensory cells of the taste sensillum.Keywords
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