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(Journal of Nutrition. 2001;131:305-310.)
© 2001 The American Society for Nutritional Sciences


Articles

Long-Term Zinc Deficiency Decreases Taste Sensitivity in Rats1

Tomoko Goto*2, Michio Komai*, Hitoshi Suzuki{dagger} and Yuji Furukawa*

* Laboratory of Nutrition, Division of Life Science, Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Tohoku University, Sendai 981-8555, Japan and {dagger} Ishinomaki-Senshu University, Ishinomaki 986-8580, Japan

2To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: gtomoko{at}biochem.tohoku.ac.jp

The effects of zinc deficiency on taste sensitivity were examined in rats by recording the electrophysiological responses of the chorda tympani (CT) nerve and by use of a preference test. Male 4-wk-old Sprague-Dawley rats were given free access to a diet containing 2.2 (zinc-deficient), 4.1 (low zinc) or 33.7 (zinc-sufficient) mg zinc/kg diet. A fourth group was pair-fed the zinc-sufficient diet (with respect to the zinc-deficient rats). A two-bottle preference test using 0.15 mol/L NaCl and water revealed that NaCl preference was greater in the zinc-deficient and low zinc groups than in the control groups (zinc-sufficient and pair-fed) after 4 d of feeding. In the case of quinine hydrochloride solution (0.01 mmol/L), the preference was greater in zinc-deficient rats than in the other groups after 9 d, and the low zinc rats never showed a preference. Electrophysiological recording indicated that in the zinc-deficient rats, the CT nerve response to 0.20 mol/L NaCl was significantly less than that in the control rats after 21 d of feeding. In the low zinc rats, this response was significantly less than in the control rats after 35 d. The responses to quinine hydrochloride (0.02 mol/L), L-glutamic acid, HCl (0.01 mol/L) and NH4Cl (0.25 mol/L) in the zinc-deficient rats were not significantly reduced until d 42. These findings suggest that long-term zinc deficiency decreases taste sensitivity at the level of the CT nerve and that the change in NaCl preference due to zinc deficiency occurs before any change in NaCl taste sensitivity.


KEY WORDS: • zinc deficiency • chorda tympani nerve • taste abnormality • NaCl preference • rats







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