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Published May 23, 2006 | public
Journal Article

Response of Drosophila to Wasabi Is Mediated by painless, the Fly Homolog of Mammalian TRPA1/ANKTM1

Abstract

A number of repellent compounds produced by plants elicit a spicy or pungent sensation in mammals 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16. In several cases, this has been found to occur through activation of ion channels in the transient receptor potential (TRP) family 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. We report that isothiocyanate (ITC), the pungent ingredient of wasabi, is a repellent to the insect Drosophila melanogaster, and that the painless gene, previously known to be required for larval nociception, is required for this avoidance behavior. A painless reporter gene is expressed in gustatory receptor neurons of the labial palpus, tarsus, and wing anterior margin, but not in olfactory receptor neurons, suggesting a gustatory role. Indeed, painless expression overlaps with a variety of gustatory-receptor gene reporters. Some, such as Gr66a, are known to be expressed in neurons that mediate gustatory repulsion 8, 9, 10. painless mutants are not taste blind; they show normal aversive gustatory behavior with salt and quinine and attractive responses to sugars and capsaicin. The painless gene is an evolutionary homolog of the mammalian "wasabi receptor" TRPA1/ANKTM1 [6], also thought to be involved in nociception. Our results suggest that the stinging sensation of isothiocyanate is caused by activation of an evolutionarily conserved molecular pathway that is also used for nociception.

Additional Information

© 2006 Elsevier Ltd. Under an Elsevier user license. Received 29 November 2005, Revised 6 April 2006, Accepted 6 April 2006, Available online 27 April 2006. We would like to thank Viveca Sapin and Christopher Waters for their excellent assistance with cryostat sectioning and confocal microscopy, Jun Lu for assistance with the two-dye assay, and Alice Robie for her help in making UAS-painless^(AR9) flies. Dr. Kristin Scott and Dr. Hubert Amrein generously donated the Gr-GFP reporter fly strains. This work was supported by a fellowship to B.A. from the Life Sciences Research Foundation, an Alfred P. Sloan Neuroscience fellowship and Whitehall Foundation grant to W.D.T., and a grant to S.B. from the National Science Foundation.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023