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== <h4><span style="color: #800020;"> Miraculin’s interactions with human tongue receptors </span></h4> ==
== <h4><span style="color: #800020;"> Miraculin’s interactions with human tongue receptors </span></h4> ==
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test
 
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Taste processing is a complex process and is initially achieved by the activation of taste receptor
 +
cells clustered on the tongue’s taste buds. Once activated by a wide variety of ligands, the taste
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receptor cells transmit signals to parts of the brain that are involved in taste perception <ref> PMID:
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28672790 </ref>
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Like many interactions involving the binding of a ligand to a receptor, miraculin undergoes a
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conformational change when binding to the tongue receptors where its active site shifts to better
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bind to tongue receptors <ref> https://doi.org/10.1142/6389 </ref>.
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Miraculin binds to the tongue’s HT1R2-HT1R3 (human taste type 1 receptor 2 and 3) receptors
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in a pH-dependent manner. HT1R2-HT1R3 is a G-protein coupled receptor that is also capable
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of binding to natural sugars and artificial sweeteners.
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Recent studies suggested also that the association of the closed and open forms of monomers
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constituting the T1R2 T1R3 heterodimer can create a large charged cavity where sweet proteins
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fit exerting their function <ref>PMID: 16107151</ref>. Interestingly, although miraculin is inactive at
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very basic conditions, it still capable of suppressing the response of HT1R2-HT1R3 to other
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sweet-tasting compounds at neutral pH. At acidic conditions, miraculin enhances
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HT1R2-HT1R3’s response to sweet-tasting compounds. <ref>
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https://www.pnas.org/content/108/40/16819 </ref> Two histidine residues, His30 and His60, participate in
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the process of taste-modification. One site maintains the attachment of the protein to the
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membranes while the other activates the sweet receptor membrane in acidic conditions.
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<ref> https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0006291X07013010?via%3Dihub </ref>
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Although the detailed mechanism of the taste-deceiving protein is unknown, numerous sources
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agree to the fact miraculin is activated in the presence of an acidic compound. At an acidic pH,
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miraculin assumes an open conformation, similar to that predicted in
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fig1
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that permits it to bind
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to the tongue’s HT1R2-HT1R3 receptors.
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Miraculin is denatured at high temperatures and at pHs below 3 or above 12. The denaturation at
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these conditions is most likely due to the loss of shape of the protein and the disruption of bonds
 +
critical to its functionality.
== <h4><span style="color: #800020;"> Miraculin-Like Proteins (MLPs) </span></h4> ==
== <h4><span style="color: #800020;"> Miraculin-Like Proteins (MLPs) </span></h4> ==

Revision as of 07:33, 29 April 2020

Miraculin, a taste-deceiving protein

PDB ID 3IIR

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Fujr Ibrahim

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