Nasal chemosensory cells use bitter taste signaling to detect irritants and bacterial signals
Marco Tizzano(Taste and Smell Clinic), Thomas E. Finger(Rocky Mountain MS Center), Hiruy M. Sibhatu(University of Colorado Denver), Wayne L. Silver(Wake Forest University), Aurélie Vandenbeuch(Taste and Smell Clinic), Jake P. Herman(University of Colorado Denver), Sue C. Kinnamon(University of Wisconsin–Madison), Brian D. Gulbransen(Michigan State University), Tod R. Clapp(Taste and Smell Clinic), Mair E. A. Churchill(University of Colorado Denver)
Cited by 414
Related Papers
Activation of neuronal P2X7 receptor–pannexin-1 mediates death of enteric neurons during colitis
|Nature Medicine|2012|444
Solitary chemoreceptor cells in the nasal cavity serve as sentinels of respiration
|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2003|406
Neurobiology of Taste and Smell
|Unknown|1991|400
Nucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase‐2 is the ecto‐ATPase of type I cells in taste buds
|The Journal of Comparative Neurology|2006|270