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Umami receptor activation increases duodenal bicarbonate secretion via glucagon-like peptide-2 release in rats.

J Pharmacol Exp Ther · 2011

Last updated 2026-05-28

In rats, a combination of the amino acid L-Glu and the flavor enhancer IMP (found in foods like soy sauce) increased duodenal bicarbonate secretion—a process that helps protect the gut lining—by triggering the release of the hormone GLP-2. This effect was blocked when a GLP-2 receptor antagonist was used, and the same response was observed when GLP-2 was directly infused at doses ranging from 0.01 to 1 nmol/kg/h. The study also found that GLP-2 levels in the blood rose after exposure to L-Glu/IMP, while levels of another hormone, GLP-1, increased later.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Pharmacol Exp Ther, 2011
Citations63
Relative citation ratio1.90
NIH percentile72
Molecules

Abstract

Luminal nutrient chemosensing during meal ingestion is mediated by intestinal endocrine cells, which regulate secretion and motility via the release of gut hormones. We have reported that luminal coperfusion of L-Glu and IMP, common condiments providing the umami or proteinaceous taste, synergistically increases duodenal bicarbonate secretion (DBS) possibly via taste receptor heterodimers, taste receptor type 1, member 1 (T1R1)/R3. We hypothesized that glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide (GIP) or glucagon-like peptide (GLP) is released by duodenal perfusion with L-Glu/IMP. We measured DBS with pH and CO(2) electrodes through a perfused rat duodenal loop in vivo. GIP, exendin (Ex)-4 (GLP-1 receptor agonist), or GLP-2 was intravenously infused (0.01-1 nmol/kg/h). l-Glu (10 mM) and IMP (0.1 mM) were luminally perfused with or without bolus intravenous injection (3 or 30 nmol/kg) of the receptor antagonists Pro(3)GIP, Ex-3(9-39), or GLP-2(3-33). GIP or GLP-2 infusion dose-dependently increased DBS, whereas Ex-4 infusion gradually decreased DBS. Luminal perfusion of l-Glu/IMP increased DBS, with no effect of Pro(3)GIP or Ex-3(9-39), whereas GLP-2(3-33) inhibited L-Glu/IMP-induced DBS. Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)(6-28) intravenously or N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester coperfusion inhibited the effect of L-Glu/IMP. Perfusion of L-Glu/IMP increased portal venous concentrations of GLP-2, followed by a delayed increase of GLP-1, with no effect on GIP release. GLP-1/2 and T1R1/R3 were expressed in duodenal endocrine-like cells. These results suggest that luminal L-Glu/IMP-induced DBS is mediated via GLP-2 release and receptor activation followed by VIP and nitric oxide release. Because GLP-1 is insulinotropic and GLP-2 is intestinotrophic, umami receptor activation may have additional benefits in glucose metabolism and duodenal mucosal protection and regeneration.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 21846840 ↗