Drayna Dennis
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health, Rockville, Maryland 20850, USA.
Annu Rev Genomics Hum Genet. 2005;6:217-35. doi: 10.1146/annurev.genom.6.080604.162340.
Humans show substantial differences in taste sensitivity to many different substances. Some of this variation is known to be genetic in origin, and many other inter-individual differences are likely to be partially or wholly determined by genetic mechanisms. Recent advances in the understanding of taste at the molecular level have provided candidate genes that can be evaluated for contributions to phenotypic differences in taste abilities. This approach has provided an understanding of variation in the ability to taste phenylthiocarbamide (PTC), and has resolved long-standing controversies about the genetics of this classic human genetic trait. Significant coding sequence variation exists in taste receptor genes, which suggests that PTC tasting may indicate more general taste sensory variation. However, many aspects of taste perception remain poorly characterized. Better understanding of the molecular components of salty and sour tastes is still needed, as is a more complete picture of second messenger and downstream signaling mechanisms for all taste modalities. More general studies of linkage and association between genetic markers and taste phenotypes may reveal genes encoding proteins that were previously unsuspected to be involved in this sensory process.
人类对许多不同物质的味觉敏感性存在显著差异。已知这种差异部分源于基因,许多个体间的其他差异可能部分或完全由遗传机制决定。在分子水平上对味觉理解的最新进展提供了一些候选基因,可对其在味觉能力表型差异中的作用进行评估。这种方法使人们了解了对苯硫脲(PTC)味觉能力的差异,并解决了关于这一经典人类遗传性状遗传学的长期争议。味觉受体基因存在显著的编码序列变异,这表明对PTC的味觉可能预示着更普遍的味觉感官差异。然而,味觉感知的许多方面仍未得到充分描述。仍需要更好地了解咸和酸味觉的分子成分,以及所有味觉模式的第二信使和下游信号传导机制的更完整情况。对遗传标记与味觉表型之间的连锁和关联进行更全面的研究,可能会揭示编码以前未被怀疑参与这一感觉过程的蛋白质的基因。