Hayes John E, Duffy Valerie B
Department of Nutritional Sciences, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of Connecticut, KH 310, 358 Mansfield Road, Unit 2101, Storrs, CT 06269-2101, USA.
Chem Senses. 2007 Mar;32(3):225-36. doi: 10.1093/chemse/bjl050. Epub 2007 Jan 4.
Genetic variation in oral sensation presumably influences ingestive behaviors through sensations arising from foods and beverages. Here, we investigated the influence of taste phenotype [6-n-propylthiouracil (PROP) bitterness, fungiform papillae (FP) density] on sweet and creamy sensations from sugar/fat mixtures. Seventy-nine subjects (43 males) reported the sweetness and creaminess of water or milk (skim, whole, heavy cream) varying in sucrose (0-20% w/v) on the general Labeled Magnitude Scale. Sweetness grew with sucrose concentration and when shifting from water to milk mixtures--the growth was greatest for those tasting PROP as most bitter. At higher sucrose levels, increasing fat blunted the PROP-sweet relationship, whereas at lower levels, the relationship was effectively eliminated. Perceived sweetness of the mixture exceeded that predicted from the sum of components at low sucrose concentrations (especially for those tasting PROP most bitter) but fell below predicted at high concentrations, irrespective of fat level. Creaminess increased greatly with fat level and somewhat with sucrose. Those tasting PROP most bitter perceived greater creaminess in the heavy cream across all sucrose levels. Perceived creaminess was somewhat lower than predicted, irrespective of PROP bitterness. The FP density generally showed similar effects as PROP on sweetness and creaminess, (but to a lesser degree) and revealed potential taste-somatosensory interactions in weakly sweet stimuli. These data support that taste phenotype affects the nature of enhancement or suppression of sweetness and creaminess in liquid fat/sugar mixtures. Taste phenotype effects on sweetness and creaminess likely involve differential taste, retronasal olfactory, and somatosensory contributions to these perceptual experiences.
口腔感觉的基因变异可能通过食物和饮料产生的感觉影响摄食行为。在此,我们研究了味觉表型[6-正丙基硫氧嘧啶(PROP)苦味、菌状乳头(FP)密度]对糖/脂肪混合物的甜味和乳脂感的影响。79名受试者(43名男性)在通用标记量值量表上报告了不同蔗糖浓度(0-20% w/v)的水或牛奶(脱脂、全脂、重奶油)的甜度和乳脂感。甜度随蔗糖浓度增加而增加,并且从水换成牛奶混合物时——对于那些尝PROP苦味最重的人来说,甜度增加最大。在较高蔗糖水平下,脂肪增加会减弱PROP与甜味的关系,而在较低水平下,这种关系实际上被消除。混合物的甜度在低蔗糖浓度下(特别是对于那些尝PROP苦味最重的人)超过了根据各成分总和预测的值,但在高浓度下低于预测值,与脂肪水平无关。乳脂感随脂肪水平大幅增加,随蔗糖略有增加。在所有蔗糖水平下,那些尝PROP苦味最重的人在重奶油中感受到更大的乳脂感。无论PROP苦味如何,感知到的乳脂感都略低于预测值。FP密度对甜度和乳脂感的影响通常与PROP相似(但程度较小),并揭示了在弱甜味刺激中潜在的味觉-躯体感觉相互作用。这些数据支持味觉表型会影响液态脂肪/糖混合物中甜味和乳脂感增强或抑制的性质。味觉表型对甜味和乳脂感的影响可能涉及对这些感知体验的不同味觉、鼻后嗅觉和躯体感觉贡献。