Department of Food Science, Purdue University, USA.
Department of Nutrition Science and Department of Food Science, Purdue University Stone Hall 700 West State St. West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.
Physiol Behav. 2020 Oct 15;225:113080. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2020.113080. Epub 2020 Jul 15.
Salivary proteins have the potential to alter oral sensory perception of foods. In rodents, dietary polyphenol exposure increases salivary concentrations of polyphenol-binding proteins and several cystatins, which correlate with less aversion to polyphenol-rich solutions. If similar salivary shifts occur in humans, then increasing dietary polyphenols may improve orosensory experience of polyphenol-rich foods. We hypothesized that small dietary changes, focused on polyphenols, would increase expression of salivary binding proteins for polyphenols and thus suppress unpleasant polyphenol sensations. However, analogs of salivary polyphenol-binding proteins are found in foods. Thus, we also hypothesized that food-sourced analogs of these salivary proteins would mitigate changes in saliva and sensation. Human subjects (N=55) alternated weeks of consuming a low polyphenol diet and then a regular diet plus a polyphenol-rich chocolate milk (almond, containing no polyphenol-binding proteins, or bovine, containing polyphenol-binding proteins). Statistical analyses revealed both chocolate milk interventions corresponded to changes in relative expression of 96 proteins and calculated concentration of 146 proteins (both after correction for false discovery rate), out of 1,176 proteins identified through proteomics. Of the proteins that changed, proline-rich proteins and cystatins were noticeable, which reflects prior work in animal studies. Subjects rated all chocolate milks as less flavorful after the bovine chocolate milk intervention week compared to low polyphenol weeks, but generally sensory changes were minimal. However, the results confirm that dietary changes coincide with salivary changes, and that some of those changes occur in proteins that have potential to influence oral sensations.
唾液蛋白有可能改变食物在口腔中的感官感知。在啮齿动物中,饮食多酚暴露会增加多酚结合蛋白和几种组织蛋白酶的唾液浓度,这与对富含多酚的溶液的厌恶感降低有关。如果类似的唾液变化发生在人类身上,那么增加饮食中的多酚可能会改善富含多酚的食物的口感体验。我们假设,以多酚为重点的饮食小变化会增加对多酚的唾液结合蛋白的表达,从而抑制不愉快的多酚感觉。然而,唾液多酚结合蛋白的类似物存在于食物中。因此,我们还假设这些唾液蛋白的食物来源类似物将减轻唾液和感觉的变化。55 名受试者交替进行低多酚饮食周和常规饮食加富含多酚的巧克力奶(杏仁,不含多酚结合蛋白,或牛,含多酚结合蛋白)周。统计分析显示,两种巧克力奶干预都对应于相对表达的 96 种蛋白质和计算浓度的 146 种蛋白质的变化(都经过假发现率校正),从通过蛋白质组学鉴定的 1176 种蛋白质中得出。在发生变化的蛋白质中,富含脯氨酸的蛋白质和组织蛋白酶很明显,这反映了动物研究中的先前工作。与低多酚周相比,受试者在牛巧克力奶干预周后对所有巧克力奶的风味评价都较低,但总体感官变化很小。然而,结果证实饮食变化与唾液变化一致,并且其中一些变化发生在有可能影响口腔感觉的蛋白质中。