Sugar and spice and all things nice – a journey into taste sensors in the body

Dr Havovi Chichger, ARU, delves into the world of taste and discuss how and why our tissues, such as the kidney and lungs, can sense sweet and bitter substances.

A key evolutionary need is to be able to sense and respond to taste: for example, if a food is bitter, we have sensors in our mouth to recognise the bitter taste and ensure we do not keep consuming a potentially harmful substance. Alternatively, if a food is sweet, another set of sensors in our mouth will recognise this taste and promote neural signals to encourage us to eat food which is potentially sugary and therefore high in energy. In recent years, scientists have identified these taste sensors in other tissues in the body, not related to the mouth which raises the question – why and how do our tissues ‘taste’?

Dr Havovi Chichger, ARU, delves into the weird and wonderful locations in the body which can taste and consider how and why these tissues and organs sense taste and discuss what this means in relation to our diet and health.

 

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