Friday, February 15, 2013

News in Brief: Bitter and sour taste detectors also say, 'too salty'

Mice that can?t sense the two tastes find high sodium attractive

By Rachel Ehrenberg

Web edition: February 13, 2013

Salt has a split personality with its ability to enhance deliciousness or ruin a dish. Now scientists have revealed the underpinnings of salt?s dark side: Heavy doses of the seasoning trigger taste cells that detect bitter and sour flavors.

Mice without working versions of these taste cells find high levels of saltiness appetizing rather than repugnant, scientists report in the Feb. 14 Nature. The mice even liked a salt concentration equivalent to that of sea water.

The researchers don?t know how high salt levels kick-start the bitter and sour detectors, but the research suggests that a triumvirate of taste cells must oversee salt detection. Dedicated salt detectors enable attraction to salt, while bitter and sour detectors take over when salt levels skyrocket.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/348281/title/News_in_Brief_Bitter_and_sour_taste_detectors_also_say_too_salty

wisconsin primary dallas fort worth airport texas tornados seattle seahawks new uniforms wisconsin recall wisconsin recall doris day

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.