Search results for "fat taste"
showing 3 items of 13 documents
Détection orosensorielle des lipides alimentaires chez la souris : mécanismes impliqués et altérations au cours de l'obésité
2015
Dietary lipids are detected by the gustatory system in rodents and humans. Two candidate lipid-receptors are found in taste buds: CD36, which is involved in the fat taste as shown by studies conducted in our laboratory, and GPR120. Our results show that GPR120 is not directly involved in the gustatory detection of lipids in mice, but could rather be involved in the modulation of the sensitivity for fat. When this gustatory system works properly, food choices can meet the organism’s energy needs. Besides, the pleasure brought by the consumption of palatable foods is satisfied. However, obese people often overconsume energy-dense food. In the central nervous system, perturbations of the rewar…
Taste of Fat and Obesity: Different Hypotheses and Our Point of View
2022
Obesity results from a temporary or prolonged positive energy balance due to an alteration in the homeostatic feedback of energy balance. Food, with its discriminative and hedonic qualities, is a key element of reward-based energy intake. An alteration in the brain reward system for highly palatable energy-rich foods, comprised of fat and carbohydrates, could be one of the main factors involved in the development of obesity by increasing the attractiveness and consumption of fat-rich foods. This would induce, in turn, a decrease in the taste of fat. A better understanding of the altered reward system in obesity may open the door to a new era for the diagnosis, management and treatment of th…
Salivary lipolytic activity seems to modulate the basal free fatty acid concentration in human saliva
2017
The perception of fat is a complex sensation that involves various sensory modalities, such as texture, aroma and taste. Taste perception is supported by the discovery of fatty acid receptors in the tongue papillae. However, dietary fat is mainly composed of esterified fatty acids, whereas only free fatty acids can bind to taste receptors. In this context, the literature often mentioned the necessity and efficiency of a salivary lipolytic activity to hydrolyse the esterified fatty acids present in foods and enable fat perception. We made a complementary hypothesis in which salivary lipolytic activity is also involved in regulating the basal level of salivary fatty acids in saliva. To test t…