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Abstract
The vertebrate sense of taste allows rapid assessment of the nutritional quality and potential presence of harmful substances prior to ingestion. Among the five basic taste qualities, salty, sour, sweet, umami, and bitter, bitterness is associated with the presence of putative toxic substances and elicits rejection behaviors in a wide range of animals including humans. However, not all bitter substances are harmful, some are thought to be health-beneficial and nutritious. Among those compound classes that elicit a bitter taste although being non-toxic and partly even essential for humans are bitter peptides and l-amino acids. Using functional heterologous expression assays, we observed that the 5 dominant human bitter taste receptors responsive to bitter peptides and amino acids are activated by bile acids, which are notorious for their extreme bitterness. We further demonstrate that the cross-reactivity of bitter taste receptors for these two different compound classes is evolutionary conserved and can be traced back to the amphibian lineage. Moreover, we show that the cross-detection by some receptors relies on “structural mimicry” between the very bitter peptide l-Trp-Trp-Trp and bile acids, whereas other receptors exhibit a phylogenetic conservation of this trait. As some bile acid-sensitive bitter taste receptor genes fulfill dual-roles in gustatory and non-gustatory systems, we suggest that the phylogenetic conservation of the rather surprising cross-detection of the two substance classes could rely on a gene-sharing-like mechanism in which the non-gustatory function accounts for the bitter taste response to amino acids and peptides.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 217 |
| Journal | Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences |
| Volume | 81 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Dec 2024 |
Keywords
- Amino acid
- Bile acid
- Bitter taste receptor
- Calcium-mobilization assay
- Evolution
- Molecular modeling
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Dive into the research topics of 'Membrane-bound chemoreception of bitter bile acids and peptides is mediated by the same subset of bitter taste receptors'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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DFG 468601105 - Bitter peptides
Behrens, M. (PI), Schäfer, S. (CoI), Di Pizio, A. (PI), Steuer, A. (CoI), Kogut-Günthel, M. (CoI) & Dawid, C. (PI)
1/01/22 → 31/12/24
Project: Research
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New insights into peptide bitterness
Schäfer, S. (Speaker)
25 Jun 2024Activity: Talk or event contribution › Poster presentation
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Bitter reception of bile acids and bitter peptides is facilitated by the same bitter taste receptor subsets
Schäfer, S. (Speaker)
17 Jan 2024Activity: Talk or event contribution › Oral presentation
Press/Media
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Nicht alles, was bitter schmeckt, ist potenziell schädlich. Doch warum?
Schäfer, S., Di Pizio, A. & Behrens, M.
22/07/24 → 28/12/24
42 Media contributions
Press/Media
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PM vom 22.07.2024 Membrane-bound chemoreception of bitter bile acids and peptides is mediated by the same subset of bitter taste receptors
3/08/24
1 Media contribution
Press/Media