TY - JOUR
T1 - Nature's chemical signatures in human olfaction
T2 - A foodborne perspective for future biotechnology
AU - Dunkel, Andreas
AU - Steinhaus, Martin
AU - Kotthoff, Matthias
AU - Nowak, Bettina
AU - Krautwurst, Dietmar
AU - Schieberle, Peter
AU - Hofmann, Thomas
PY - 2014/7/7
Y1 - 2014/7/7
N2 - The biocatalytic production of flavor naturals that determine chemosensory percepts of foods and beverages is an ever challenging target for academic and industrial research. Advances in chemical trace analysis and post-genomic progress at the chemistry-biology interface revealed odor qualities of nature's chemosensory entities to be defined by odorant-induced olfactory receptor activity patterns. Beyond traditional views, this review and meta-analysis now shows characteristic ratios of only about 3 to 40 genuine key odorants for each food, from a group of about 230 out of circa 10 000 food volatiles. This suggests the foodborn stimulus space has co-evolved with, and roughly match our circa 400 olfactory receptors as best natural agonists. This perspective gives insight into nature's chemical signatures of smell, provides the chemical odor codes of more than 220 food samples, and beyond addresses industrial implications for producing recombinants that fully reconstruct the natural odor signatures for use in flavors and fragrances, fully immersive interactive virtual environments, or humanoid bioelectronic noses.
AB - The biocatalytic production of flavor naturals that determine chemosensory percepts of foods and beverages is an ever challenging target for academic and industrial research. Advances in chemical trace analysis and post-genomic progress at the chemistry-biology interface revealed odor qualities of nature's chemosensory entities to be defined by odorant-induced olfactory receptor activity patterns. Beyond traditional views, this review and meta-analysis now shows characteristic ratios of only about 3 to 40 genuine key odorants for each food, from a group of about 230 out of circa 10 000 food volatiles. This suggests the foodborn stimulus space has co-evolved with, and roughly match our circa 400 olfactory receptors as best natural agonists. This perspective gives insight into nature's chemical signatures of smell, provides the chemical odor codes of more than 220 food samples, and beyond addresses industrial implications for producing recombinants that fully reconstruct the natural odor signatures for use in flavors and fragrances, fully immersive interactive virtual environments, or humanoid bioelectronic noses.
KW - biotechnology
KW - electronic noses
KW - key food odorants
KW - olfaction
KW - receptors
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84903745919
U2 - 10.1002/anie.201309508
DO - 10.1002/anie.201309508
M3 - Review article / Perspectives
C2 - 24939725
AN - SCOPUS:84903745919
SN - 1433-7851
VL - 53
SP - 7124
EP - 7143
JO - Angewandte Chemie - International Edition
JF - Angewandte Chemie - International Edition
IS - 28
ER -