The multi-faceted food odorant 4-methylphenol selectively activates evolutionary conserved receptor OR9Q2

Franziska Haag (First Author), Tim Frey (Co-Author), Sandra Hoffmann (Co-Author), Johanna Kreissl (Co-Author), Jörg Stein (Co-Author), Gerd Kobal (Co-Author), Hans Hauner (Co-Author), Dietmar Krautwurst* (Last Author)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

4-Methylphenol is a food-related odor-active volatile with a high recognition factor, due to its horse stable-like, fecal odor quality. Its ambivalent hedonic impact as key aroma compound, malodor, and semiochemical has spurred the search for its cognate, chemosensory odorant receptors across species. A human odorant receptor for the highly characteristic 4-methylphenol has been elusive. Here, we identified and characterized human receptor OR9Q2 to be tuned to purified 4-methylphenol, but not to its contaminant isomer 3-methylphenol. This highly selective function of OR9Q2 complements an exclusive phenol detection gap in the ancient, most broadly tuned human odorant receptor OR2W1. Moreover, a 4-methylphenol function is evolutionary conserved in phylogenetically related OR9Q2 orthologs from chimpanzee, mouse, and cow. Notably, the cow receptor outperformed human OR9Q2 10-fold in signal strength, consonant with previous reports of 4-methylphenol as a bovine pheromone. Our results suggest OR9Q2 as best sensor for the key food odorant, malodor, and semiochemical 4-methylphenol.

Original languageEnglish
Article number136492
JournalFood Chemistry
Volume426
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Nov 2023

Keywords

  • G-protein coupled receptor
  • High throughput screening
  • High-impact aroma compound
  • Malodor
  • Narrowly tuned
  • P-cresol

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