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1.
In order to investigate the effect of leucine residues on the taste of peptides, some oligo peptides containing leucine residues were synthesized and their taste was evaluated. The hydrophobicity of leucine residues markedly caused the bitterness of peptides and stronger bitterness was always found when a leucine residue was located at the C-terminus of peptides. The possibility of 2 binding sites between the bitter peptides and the bitter taste receptors of the gustation cells was postulated.  相似文献   

2.
Mutant strains of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae that require branched-chain amino acids must be supplemented with large concentrations (up to 10 mM) of these amino acids to satisfy their nutritional requirement. The utilization of one branched-chain amino acid, leucine, was examined in several leul strains of yeast grown aerobically in a glucose-ammonium salts minimal medium containing a limiting concentration (0.2 mM) of leucine. In this medium, the leucine requirement of the auxotrophic strains could be reduced by valine, another branched-chain amino acid. Increasing the valine concentration increased the cell yields of cultures and also reduced the levels of 3-methyl-1-butanol detected in the medium by gas chromatography. The concentration of 3-methyl-1-butanol was reduced from 122.0 to 48.9 μM when 5.0 mM valine was supplemented to limiting-leucine cultures. The amino acids isoleucine, threonine, norleucine, norvaline, α-amino-butyrate, alanine, and glycine also spared the leucine requirement of leucine auxotrophs, most likely because they resembled leucine and competed for its uptake. We propose that leucine analogs restrict the entry and degradation of leucine and thus reduce its conversion to 3-methyl-1-butanol, a major component of fusel oil.  相似文献   

3.
Various peptides and derivatives of peptides and amino acids were synthesized and tasted, systematically, to elucidate the relationship between bitterness and chemical structures of peptides.

We have found that: 1. Peptides become more bitter than the original amino acids when their amino and carboxyl groups are blocked and when peptide bond is formed. 2. A peptide molecule with a high content of amino acids with hydrophobic side chains will develop bitter taste. 3. The amino acids in a peptide chain independently contribute to bitterness regardless of amino acid sequences and configuration.  相似文献   

4.
To estimate the steric distance between the bitter taste determinant sites in peptides, some cyclic dipeptides, amino acid anilides, amino acid cyclohexylamides, and benzoyl amino acids were synthesized and their tastes were evaluated. The diketopiperazine ring of cyclic dipeptides acted as a bitter taste determinant site due to its hydrophobicity. The steric distance between 2 sites was estimated as 4.1 Å from the molecule models of cyclic dipeptides composed of typical amino acids in the bitter peptides. Due to the hypothesis of two bitter taste determinant sites, which bind with the bitter taste receptor via a “binding unit” and a “stimulating unit,” a mechanism for the bitterness in peptides was postulated.  相似文献   

5.
A previous study investigating individuals' bitterness sensitivities found a close association among three compounds: L-tryptophan (L-trp), L-phenylalanine (L-phe) and urea (Delwiche et al., 2001, Percept. Psychophys. 63, 761-776). In the present experiment, psychophysical cross-adaptation and bitterness inhibition experiments were performed on these three compounds to determine whether the bitterness could be differentially affected by either technique. If the two experimental approaches failed to differentiate L-trp, L-phe and urea's bitterness, then we may infer they share peripheral physiological mechanisms involved in bitter taste. All compounds were intensity matched in each of 13 subjects, so the judgments of adaptation or bitterness inhibition would be based on equal initial magnitudes and, therefore, directly comparable. In the first experiment, cross-adaptation of bitterness between the amino acids was high (>80%) and reciprocal. Urea and quinine-HCl (control) did not cross-adapt with the amino acids symmetrically. In a second experiment, the sodium salts, NaCl and Na gluconate, did not differentially inhibit the bitterness of L-trp, L-phe and urea, but the control compound, MgSO(4), was differentially affected. The bitter inhibition experiment supports the hypothesis that L-trp, L-phe and urea share peripheral bitter taste mechanisms, while the adaptation experiment revealed subtle differences between urea and the amino acids indicating that urea and the amino acids activate only partially overlapping bitter taste mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
The bitter taste perception (associated with the ability or inability to taste phenylthiocarbamide) is mediated by the TAS2R38 gene. Most of the variation in this gene is explained by three common amino-acid polymorphisms at positions 49 (encoding proline or alanine), 262 (alanine or valine) and 296 (valine or isoleucine) that determine two common isoforms: proline–alanine–valine (PAV) and alanine–valine–isoleucine (AVI). PAV is the major taster haplotype (heterozygote and homozygote) and AVI is the major non-taster haplotype (homozygote). Amino acid 49 has the major effect on the distinction between tasters and non-tasters of all three variants. The sense of bitter taste protects us from ingesting toxic substances, present in some vegetables, that can affect the thyroid when ingested in large quantities. Balancing selection has been used to explain the current high non-taster frequency, by maintaining divergent TAS2R38 alleles in humans. We have amplified and sequenced the TAS2R38 amino acid 49 in the virtually uncontaminated Neanderthal sample of El Sidrón 1253 and have determined that it was heterozygous. Thus, this Neanderthal was a taster individual, although probably slightly less than a PAV homozygote. This indicates that variation in bitter taste perception pre-dates the divergence of the lineages leading to Neanderthals and modern humans.  相似文献   

7.
In order to investigate the production of a strong bitter taste of the tetrapeptide, Arg-Pro-Phe-Phe (1), we synthesized 16 kinds of analogs and tasted them. From the results, it was clarified that all the constituent amino acid residues in Arg-Pro-Phe-Phe (1) were necessary for its strong bitter taste. For a further increase in bitterness potency, it was found that the bitterness production units necessary should be concentrated together. In addition, Arg-Pro-Gly-Gly (6) and Gly-Gly-Arg-Pro (7) were found to have no bitterness. This will be very useful not only for studies on debittering of food but also for basic studies on the taste production mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
In order to elucidate the relationship between bitter taste and chemical structure in peptides, various kinds of model bitter peptides containing arginine, proline and phenylalanine were synthesized, and the contribution of the individual amino acids to the bitter taste was made clear. It was confirmed that, in order to strengthen the bitterness in di- and tripeptides, the hydrophobic amino acid needs to be located at the C-terminal and, conversely, the basic amino acid should be located at the N-terminal Furthermore, a strong bitter taste was observed when arginine was contiguous to proline such as Arg-Pro, Gly-Arg-Pro and Arg-Pro-Gly. A synergistic effect for bitter taste was observed in the peptides whose structure is (Arg)l-(Pro)m-(Phe)n (l=1, 2; m, n = 1 ~ 3) by increasing the number of amino acids. Among them, the octapeptide (Arg-Arg-Pro-Pro-Pro-Phe-Phe-Phe) possessed an extremely bitter taste with its threshold value of 0.002 mm and was found to be the most bitter among the peptides.  相似文献   

9.
1. The reciprocal interference between l-leucine, l-isoleucine and l-valine during absorption was studied in rats both in vivo and with an everted-sac preparation in vitro. 2. After feeding with the amino acids alone there was a considerable increase in their concentration in the intestinal lumen followed by a rapid disappearance, indicating efficient absorption. Absorption was reflected by a high concentration of the respective amino acids in the portal plasma. Isoleucine and valine inhibited the absorption of leucine, and leucine inhibited the absorption of isoleucine and valine. Inhibition of absorption by the interfering amino acid was generally partly overcome after 30–60min., probably through the absorption of the interfering amino acid. At that time the rise in the concentration of the amino acid in portal plasma began. 3. These results were confirmed by experiments in vitro: isoleucine and valine inhibited the absorption rate of leucine, and leucine that of isoleucine and valine. 4. Active absorption of amino acids was rapid at low concentrations and depressed at higher concentrations.  相似文献   

10.
The genetic predisposition to taste 6-n-propylthiouracil (PROP) varies among individuals and is associated with salivary levels of Ps-1 and II-2 peptides, belonging to the basic proline-rich protein family (bPRP). We evaluated the role of these proteins and free amino acids that selectively interact with the PROP molecule, in modulating bitter taste responsiveness. Subjects were classified by their PROP taster status based on ratings of perceived taste intensity for PROP and NaCl solutions. Quantitative and qualitative determinations of Ps-1 and II-2 proteins in unstimulated saliva were performed by HPLC-ESI-MS analysis. Subjects rated PROP bitterness after supplementation with Ps-1 and II-2, and two amino acids (L-Arg and L-Lys) whose interaction with PROP was demonstrated by 1H-NMR spectroscopy. ANOVA showed that salivary levels of II-2 and Ps-1 proteins were higher in unstimulated saliva of PROP super-tasters and medium tasters than in non-tasters. Supplementation of Ps-1 protein in individuals lacking it in saliva enhanced their PROP bitter taste responsiveness, and this effect was specific to the non-taster group.1H-NMR results showed that the interaction between PROP and L-Arg is stronger than that involving L-Lys, and taste experiments confirmed that oral supplementation with these two amino acids increased PROP bitterness intensity, more for L-Arg than for L-Lys. These data suggest that Ps-1 protein facilitates PROP bitter taste perception and identifies a role for free L-Arg and L-Lys in PROP tasting.  相似文献   

11.
AIMS: Staphylococcus xylosus is an important starter culture in the production of flavours from the branched-chain amino acids leucine, valine and isoleucine in fermented meat products. The sensorially most important flavour compounds are the branched-chain aldehydes and acids derived from the corresponding amino acids and this paper intends to perspectivate these flavour compounds in the context of leucine metabolism. METHODS AND RESULTS: GC and GC/MS analysis combined with stable isotope labelling was used to study leucine catabolism. This amino acid together with valine and isoleucine was used as precursors for the production of branched-chain fatty acids for cell membrane biosynthesis during growth. A 83.3% of the cellular fatty acids were branched. The dominating fatty acid was anteiso-C(15:0) that constituted 55% of the fatty acids. A pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and alpha-ketoacid dependent reaction catalysed the deamination of leucine, valine and isoleucine into their corresponding alpha-ketoacids. As alpha-amino group acceptor alpha-keto-beta-methylvaleric acid and alpha-ketoisovaleric acid was much more efficient than alpha-ketoglutarate. The sensorially and metabolic key intermediate on the pathway to the branched-chain fatty acids, 3-methylbutanoic acid was produced from leucine at the onset of the stationary growth phase and then, when the growth medium became scarce in leucine, from the oxidation of glucose via pyruvate. CONCLUSIONS: This paper demonstrates that the sensorially important branched-chain aldehydes and acids are important intermediates on the metabolic route leading to branched-chain fatty acids for cell membrane biosynthesis. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The metabolic information obtained is extremely important in connection with a future biotechnological design of starter cultures for production of fermented meat.  相似文献   

12.
  1. The influence of varying amounts of amino acids on the uptake of threonine, isoleucine, valine and leucine and their degradation to higher alcohols was investigated using a mutant strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, mating type a, genetic markers ade2, hom2, thr4, ilv2, leu1.
  2. The cell mass is increased by increasing concentrations of threonine, isoleucine, valine and leucine, the latter two resulting in a higher dry weight. The amino acids are completely utilised at low concentrations. At higher contents up to 20% of the amino acids remain in the medium. The uptake of threonine, isoleucine, valine and leucine depends on the relative amounts of the concentrations of these amino acids in the medium. A greater amount of an amino acid is taken up if its concentration is comparatively higher than those of the other amino acids. There is a competition between the amino acids for the uptake into the cells.
Higher amounts of intracellular isoleucine and leucine are converted to 2-and 3-methylbutanol when compared with the degradation of valine and threonine to isobutanol and n-propanol-1, isoleucine and leucine up to 90%, valine up to 24% and threonine up to 20%. There is a competition between the four amino acids for their degradation to the corresponding higher alcohols. This behaviour confirms the earlier assumption of a degradation of the four amino acids by unspecific enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
An epinephrine (E) tablet is under development for sublingual (SL) administration for the first-aid treatment of anaphylaxis; however, the inherent bitterness of E may hinder acceptability by patients, especially children. To assess the degree of E bitterness and to predict the masking effects of sweetening and/or flavoring non-medicinal ingredients (NMIs), the potential usefulness of an electronic tongue (e-Tongue) was evaluated. The e-Tongue sensors were conditioned, calibrated, and tested for taste discrimination. Six standard active pharmaceutical ingredients were used to build and validate a bitterness model which was then used to assess E bitartrate (EB) solutions from 0.3–9 mM. Taste-masking efficiency of aspartame (ASP), acesulfame potassium (ASK), and citric acid (CA) each at 0.5 mM was evaluated. Using EB 9 mM, the bitterness score was 20 on a scale of 20 (unacceptable) down to 1 (not detected). When NMIs 0.5 mM were added, neither ASK (17.2, unacceptable) nor was ASP (14.0, limit acceptable) effective in masking the bitter taste. When the combination of ASK and ASP was used, the bitterness score was reduced to 9.2 (acceptable). However, the addition of CA alone resulted in the best reduction of the bitterness score to 3.3 (not detected). Using the e-Tongue, the incorporation of a variety of sweetening and/or flavoring NMIs into a SL tablet of E could be shown to mask its bitter taste by up to 80%. These results should be confirmed by in vivo studies.  相似文献   

14.
Zhang Y  Hoon MA  Chandrashekar J  Mueller KL  Cook B  Wu D  Zuker CS  Ryba NJ 《Cell》2003,112(3):293-301
Mammals can taste a wide repertoire of chemosensory stimuli. Two unrelated families of receptors (T1Rs and T2Rs) mediate responses to sweet, amino acids, and bitter compounds. Here, we demonstrate that knockouts of TRPM5, a taste TRP ion channel, or PLCbeta2, a phospholipase C selectively expressed in taste tissue, abolish sweet, amino acid, and bitter taste reception, but do not impact sour or salty tastes. Therefore, despite relying on different receptors, sweet, amino acid, and bitter transduction converge on common signaling molecules. Using PLCbeta2 taste-blind animals, we then examined a fundamental question in taste perception: how taste modalities are encoded at the cellular level. Mice engineered to rescue PLCbeta2 function exclusively in bitter-receptor expressing cells respond normally to bitter tastants but do not taste sweet or amino acid stimuli. Thus, bitter is encoded independently of sweet and amino acids, and taste receptor cells are not broadly tuned across these modalities.  相似文献   

15.
Capsaicin is viewed as a purely chemesthetic stimulus that selectively stimulates the somatosensory system. Here we show that when applied to small areas of the tongue, capsaicin can produce a bitter taste as well as sensory irritation. In experiment 1, individuals were screened for the ability to perceive bitterness from capsaicin on the circumvallate papillae. Fifteen of 25 subjects who reported at least weak bitterness rated the intensity of taste, irritation and coolness produced by 100-320 microM capsaicin and 100-320 mM menthol applied via cotton swabs to the tip (fungiform region), the posterior edge (foliate region), and the dorsal posterior surface (circumvallate region) of the tongue. Sucrose, citric acid, sodium chloride and quinine hydrochloride were applied to the same areas to assess tastes responsiveness. On average, capsaicin and menthol produced "moderate" bitterness (and no other significant taste qualities) in the circumvallate region, and weaker bitterness on the side and tip of the tongue. Sensory irritation from capsaicin was rated significantly higher at the tongue tip, whereas menthol coolness was rated higher in the circumvallate region. In experiment 2 we applied sucrose and quinine hydrochloride together with capsaicin to investigate the effects other taste stimuli might have on capsaicin's reported bitterness. As expected, adding quinine produced stronger bitterness in the circumvallate and fungiform regions, and adding sucrose significantly reduced the bitterness of capsaicin in the circumvallate region. Overall, the results suggest that capsaicin and menthol are capable of stimulating a subset of taste neurons that respond to bitter substances, perhaps via receptor-gated ion channels like those recently found in capsaicin- and menthol-sensitive trigeminal ganglion neurons, and that the glossopharyngeal nerve may contain more such neurons than the chorda tympani nerve. That some people fail to perceive bitterness from capsaicin further implies that the incidence of capsaicin-sensitive taste neurons varies across people as well as between gustatory nerves.  相似文献   

16.
Two neutrophil chemotactic factors were isolated from the culture filtrates of Streptococcus sanguis ATCC 10556 and were chemically characterized as N-terminal blocked peptides of low molecular weight. One of the factors consisted of proline, valine, methionine, isoleucine and leucine and the other of methionine, isoleucine, leucine and phenylalanine. In both factors, methionine was detected as the sole N-terminal amino acid, but the amino group was blocked. The removal of N-terminal methionine yielded several N-terminal amino acids, suggesting that S. sanguis produced several N-terminal blocked methionyl peptides, all of which could be chemotactically active.  相似文献   

17.
The mode of action of purified aminopeptidase N from Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris Wg2 on a complex peptide mixture of a tryptic digest from bovine beta-casein was analyzed. The oligopeptides produced in the tryptic digest before and after aminopeptidase N treatment were identified by analysis of the N- and C-terminal amino acid sequences and amino acid compositions of the isolated peptides and by on-line liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Incubation of purified peptides with aminopeptidase N resulted in complete hydrolysis of many peptides, while others were only partially hydrolyzed or not hydrolyzed. The tryptic digest of beta-casein exhibits a strong bitter taste, which corresponds to the strong hydrophobicity of several peptides in the tryptic digest of beta-casein. The degradation of the "bitter" tryptic digest by aminopeptidase N resulted in a decrease of hydrophobic peptides and a drastic decrease of bitterness of the reaction mixture.  相似文献   

18.
The cDNA encoding A1aB1b proglycinin was expressed in E. coli, for the efficient isolation of a single peptide responsible for the bitterness. The 55-kD proglycinin was highly purified, hydrolyzed, and further purified through a series of chromatographic steps to yield fractions with the major bitter peptides. The most bitter-tasting fractions contained peptides with average molecular weights lower than 1,700 Da. An analysis of the amino acid sequences indicated that many small bitter peptides (< 1,000 Da) are composed of uncharged polar amino acids as well as hydrophobic amino acids, with a charged residue often being present at either end. This suggests the involvement of a certain structural requirement in taste perception.  相似文献   

19.
It was recently shown that in some subjects capsaicin can evoke bitterness as well as burning and stinging, particularly in the circumvallate (CV) region of the tongue. Because perception of bitterness from capsaicin is characterized by large individual differences, the main goal of the present study was to learn whether people who taste capsaicin as bitter also report bitterness from structurally similar sensory irritants that are known to stimulate capsaicin-sensitive neurons. The irritancy and taste of capsaicin and two of its most commonly studied congeners, piperine and zingerone, were measured in individuals who had been screened for visibility of, and reliable access to, the CV papillae. Approximately half of these individuals reported tasting bitterness from all three irritants when the stimuli were swabbed directly onto the CV papillae. Concentrations that produced similar levels of burning sensation across subjects also produced similar (though lower) levels of bitter taste. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that capsaicin and its congeners stimulate bitterness via a common sensory receptor that is distributed differentially among individuals. Additionally, bitter tasters rated gustatory qualities (but not burning and stinging) slightly but significantly higher than did bitter non-tasters, which suggests that perception of capsaicin bitterness is associated with a higher overall taste responsiveness (but not chemesthetic responsiveness) in the CV region.  相似文献   

20.
Amino acid fermentation and hydrogen transfer in mixed cultures   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Abstract The degradation of the following amino acids was investigated in mixed cultures obtained from a waste water purification plant: aspartate, glutamate, serine, alanine, valine and leucine. Inhibition of sulfate-reducing bacteria in these mixed cultures by molybdate was found to inhibit amino acid degradation. The degradation of serine, alanine, valine and leucine was accelerated considerably by active sulfate reduction. The fermentation of aspartate and glutamate was not stimulated by the presence of sulfate-reducing bacteria. The existence of species which are able to ferment valine and leucine by coupling their oxidation to the reduction of exogenous acetate to butyrate was demonstrated.  相似文献   

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