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Individual differences in sensitivity to bitter-tasting substances
Authors:Yokomukai  Yoshiko; Cowart  Beverly J; Beauchamp  Gary K
Abstract:Perception of several bitter-tasting compounds was tested in52 subjects. Stable individual differences in the perceivedintensity of the bitterness of suprathreshold concentrationsof quinine sulfate (QSO4) and urea were found. Whereas 18 subjectsjudged selected concentrations of these compounds to be equallybitter, 17 found QSO4 to be more bitter than urea, and 17 foundurea to be more bitter than QSO4. These reliable individualdifferences were significantly related to threshold sensitivityto QSO4; that is, individuals who perceived QSO4 to be moreintense than urea at suprathreshold concentrations also hadlower QSO4 thresholds than did those who perceived urea to bemore intense than QSO4. There appeared to be no relationshipbetween the relative perceived intensities of these compoundsand rating of the bitterness of PROP (6-n-propylthiouracil).However, QSO4-sensitive individuals tended to find the bitternessof suprathreshold caffeine and sucrose octaacetate to be greaterthan that of suprathreshold magnesium sulfate, whereas the reversewas true for urea-sensitive individuals. This pattern parallelsthe pattern of cross-adaptation among these compounds reportedby other investigators. These results are consistent with theexistence of multiple bitter transduction sequences and suggestthat individual differences in response to various bitter compoundsmay reflect differences in teh relative availability of specifictransduction sequences.
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