About this Research Topic
In addition, fat or fatty acids have been recognized as the triggers of a potential sixth taste in animals and humans. Similar to the T1Rs and T2R families, the receptors for fatty acids, e.g., CD36, GPR40 (FFAR1), GPR41 (FFAR3), GPR43 (FFAR2), GPR84 and GPR120 (FFAR4), are also expressed in a number of cell types throughout the body. In the gastrointestinal tract and hypothalamic nucleus, fatty acids act on these receptors to critically regulate energy balance by changing ingestive behavior, energy storage and utilization.
Significantly, the sensitivity of these receptors to fatty acids in obese individuals is lower than that in lean individuals. This may account for excess fat consumption in obese individuals and contribute to other diseases such as type 2 diabetes. Fatty acid receptors are present in pancreas, immune cells and other extra-oral organs, but the biological significance of these receptors in these tissues is yet to be fully explored. This Research Topic also welcomes research articles and review papers which address emerging roles mediated by this class of receptors and the molecular mechanisms underlying these roles in the extra-oral organs.
Historically, taste is considered to be responsible for differentiating dietary components in food, and to have been evolved under food selective pressure. With the increasing number of biological functions being mediated by extra-oral taste receptors, it raises a possibility whether the evolution of taste receptors may also be attributed to the selective pressure related to their biological functions in the extra-oral organs. Hence this Research Topic further welcomes review papers, opinions and research articles that address the evolution of taste receptors in the extra-oral systems.
Keywords: Chemosense, Bitter taste, Sweet taste, Nutrient sensing, G-protein-coupled receptors
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