Today's interesting fact has to do with fat and alcohol.
They have recently discovered that there chemicals that are produced in the hypothalamus that control your desire to eat fatty foods and/or drink alcoholic liquids.
The amount of these chemicals produced have been found to be controlled by specific genes, and they have shown that certain alleles of those genes produce more than others.
I've already discussed about how they found there are additional taste buds that identify different types of fats on your tongue, and that they've shown that we can suffer cravings for specific types of fat and oil in our food.
This suggests that we are less under control of what we desire to eat, than doctors thought.
Challenged in September 2010 to come up with interesting facts every day by one of my work colleagues, I've since entertained him and those near his desk with bits of information dredged from my brain. Some of my audience went on holiday and still wanted the facts so I started posting here, every day I do one of them, usually Monday through Friday, and the occasional post on the weekend. I post these facts here almost every day and you will find two posts on some days to make any missing days.
Showing posts with label genes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label genes. Show all posts
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Today's interesting fact has to do with bitter tastes, spinach, and brussels sprouts.
I started off today’s fact with how a lab in the US has developed a system that uses extracts from spinach leaves to produce electricity.
While this was considered interesting by my audience, Nick Myall stated that he doesn't like the taste of spinach, brussels sprouts and other brassicas.
As he is the one I give these interesting facts to, this reminded me, that there are bitter tasting chemicals that not everyone taste.
While at university many years ago, our chemistry professor gave all of the class a litmus test strip that had been dipped onto one such chemical.
Our task was to taste the strip and report on that taste. About 10% of the class found it very bitter, but the rest of the class reported tasting just paper.
This ability to taste this specific chemical comes from having two copies of a specific recessive allele of a certain gene.
Our ability to taste many bitter tastes is also controlled by specific alleles.
So Nick and his son, who both find brussels sprouts particularly repugnant, probably have some of these genes, whereas his wife and daughter, who love the taste, probably don't.
My advice would be to have something different on their plates, if possible.
I started off today’s fact with how a lab in the US has developed a system that uses extracts from spinach leaves to produce electricity.
While this was considered interesting by my audience, Nick Myall stated that he doesn't like the taste of spinach, brussels sprouts and other brassicas.
As he is the one I give these interesting facts to, this reminded me, that there are bitter tasting chemicals that not everyone taste.
While at university many years ago, our chemistry professor gave all of the class a litmus test strip that had been dipped onto one such chemical.
Our task was to taste the strip and report on that taste. About 10% of the class found it very bitter, but the rest of the class reported tasting just paper.
This ability to taste this specific chemical comes from having two copies of a specific recessive allele of a certain gene.
Our ability to taste many bitter tastes is also controlled by specific alleles.
So Nick and his son, who both find brussels sprouts particularly repugnant, probably have some of these genes, whereas his wife and daughter, who love the taste, probably don't.
My advice would be to have something different on their plates, if possible.
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