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NIH Workshop Report: sensory nutrition and disease

Authors :
Nirupa Chaudhari
Alan C. Spector
Claire Murphy
Barry G. Green
Mark Lyte
Emily E. Noble
John McLaughlin
Danielle R. Reed
Amber L. Alhadeff
John P. McGann
Catia Sternini
John I. Glendinning
Valerie B. Duffy
Padma Maruvada
Timothy H. Moran
Paule V. Joseph
Jennifer L. Pluznick
Kristina I. Rother
Gary K. Beauchamp
M. Yanina Pepino
Alfredo Fontanini
Richard D. Mattes
George Kyriazis
Enrique Saez
Monica Dus
Source :
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Reed, D R, Alhadeff, A L, Beauchamp, G K, Chaudhari, N, Duffy, V B, Dus, M, Fontanini, A, Glendinning, J I, Green, B G, Joseph, P V, Kyriazis, G A, Lyte, M, Maruvada, P, Mcgann, J P, Mclaughlin, J T, Moran, T H, Murphy, C, Noble, E E, Pepino, M Y, Pluznick, J L, Rother, K I, Saez, E, Spector, A C, Sternini, C & Mattes, R D 2021, ' NIH Workshop Report: sensory nutrition and disease ', The American journal of clinical nutrition, vol. 113, no. 1, pp. 232-245 . https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/nqaa302
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

In November 2019, the NIH held the “Sensory Nutrition and Disease” workshop to challenge multidisciplinary researchers working at the interface of sensory science, food science, psychology, neuroscience, nutrition, and health sciences to explore how chemosensation influences dietary choice and health. This report summarizes deliberations of the workshop, as well as follow-up discussion in the wake of the current pandemic. Three topics were addressed: A) the need to optimize human chemosensory testing and assessment, B) the plasticity of chemosensory systems, and C) the interplay of chemosensory signals, cognitive signals, dietary intake, and metabolism. Several ways to advance sensory nutrition research emerged from the workshop: 1) refining methods to measure chemosensation in large cohort studies and validating measures that reflect perception of complex chemosensations relevant to dietary choice; 2) characterizing interindividual differences in chemosensory function and how they affect ingestive behaviors, health, and disease risk; 3) defining circuit-level organization and function that link and interact with gustatory, olfactory, homeostatic, visceral, and cognitive systems; and 4) discovering new ligands for chemosensory receptors (e.g., those produced by the microbiome) and cataloging cell types expressing these receptors. Several of these priorities were made more urgent by the current pandemic because infection with sudden acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and the ensuing coronavirus disease of 2019 has direct short- and perhaps long-term effects on flavor perception. There is increasing evidence of functional interactions between the chemosensory and nutritional sciences. Better characterization of this interface is expected to yield insights to promote health, mitigate disease risk, and guide nutrition policy.

Details

ISSN :
00029165
Volume :
113
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0114141e14747309b187e52e6d7205e6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/nqaa302