Molecules, Receptors, and Sensation
When you bite into a ripe strawberry, your brain simultaneously perceives sweetness, a complex fruity aroma, and a hint of tartness. This multisensory experience is the result of specific molecules binding to specific receptor proteins on your taste cells and olfactory neurons. The biochemistry of taste and smell is one of the most elegant examples of molecular recognition in biology — and understanding it has profound implications for nutrition, food science, and medicine.
The 2004 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Richard Axel and Linda Buck for their discovery of the odorant receptor gene family (approximately 400 functional genes in humans), opening the molecular door to olfactory science.
The Five Basic Tastes
The human tongue contains approximately 10,000 taste buds, each housing 50–100 taste receptor cells (TRCs). TRCs detect five basic tastes: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami. Recent research suggests fat (oleogustus) and starchy tastes may constitute additional basic modalities.
Sweet: Sugar and Receptor T1R2/T1R3
Sweetness is detected by the T1R2 + T1R3 heterodimer — a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). This receptor has a large extracellular Venus flytrap domain that binds sugars and other sweeteners.
Glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆), sucrose, and fructose bind through hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interactions. The remarkable sweetness of artificial sweeteners comes from their much tighter binding: - Aspartame (L-Asp-L-Phe-OMe): ~200× sweeter than sucrose by weight - Saccharin: ~300–500× sweeter - Sucralose (chlorinated sucrose analog): ~600× sweeter - Rebaudioside A (from stevia plant): ~200–400× sweeter
All trigger the same T1R2/T1R3 receptor → Gαgustducin → phospholipase C → IP₃ → Ca²⁺ release → TRPM5 channel opening → depolarization → sweet nerve signal.
Sour: Acid Detection
Sourness signals the presence of acids — protons (H⁺). The primary sour receptor is the OTOP1 proton channel (otopetrin 1), which allows H⁺ to flow directly into TRCs, causing membrane depolarization. The PKD2L1/PKD1L3 ion channel complex contributes to sour detection on Type III TRCs.
Acetic acid in vinegar (pKa 4.76), citric acid in lemons (pKa 3.13), malic acid in apples, and tartaric acid in wine all trigger sour taste. The sourness of a food correlates with titratable acidity more than pH alone, explaining why some acids taste sourer than their pH might suggest.
Salty: Ion Channels
Saltiness primarily results from Na⁺ ions. The ENaC (epithelial sodium channel) on Type I TRCs allows Na⁺ to flow in, directly depolarizing the cell. This is why sodium chloride (NaCl) tastes purely salty. Lithium chloride (LiCl) also tastes salty because Li⁺ permeates ENaC. Potassium chloride (KCl) and ammonium chloride (NH₄Cl) trigger salt-like tastes through a different, ENaC-independent pathway with a bitter component.
The evolutionary logic of salt taste is straightforward: sodium is an essential mineral for nerve function and osmotic balance, and humans and animals evolved to seek it out.
Bitter: The Protective Sense
Bitterness is detected by the T2R receptor family — 25 different GPCRs in humans, each tuned to different bitter compounds. This redundancy evolved to warn against a wide variety of potentially toxic plant alkaloids and other compounds.
Notable bitter compounds and their chemical nature: - Caffeine (methylxanthine): binds T2R43, T2R44 - Quinine (quinoline alkaloid): the bitter taste in tonic water; binds multiple T2Rs - Isohumulones (from hops): bitter compounds in beer - Phenylthiocarbamide (PTC) and PROP (propylthiouracil): bitter to ~75% of people; the T2R38 gene underlies the classical "taster vs. non-taster" genetic polymorphism - Glucosinolates in broccoli/Brussels sprouts: broken down to bitter isothiocyanates by gut bacteria
All T2R receptors signal through Gαgustducin → phosphodiesterase → decreased cAMP → ion channel changes → bitter nerve signal.
Umami: The Savory Taste
Umami (Japanese for "delicious savory") was identified as a basic taste by Kikunae Ikeda in 1908, who isolated monosodium glutamate (MSG) from seaweed broth. The receptor is the T1R1 + T1R3 heterodimer, which binds:
- L-glutamate (the primary umami compound; present in aged cheese, tomatoes, soy sauce, mushrooms, meat)
- L-aspartate
- 5'-ribonucleotides (IMP and GMP from meat and dried mushrooms, respectively), which dramatically synergize with glutamate — increasing umami intensity 7–8× when combined
The molecular interaction between glutamate and the T1R1 Venus flytrap domain involves hydrogen bonds between glutamate's α-amino and α-carboxylate groups and specific residues in the binding pocket.
Flavor: The Integration of Taste and Smell
What we experience as "flavor" is approximately 80% olfactory and only 20% taste. Most of the complexity we ascribe to flavors — the difference between strawberry and raspberry, coffee and tea — comes from volatile aroma compounds detected by the olfactory system.
Retronasal olfaction occurs when volatile compounds from food in the mouth travel up through the nasopharynx to the olfactory epithelium. This is why food "tastes like nothing" when you have a blocked nose.
Olfaction: Detecting Volatile Molecules
The human olfactory epithelium (in the roof of the nasal cavity) contains approximately 6 million olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs). Each ORN expresses only one type of olfactory receptor (OR) from a family of ~400 functional genes (the largest gene family in mammals).
Olfactory receptors are GPCRs with a hydrophobic binding pocket in their transmembrane helices. Odorant binding → Gαolf → adenylyl cyclase → cAMP → CNG channels → Ca²⁺ influx → depolarization → odor signal to olfactory bulb.
The Combinatorial Code
With only ~400 ORs, humans can detect and distinguish potentially 1 trillion different odors. The key is a combinatorial code: each odorant activates a pattern of multiple receptor types, and the pattern (not the receptors activated individually) encodes odor identity. Changing even one functional group on an odorant can shift its receptor activation pattern and its perceived smell:
- Octanoic acid (caprylic acid): rancid, fatty smell
- Methyl octanoate: fruity
- Octanol: rose, citrus
- Octanal: citrus, soapy
Structure-Odor Relationships
The relationship between molecular structure and perceived odor is complex and not fully predictable, but key principles include: - Molecular size: larger molecules are less volatile and have lower odor thresholds (more potent) - Functional groups: aldehydes often have fruity/fresh notes; esters are fruity; thiols are sulfurous; pyrazines (from roasting) are nutty/earthy - Chirality: (+)-carvone smells like spearmint; (−)-carvone smells like caraway — the same formula, mirror-image molecules, completely different perceptions
Key Flavor Compounds
| Compound | Chemical Class | Aroma |
|---|---|---|
| Vanillin | Aldehyde | Vanilla |
| Benzaldehyde | Aldehyde | Almond/cherry |
| Limonene | Terpene | Citrus |
| Linalool | Terpene alcohol | Floral/lavender |
| Isoamyl acetate | Ester | Banana |
| Geraniol | Terpene alcohol | Rose |
| 2-Isobutyl-3-methoxypyrazine | Pyrazine | Bell pepper, green |
| Diacetyl | Diketone | Butter |
| Furfural | Furan | Caramel/bread |
| Indole | Aromatic amine | Jasmine (low conc.), fecal (high conc.) |
| Hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) | Inorganic | Rotten egg, also contributes to wine minerality |
| Methyl mercaptan (methanethiol) | Thiol | Garlic, "cat urine" taint in wine |
Chemosensory Processing in the Brain
Olfactory signals travel from ORNs → olfactory bulb → primary olfactory cortex (piriform cortex) → amygdala, hippocampus, and prefrontal cortex. The direct connection to the limbic system explains the powerful emotional and memory-triggering effects of odors (the Proustian memory phenomenon).
Taste signals from taste buds travel via cranial nerves VII, IX, and X → brainstem → thalamus → primary gustatory cortex (insular and frontal opercular cortex).
The final "flavor" percept is created by multisensory integration in higher brain areas, combining taste, smell, texture, temperature, and even sound (the crunch of potato chips is literally part of their flavor experience — confirmed by experiments where chips taste less crispy when the crunching sound is filtered out).
The biochemistry of taste and smell thus bridges molecular chemistry, receptor biology, neuroscience, and the rich cultural and emotional dimensions of food — one of the most human of all chemical experiences.