
INA- sources
Food scientists have discovered a mushroom chemical they say is the most bitter substance known thus far, a finding that sheds light on how the tongue helps us perceive taste.
Researchers at the Leibniz Institute for Food Systems Biology in Germany extracted three compounds from Amaropostia stiptica mushroom and studied their effect on human taste receptors.
They found the chemicals to be the most bitter substances known to man, expanding our knowledge of natural bitter compounds and their effects on the tongue.
Thousands of different chemical molecules are known to be bitter, mainly sourced from flowering plants or synthetic sources. But, scientists say, bitter compounds from animal, bacterial or fungal origins remain less studied.
Expanding our understanding of such compounds, they say, may unravel the mystery of how the perception of bitterness evolved in humans.
Bitter taste receptors are thought to have evolved to warn human beings against consuming potentially harmful substances.
Not all bitter compounds are toxic or harmful, though, and not every toxic substance – like the death cap mushroom – tastes bitter.
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