Exploring the Mouthfeel of Food with a Microscope
New Research Approach
The mouthfeel of a food plays a crucial role in its acceptance. For example, many people prefer the creamy consistency of quark and yogurt. Apples, on the other hand, should be juicy and crunchy and bread crusts crispy. This diversity shows that the optimal mouthfeel is highly dependent heavily on the type of food and is not uniformly defined.
Researching complex interactions
In addition, the interplay between the constituents, the texture and the temperature of food and various sensor molecules and cell types in the mouth is extremely complex. Junior research group leader Melanie Köhler says: "Mechanoreceptors in particular, which react to pressure or stretching, have been under-researched so far with regard to the optimal mouthfeel and their contribution to the flavor of a food."
Veronika Somoza, Director of the Leibniz Institute in Freising, adds: "In our current perspectives article, we present various experimental approaches that can be used to tackle the many unanswered questions surrounding mouthfeel from a biophysical point of view. We have focused on biological atomic force microscopy."
The atomic force microscope is a suitable tool for scanning surfaces at an atomic level or investigating interactions between molecules such as food constituents and receptor proteins. However, it can also be used to apply mechanical pressure to cells, thereby activating mechanoreceptors for identifying and characterizing their cellular signal response.
Rethinking the traditional definition
According to Melanie Köhler, a fundamental biophysical and functional understanding of the diverse mechanosensory key players in oral and extra-oral tissue as well as their responses to food constituents is important. It enables constructing new hypotheses about the contribution of mechanosensors to the overall sensory impression of a food for answering many questions that are still pending in the molecular field.
"With regard to food research, we expect that future results will lead to a revision of our traditional definition of flavor, i.e. the overall sensory impression of a food, by including mechanical perception as an additional factor alongside taste and smell," explains the young scientist. "In terms of food production, our pioneering research approach opens up promising perspectives for the design of future, enjoyable and health-conscious nutritional options," Melanie Köhler continues.
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