Unstimulated saliva: Background noise in taste molecules

Affiliation auteursAffiliation ok
TitreUnstimulated saliva: Background noise in taste molecules
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursFeron G
JournalJOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES
Volume50
Pagination6-18
Date PublishedFEB
Type of ArticleReview
ISSN0022-4901
Mots-clésAmino acids, flavor, free fatty acids, ions, sensory thresholds, sugars, taste, unstimulated saliva
Résumé

Saliva is a highly complex bodily fluid composed of many proteins, peptides, small organic molecules, and ions. Saliva is produced and secreted by the major and minor salivary glands to protect the mouth and to participate in digestion. Generally, a distinction is made between unstimulated saliva that is a result of autonomic stimulation and stimulated saliva that is produced during chewing and taste stimulation. The link between saliva and sensory perception can thus be regarded in two ways: the role of unstimulated saliva as a background taste and the mechanistic role of stimulated saliva during eating. Indeed, unstimulated saliva (and its components) is continuously bathing our oral cavity and as such stimulates our taste receptors, thus playing a role in taste sensitivity. However, the role of unstimulated salivary components in mediating taste has been studied only in very few substances. To explore this question, this review attempts to compare data from the literature on unstimulated salivary composition with those on taste sensitivity. The main conclusion centres around the concept that the gustatory self-adaptation phenomenon may be relevant for only a few salivary compounds. Further studies at the level of the salivary Von Ebner glands and salivary pellicle are necessary before arriving at definitive conclusions on this subject.

DOI10.1111/jtxs.12369