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Europeans’ Sweet Tooth May Have Been Survival Trait

More news stories on Racial Differences

Ewen Callaway, ABC News, June 28, 2009

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The vast majority of people in the UK, France, Italy and Russia boast a tandem of genetic variations in a sugar-sensing gene that allows them to detect trace levels of sweetness.

Around the world, populations that live at northern latitudes carry these genetic variations at far higher frequencies than tropical-living peoples, says Dennis Drayna, a geneticist at the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders in Bethesda, Maryland.

His team presented 144 Europeans, Asians and Africans with nine solutions containing varying amounts of table sugar—sucrose—in amounts varying from 0 to 4 per cent. “Four-per-cent sucrose is very sweet to everyone, and to me it’s intensely sweet,” Drayna says. “Imagine some cloyingly sweet desert.”

Gene Surprise

Volunteers arranged the solutions in order of their perceived sweetness numerous times, and from these, Drayna’s team calculated a sucrose sensitivity score for each person.

When the researchers correlated the scores with variations in two sugar-sensing genes, TAS1R3 and TAS1R2, they found two variants just outside of the TAS1R3 gene that seemed to predict their volunteer’s scores.

This puzzled Drayna because TAS1R2 is chock-full of single DNA letter differences between people, and research on bitter taste genes suggested that such mutations—which change the shape of the receptor—underlie these differences.

Instead, the two variations near TAS1R3 probably determine how much of a receptor protein is produced by the taste buds, Drayna says. Tests showed that the variations most common in Europeans crank up the expression of TAS1R3.

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Original article

(Posted on July 7, 2009)


Dennis Drayna, Ph.D.

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

Chief
Section on Systems Biology of Communication Disorders
Laboratory of Molecular Genetics
NIDCD/NIH
5 Research Court, Room 2B-46
Rockville, MD 20850
Phone: (301) 402-4930
Fax: (301) 827-9637
E-mail: drayna@nidcd.nih.gov

Ph.D., Harvard University, 1981

Research Statement

The Section on Systems Biology of Communication Disorders is focused on identifying genetic variation in the molecular components of human communication systems. Our primary tools are genetic linkage and positional cloning studies, used to identify genes responsible for communication disorders in humans, including deficits in the human sense of taste and the speech disorder of stuttering.

Recent Accomplishments

Sweet taste perception: In a study of a group of 150 normal individuals, we’ve recently shown that specific genetic variants, called SNPs, are associated with sweet taste perception. These variants, which are inherited in a simple fashion, explain approximately 16%, or about 1/6th of the difference between individuals in their ability to sense sucrose and other sweet substances. These genetic variants occur in all populations worldwide, but at different frequencies in different populations. The variant forms, which cause reduced ability to taste sweet substances, are most common in African populations. They occur at moderate frequencies in East Asian populations, and lowest frequencies in Western European populations. These differences are related to varying food choices and food preferences, and provide insights into taste perception as well as factors that control our intake of high-calorie sweet foods. Other large-scale studies are currently underway in an effort to identify other genetic variants that affect sweet taste perception.

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Original article

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Comments

1 — Anonymous wrote at 12:17 AM on July 8:

I’m sure the tests he used were racially and culturaly biased.

2 — Anonymous wrote at 10:37 AM on July 8:

This could be the reason so many blacks are morbidly obese. They can’t taste the sugar till it reaches unhealthy levels. I’m sure it will somehow turn out to be all Whitey’s fault.

3 — Anonymous wrote at 5:10 PM on July 8:

What is kind of interesting is whites suffer less from diabetes, in The magazine Discover They have found that diabetes is in direct relation to hunter gather people……..Need I say more?

More civilized or more evolved? for better or worse is irrelevant.

4 — Brendan wrote at 1:48 PM on July 9:

“This could be the reason so many blacks are morbidly obese. They can’t taste the sugar till it reaches unhealthy levels. I’m sure it will somehow turn out to be all Whitey’s fault.”

Wow… makes sense to me. All that cheap junk at the store being too sweet makes most whites (myself included) go “bleah…no more” after a couple of mouthfuls. If blacks can’t taste it, they’d of course pack on the poundage. I also noticed how European sweets tend to have the perfect amount of sugar in them… I guess they have had more experience getting the formula just right for Europeans’ taste.


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