Key Highlights
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Researchers have discovered a second, “noncanonical” pathway for tasting sugars that works independently of the well-known sweet taste receptor. This finding is significant because it reveals that our brain receives sweet taste information through at least two separate neural channels, which could explain why we can still detect intense sweetness even when the primary receptor is blocked.
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The study found that this alternative sugar-detection pathway is not dependent on the SGLT1 transporter, as previously thought, because it responded equally to sugars that SGLT1 cannot transport. This challenges existing scientific models and opens up new questions about the molecular machinery our taste buds use to sense the world.
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