AI Article Synopsis

  • Type 2 diabetes is associated with sensory dysfunctions, particularly affecting the ability to taste lipids, which may influence unhealthy eating behaviors.
  • The study explored the relationship between oral microbiota composition and lipid taste perception in insulin-resistant patients compared to healthy controls, revealing that diabetic patients exhibited a range of taste sensitivities.
  • Findings suggested that diabetic patients who struggled with fat taste perception had distinct microbiota profiles, and this impairment was potentially exacerbated by medications like metformin and statins.

Article Abstract

Aims: Type 2 diabetes leads to multiple sensory dysfunctions affecting notably the gustatory sensitivity. Although this sensory defect, by impacting food choices, might lead to unhealthy eating behavior, underlying mechanisms remains poorly studied. We have recently reported that the composition of microbiota in contact with circumvallate gustatory papillae might affect the orosensory perception of lipids in lean and normoglycemic obese subjects. This finding has prompted us to explore whether such a phenomenon also occurs in diabetic obese patients.

Methods: The composition of microbiota surrounding the circumvallate papillae was analyzed in combination with the linoleic acid perception thresholds in male insulin-resistant patients and weight-matched healthy controls. Two complementary comparisons were performed: (1) controls vs diabetic and (2) diabetic low-lipid tasters versus diabetic high-lipid tasters.

Results: Despite subtle modifications in the oral microbiota composition, comparison of orosensory lipid perception in controls and diabetic subjects did not lead to discriminating data due to the large inter-individual variability of linoleic acid perception thresholds. In contrast, specific bacterial signatures were found by comparing diabetic low- and high-lipid tasters leading to differential molecular pathways. Surprisingly, a lower fatty taste perception was mainly found in patients treated with metformin and/or statins, suggesting a possible side effect of these antidiabetic and/or hypolipidemic drugs on taste acuity.

Conclusions: Collectively, these data show that the diabetic patients with defective fatty taste detection are characterized by a specific microbiota metabolism at the circumvallate papillae levels, this occurrence seeming amplified by drugs commonly used to counteract the damaging metabolic effects of T2D. Trial registration for original previous studies: ClinicalTrials.gov #NCT02028975.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7591415PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00592-020-01567-9DOI Listing

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