| Literature DB >> 28642799 |
Marilena Gilca1, Dorin Dragos2,3.
Abstract
More and more research studies are revealing unexpectedly important roles of taste for health and pathogenesis of various diseases. Only recently it has been shown that taste receptors have many extraoral locations (e.g., stomach, intestines, liver, pancreas, respiratory system, heart, brain, kidney, urinary bladder, pancreas, adipose tissue, testis, and ovary), being part of a large diffuse chemosensory system. The functional implications of these taste receptors widely dispersed in various organs or tissues shed a new light on several concepts used in ayurvedic pharmacology (dravyaguna vijnana), such as taste (rasa), postdigestive effect (vipaka), qualities (guna), and energetic nature (virya). This review summarizes the significance of extraoral taste receptors and transient receptor potential (TRP) channels for ayurvedic pharmacology, as well as the biological activities of various types of phytochemical tastants from an ayurvedic perspective. The relative importance of taste (rasa), postdigestive effect (vipaka), and energetic nature (virya) as ethnopharmacological descriptors within Ayurveda boundaries will also be discussed.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28642799 PMCID: PMC5469997 DOI: 10.1155/2017/5435831
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Expression of taste receptor elements and other chemosensorial transducers in various organs or tissues (BAT: brown adipose tissue, H: evidence of TR expression in human tissues, and ?: not yet studied).
| Organ | Sweet | Bitter | Sour | Salty | Pungent |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stomach | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ |
| Small intestine | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ |
| Colon | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ |
| Pancreas | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ |
| Spleen | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ |
| Liver | + bile ducts | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ |
| Kidney | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ |
| Urinary bladder | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ |
| Heart | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ |
| Vessels | ? | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ |
| Brain | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ |
| Respiratory system | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ |
| Adipose tissue | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+BAT) [ | ? | (+) [ |
| Bone | ? | (+) osteoclasts [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ |
| Bone marrow | ? | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ |
| Joints | ? | ? | (+H) [ | (+) [ | |
| Leukocytes | (+H) [ | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ |
| Testis, sperm | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ |
| Ovary | ? | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ |
| Uterus | ? | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ | (+) [ |
| Breast | (+H) [ | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ |
| Skin | ? | (+H) [ | (+) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ |
| Thyroid | ? | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ | ? |
| Thymus | (+H) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | ? |
| Adrenal glands | (+) [ | (+H) [ | (+) [ | (+H) [ | ? |
| Pituitary gland | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | (+H) [ | ? | ? |
Figure 1Potential physiological roles of extraoral taste receptors or other chemosensory processors (A−: anion, AC: adenylate cyclase, ENaC: epithelial Na+ channel, PLC: phospholipase C, TRP: transient receptor potential channel, TRPV: TRP vanilloid type, TRPA: TRP ankyrin type, TR: taste receptor).
Ethnopharmacological description of the six tastes (rasa) in Ayurveda [109, 110].
| Rasa | Virya | Guna | Vipaka | Karman (therapeutic activities) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sweet | Cold | Heavy, wet | Sweet | Nourishing of plasma, blood, muscle, adipose tissue, bone, marrow, and semen, longevity enhancer, strengthening, antitoxic, antidipsogenic, sensorial soothing |
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| Salty | Hot | Heavy, wet | Sweet | Carminative, digestive, laxative, deobstruent, lubrifying, sialogogue |
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| Sour | Hot | Light, wet | Sour | Digestive stimulant, nourishing the heart and the entire body, sialogogue, stimulates appetite, emollient, strengthening the sense organs |
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| Pungent | Hot | Light, dry | Pungent | Digestive stimulant, anti-itching, anti-infectious, reduces the muscle mass, breaks obstructions (e.g., anticoagulant), purifying, clarifies the passages, helps sensorial activity, intestinal peristalsis, elimination of waste products (e.g., feces), antiswelling, channel dilatory |
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| Bitter | Cold | Light, dry | Pungent | Antianorexia, digestive stimulant, antitoxic, anti-infectious, febrifuge, antiemetic, milk purification, reducer of adipose tissue, muscle fat, bone marrow, lymph, pus, sweat, urine, stool |
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| Astringent | Cold | Heavy, dry | Pungent | Sedative, styptic, constipative (antidiarrheic), antihemorrhagic, absorptive, blood purifier, skin purifier, wound/ulcer healing, anti-adiposity |
Figure 2Complex meaning of rasa (TC: taste receptor cell, TR: taste receptor, n.V: trigeminal nerve, n. VII: facial nerve/chorda tympani branch, n IX: glossopharyngeal nerve/lingual branch, r-NTS: rostral division of the nucleus tractus solitarius).
Figure 3Rasa (taste) versus vipaka (taste after digestion) (TRC: taste receptor cells, TR: taste receptor).
Figure 4Interferences of sweet taste and sweet taste receptor with tissue (dhatu) generation cycle (in Ayurveda the tissues are generated in a successive order: rasa, rakta, mamsa, meda, asthi, majja, and shukra.).
Comparative effects of excessive dietary saltiness in Ayurveda and modern medicine (∗ = not yet clarified/studied, ∗∗ = contradictory information Ayurveda versus modern science).
| Effect of excessive use of drugs and diet having salty taste, according to Ayurveda [ | High salt diet effects according to scientific studies |
|---|---|
| Bursting of inflamed part, heating sensation, inflammatory skin diseases (e.g., | Proinflammatory effect via induction of pathogenic Th17 cells and cytokine synthesis [ |
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| Aggravation of Blood | Hypertension, epistaxis, stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage [ |
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| Obstruction of the function of senses, fainting, depletion of muscles | Multiple sclerosis (double vision, blindness, muscle weakness, sensorial and coordination disorders) (>5 g NaCl/day) [ |
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| Gastric hyperacidity | High level of gastric inflammation [ |
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| Premature skin ageing (wrinkling, graying, baldness) | Potentially linked with excessive storage of Na+ in skin without concomitant water retention, leading to an osmotic stress in the skin microenvironment [ |
Transducers involved in thermosensation and examples of agonists (contradictory information Ayurveda versus modern science: evergreen tree and Andrographis paniculata are described as being “cold” in Ayurveda [119] and clove is described as being “hot” in Ayurveda [119], while eugenol was found to have hypothermic effects [120]; mint is pungent and therefore “hot” although it induces a cooling sensation [119]).
| TRP channels | Agonists |
|---|---|
| Cooling Sensation | |
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| TRPM5 (sweet, umami, bitter taste receptor cells) (15°–35°C) [ | Rutamarin (rue) [ |
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| TRPM8 (trigeminal orosensation) | Menthol (mint) |
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| TRPA1 (trigeminal orosensation) | Eugenol (clove) [ |
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| Warming sensation | |
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| TRPV4 (trigeminal orosensation) | Bisandrographolide A |
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| TRPV3 (trigeminal orosensation) (≥33°C) non painful warmth [ | Carvacrol (oregano) [ |
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| TRPV1 (trigeminal orosensation) (>43°C) painful heat [ | Capsaicin (chili peppers) [ |
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| TRPV2 (trigeminal orosensation) | Δ9-Tetrahydrocannabinol, Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol acid [ |
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| TRPA1 (trigeminal orosensation – pungency, burning sensation) | Allicin (garlic) [ |