Corked wine suppresses sense of smell
The presence of cork taint in wine shuts off
signals from our noses to our brains, preventing the ability to detect
other odours, Japanese scientists have found.
As reported by the BBC, researchers at Osaka University have
discovered that the suppression of our sense of smell by the chemical
2,4,6-trichloroanisole (TCA) leads drinkers to imaging “pseudo-olfactory
sensations” such as the damp cloth and wet dog aromas traditionally
associated with corked wine.
“It has long been thought that TCA causes excitation of sensory cells
to induce unpleasant sensation,” professor Hiroko Takeuchi from the
university’s Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences told the BBC.
“However, our findings show that TCA suppresses activity of sensory
cells, we also speculate that this suppression may cause a musty smell
that is a typical feature of corked wine,” he added.
The team was investigating how TCA functions by analysing how both
newts and people responded to the chemical, publishing the report in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.
The study monitored the activity in the cells of newts exposed to TCA
and found that rather than sparking odour perception, cork taint
suppressed it.
A separate study measured how 20 participants reacted to the presence
of cork taint in samples of wine, and found that aroma perception was
reduced when TCA was present.TCA suppresses the nose’s primary smelling receptor, which converts smells to electrical signals sent to the brain.
The study, which has implications beyond wine, found the brain interprets this reaction as an unpleasant odour.
“Our research shows that the reduction of quality found in foods and
drinks is in part due to the generation of a suppressor, rather than the
reduction of original flavour,” Takeuchi told the BBC.
The team wants to use the findings to develop ways to deliberately
weaken the nose’s sense of smell in order to mask bad odours in certain
products.
Source: www.thedrinksbusiness.com
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