Data from several studies show that consuming a diet high in low-calorie sweeteners (LCS), mainly in diet sodas, is linked to the same metabolic disorders as consuming a diet high in added sugars, including an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes. Sweet taste receptors, once thought to be unique to the mouth, have now been discovered in other parts of the body, including the intestine and the pancreas, where they play a role in blood sugar control. These newly identified receptors provide new avenues to explore how LCS may affect metabolism and health. This project is designed to examine the role of sweet taste signaling, both in the mouth and in the gut, on blood sugar control and how habitual consumption of LCS may affect sweet taste signaling and metabolism in people with obesity.
The overall goal of this research is to assess the role of oral and gut sweetness signaling in postprandial glucose metabolism and to determine how acute and chronic low-calorie sweetener (LCS) consumption may affect this signaling in people with obesity. The aims will determine the independent and combined contributions of pharmacological inhibition (Aim 1) or extra stimulation (Aim 2) of sweet taste signaling in the gut, mouth, or both on hormonal responses to an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) in two groups of subjects with obesity: habitual and non-habitual LCS consumers. Validated sensory evaluation techniques will also ascertain subjects' taste perception (Aim 3) to test the hypotheses that habitual consumption of LCS blunts perception of sweetness and, in turn, affects postprandial glucose regulation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
80
Taste and spit up water 10 minutes before drinking a glucose load
Taste and spit up water 10 minutes before drinking a glucose load mixed with lactisole
Taste and spit up sucralose 10 minutes before drinking a glucose load mixed with lactisole
Taste and spit up water 10 minutes before drinking a glucose load
Taste and spit up sucralose 10 minutes before drinking a glucose load
Drink sucralose 10 minutes before drinking a glucose load
Taste different solutions to evaluate sweet taste preference, suprathreshold intensity and detection threshold
University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
Champaign, Illinois, United States
RECRUITINGPlasma Glucose
Blood samples will be collected before and for 5 hours after drinking a glucose load to determine plasma glucose concentration
Time frame: Up to 5 hours after drinking a glucose load
Plasma Insulin
Blood samples will be collected before and for 5 hours after drinking a glucose load to determine plasma insulin concentration
Time frame: Up to 5 hours after drinking a glucose load
Plasma C-Peptide
Blood samples will be collected before and for 5 hours after drinking a glucose load to determine plasma C-peptide concentration
Time frame: Up to 5 hours after drinking a glucose load
Sensory Evaluation
Participants will be tasting solutions containing different concentrations of glucose, sucrose and sucralose (some of the solutions will also have lactisole) to assess their detection threshold, sweet taste intensity and preference. They will have to rate the intensity of the solution on a general Labeled Magnitude Scale (gLMS) ranging from "no sensation" (0) to "strongest imaginable sensation" (100) and choose the solutions they prefer.
Time frame: Up to 2 hours
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