Litcius/Paper detail

Examining the role of olfaction in dietary choice

Montana H. Boone, Jing Liang-Guallpa, Michael J. Krashes

2021Cell Reports25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Obesity is frequently caused by calorie-rich dietary choices across the animal kingdom. As prandial preference toward a high-fat diet develops in mice, an anti-preference or devaluation of a nutritionally balanced but less palatable standard chow diet occurs concomitantly. Although mechanistic insights underlying devaluation have been observed physiologically in the brain, it is unclear how peripheral sensory processing affects food choice. Because olfactory cues and odor perception help coordinate food preference and intake, we determine the role of smell in the targeted consumption of a high-fat diet and simultaneous devaluation of a standard chow diet. Using inaccessible food and loss-of-function manipulations, we find that olfactory information is neither sufficient nor necessary for both the acute and chronic selection of high-fat diet and coincident diminished value of standard diet. This work suggests alternative means are behind the immediate and sustained consumption of high-fat diet and concurrent standard diet devaluation.

Topics & Concepts

DevaluationFood preferenceOlfactionPreferenceOdorSensory systemCalorieFood choiceObesityEndocrinologyBiologyInternal medicineMedicineFood scienceNeuroscienceEconomicsMonetary economicsMicroeconomicsPathologyExchange rateOlfactory and Sensory Function StudiesBiochemical Analysis and Sensing TechniquesAdvanced Chemical Sensor Technologies