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Article: Tasting bitterness is in your genes
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3.8 (3 Reviews)
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Article: Tasting bitterness is in your genes

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Grade Level Grades 6-12
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About This Lesson

Food doesn’t taste the same to everyone. We explore one type of genetic variation between people that means it’s easier for some of us
than others to eat our greens. This genetic variation is in a receptor that registers bitterness:
people with two copies of a variant in the receptor gene find certain chemicals unbearable, including the man-made sulphur-containing compound phenylthiocarbamide (PTC). Part of the Wellcome Trust's Big Picture: Food and Diet (www.wellcome.ac.uk/bigpicture/food)

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EdBrAIn uses AI to customize lesson resources for your students’ needs.

Big_Picture_Food_and_Diet_Differences_in_taste.pdf

February 11, 2020
99.62 KB
3.8
3 Reviews
SML Member
SML Member February 05, 2012

An interesting article to spark discussion into genetics

GolfKid
GolfKid May 03, 2013

Quick article with good information.

Raymond Macias
Raymond Macias June 28, 2014

This is definitely an article that I could see capturing my student's attention. I would like to create a practical lab that used phenylthiocarbamide to test students for this trait and plot our data.

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