Your lungs can smell too.
owever,
instead of being used to detect the aroma of blueberry cobbler or a
succulent roasting chicken, the odor receptors in the lungs trigger a
response designed to protect the airways.
“We forget,” said study author
Yehuda Ben-Shahar,
“that our body plan is a tube within a tube, so our lungs and our gut
are open to the external environment. Although they’re inside us, they
Read more at
http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1113038427/odor-receptors-discovered-in-human-lungs-010314/#3Qkt97vw3WLAxSkI.99
A new study found that receptors we have in the nose are also lining our lungs, membranes of neuroendocrine cells. And these receptors are there to protect us from harmful substances in the air.
4 years ago, another study found bitter-tasting receptors in the lungs. Every time the bitter taste was detected, our lungs worked hard to sweet the chemicals out of the airways. The recent study explains why smells can cause shortness of breath, chest tightnessand other issues affecting lungs.
ublished in the
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology has revealed that
odor receptors
aren’t just found in the nose – they also line the lungs as well.
However, instead of being used to detect the aroma of blueberry cobbler
or a succulent roasting chicken, the odor receptors in the lungs trigger
a response designed to protect the airways.
“We forget,” said study author
Yehuda Ben-Shahar,
“that our body plan is a tube within a tube, so our lungs and our gut
are open to the external environment. Although they’re inside us, they’re actually part of our external layer.”
“So they constantly suffer environmental insults, and it makes sense
that we evolved mechanisms to protect ourselves,” added Ben-Shahar, and
assistant professor of biolo
Read more at
http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1113038427/odor-receptors-discovered-in-human-lungs-010314/#3Qkt97vw3WLAxSkI.99
owever,
instead of being used to detect the aroma of blueberry cobbler or a
succulent roasting chicken, the odor receptors in the lungs trigger a
response designed to protect the airways.
“We forget,” said study author
Yehuda Ben-Shahar,
“that our body plan is a tube within a tube, so our lungs and our gut
are open to the external environment. Although they’re inside us, they
Read more at
http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1113038427/odor-receptors-discovered-in-human-lungs-010314/#3Qkt97vw3WLAxSkI.99
REFERENCES
Philip H Karp, Steven L Brody, Richard A Pierce, Michael J Welsh, Michael J Holtzman, and Yehuda Ben-Shahar (2013)
Volatile-Sensing Functions for Pulmonary Neuroendocrine Cells American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
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