Semaglutide improves sense of taste in women with obesity

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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New research shows semaglutide modified a gene expression in the tongue to improve taste sensitivity in females with obesity. FG Trade/Getty Images
  • Everyone tastes foods differently, but people with obesity have a weakened sense of taste.
  • In a new study, researchers found that semaglutide helps improve taste sensitivity in women with obesity.
  • Study participants who took semaglutide experienced a modification in a gene expression in the tongue responsible for taste perception.
  • Participants also experienced a change in the brain’s response to sweet tastes.

Although there are five main flavor categories — sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami — not everyone will taste foods the same way.

Some people may be more sensitive to certain flavors than others. How a person smells food also affects how it tastes to them.

Additionally, certain factors, such as smoking, aging, certain medications, and obesity, may cause a person’s sense of taste to change over time. Past research has linked obesity to fewer taste buds on the tongue, leaving people with a weakened sense of taste.

Now, researchers from the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia have found the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 agonist) semaglutide — the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic — helps improve taste sensitivity in women with obesity.

Scientists report participants who took semaglutide experienced a modification in gene expression in the tongue that’s responsible for taste perception and a change to the brain’s response to sweet tastes.

The findings were presented on June 1 at ENDO 2024, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Boston, MA. The research has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal.

First presenting author Mojca Jensterle Sever, PhD of the Department of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolic Diseases at the University Medical Centre Ljubljana and the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia told Medical News Today:

“Alterations in metabolic health can significantly affect taste perception, “Obese individuals might perceive sweet tastes as less intense and may need more sweet-tasting agents to satisfy their reward-producing need for sweet. Reciprocally, populations that are prone to obesity have been shown to have an inherently elevated desire for sweet diets. The mechanisms behind these alterations are not well elucidated.”

For this study, researchers recruited 30 women with an average BMI of 36.4 who received semaglutide or a placebo for 16 weeks.

“The eligibility criteria in our study aimed to control for as many covariates as possible that, alongside obesity, could affect taste perception, including Health">sex, aging, Health">diabetes, other serious chronic diseases, (and) smoking,” Jensterle Sever explained.

“Therefore, we selected a homogeneous group of women with obesity without serious chronic diseases or lifestyle habits that could influence taste perception. By selecting anovulatory women with polycystic ovary syndrome, we additionally aimed to reduce the variability of taste perception across different phases of the menstrual cycle.”

Over the 16 weeks of the study, researchers measured the taste sensitivity of participants using strips with concentrations of four basic tastes.

“Taste sensitivity relates to the detection threshold for different tastes,” Jensterle Sever said. “We assessed the taste sensitivity by 16 strips impregnated with four different concentrations of four basic tastes. We did not study the correlation between increased taste sensitivity and weight loss.”

Scientists used MRI scans to evaluate brain responses to a sweet solution the study participants were given before and after a standard meal. Each participant had a tongue biopsy conducted to evaluate the mRNA expression within their tongue tissue.

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