Michael Tordoff
Michael Tordoff | |
---|---|
Born |
1956 Bradford, Yorkshire, UK |
Residence | Pennsylvania |
Fields | Biologist, Geneticist |
Institutions | Monell Chemical Senses Center |
Alma mater | UCLA |
Known for | Work on calcium intake and appetite |
Dr. Michael G. Tordoff is a psychobiologist working at the Monell Chemical Senses Center. His research deals with the genetics and physiology of taste and nutrition. His early work addressed (a) how and what animals learn about the value of their food,[1] (b) how artificial sweeteners influence appetite and body weight,[2] (c) how salt intake is regulated, and (d) how dietary calcium influences salt intake.[3] Recently, he has been investigating calcium taste and appetite.[4][5] He is the primary proponent of the notion that calcium is a basic taste, equivalent to sweet, sour, salty, and bitter.
Dr. Tordoff hosts the Monell Mouse Taste Phenotyping Project. In August 2009, he bicycled across the USA in 27 days. He is married to, and often collaborates with, Dr. Danielle Reed.
Reference list
- ↑ Tordoff, MG (1991). "Metabolic basis of learned food preferences". In Friedman, MI; Kare, MR; Tordoff, MG. Chemical Senses: Appetite and Nutrition. New York: Marcel Dekker. pp. 239–260.
- ↑ Tordoff, MG; Alleva, AM (1990). "Effect of drinking soda sweetened with aspartame or high-fructose corn syrup on food intake and body weight". American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 51 (6): 963–969. PMID 2349932.
- ↑ Tordoff, MG (1996). "The importance of calcium in the control of salt intake". Neuroscience Biobehavioral Reviews. 20: 89–99. doi:10.1016/0149-7634(95)00051-f.
- ↑ Tordoff, MG (2001). "Calcium: taste, intake and appetite". Physiological Reviews. 81: 1567–1597.
- ↑ Tordoff, MG (2005). Weaver, CM; Heaney, RP, eds. Calcium in Human Health. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press. pp. 247–266.
Recent publications
- Cherukuri, C. M.; McCaughey, S. A.; Tordoff, M. G. (2011). "Comparison of differences between PWD/PhJ and C57BL/6J mice in calcium solution preferences and chorda tympani nerve responses". Physiology & Behavior. 102: 496–502. doi:10.1016/j.physbeh.2010.12.024.
- Tordoff, M. G. (2010). "Taste solution consumption by FHH-Chr nBN consomic rats". Chemical Senses. 35: 473–489. doi:10.1093/chemse/bjq038.
- Bachmanov, A. A.; Inoue, M.; Ji, H.; Murata, Y.; Tordoff, M. G.; Beauchamp, G. K. (2009). "Glutamate taste and appetite in laboratory mice: physiologic and genetic analyses". American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 90 (3): 756S–63S. doi:10.3945/ajcn.2009.27462l.
- De Jonghe, B. C.; Lawler, M. P.; Horn, C. C.; Tordoff, M. G. (2009). "Pica as an adaptive response: Kaolin consumption helps rats recover from chemotherapy-induced illness". Physiology & Behavior. 97 (1): 87–90. doi:10.1016/j.physbeh.2009.02.009.
- Tordoff, M. G.; Sandell, M. A. (2009). "Vegetable bitterness is related to calcium content". Appetite. 52 (2): 498–504. doi:10.1016/j.appet.2009.01.002.
- Guenthner, C. J.; McCaughey, S. A.; Tordoff, M. G.; Baird, J. P. (2008). "Licking for taste solutions by potassium-deprived rats: Specificity and mechanisms". BMC Genetics. 93: 937–46. doi:10.1016/j.physbeh.2007.12.017.
- Reed, D. R.; Lawler, M. P.; Tordoff, M. G. (2008). "Reduced body weight is a common effect of gene knockout". BMC Genetics. 9: 4. doi:10.1186/1471-2156-9-4.
- Tordoff, M. G.; Shao, H.; Alarcón, L. K.; Margolskee, R. F.; Mosinger, B.; Bachmanov, A. A.; Reed, D. R.; McCaughey, S. A. (2008). "Involvement of T1R3 in calcium-magnesium taste". Physiological Genomics. 34 (3): 338–48. doi:10.1152/physiolgenomics.90200.2008.
- Tordoff, M. G. (2008). "Gene discovery and the genetic basis of calcium consumption". Physiology & Behavior. 94: 649–59. doi:10.1016/j.physbeh.2008.04.004. PMC 2574908. PMID 18499198.
External links
- Dr. Tordoff's page at the Monell Chemical Senses Center website
- The Elsevier Science Direct Directory of the works of Dr. Tordoff