Whether a cup of java will leave you craving more could be chalked up to your genes.
一杯咖啡是否會使你上癮也許是由你的基因決定的。
People with a newly identified genetic variant in their DNA, called PDSS2, may be inclined to drink fewer cups of coffee than others, according to a small study published in the journal Scientific Reports on Thursday.
I actually was very surprised to find a new gene for coffee consumption, said Nicola Pirastu, a chancellor’s research fellow at the University of Edinburgh’s Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatics, and lead author of the study.
We believe that this PDSS2 genetic variant is impacting coffee drinking through the regulation of the speed at which caffeine is metabolized, he said. "It has been observed before that higher levels of PDSS2 inhibits the expression of the genes metabolizing caffeine and thus the speed at which caffeine is degraded.”
The findings add to existing research suggesting that our espresso habits may be embedded in our genes, Pirastu said.
皮拉斯圖說,基于現有的研究基礎上,這些新發現表明我們對于濃咖啡的愛好是藏在我們的基因中的。
About 64% of American adults drink at least one cup of coffee a day, according to a 2015 Gallup poll.
根據2015年的蓋洛普民意測試,約有64%的美國成年人每天要喝至少一杯咖啡。
For the new study, researchers analyzed medical and genetic data on 370 people from a small village in southern Italy, and 843 people from six villages in northeast Italy. The study participants also self-reported their daily coffee-drinking habits.
The researchers discovered that people with the PDSS2 variant reported consuming fewer cups of coffee than people without the variant.
研究者發現,體內帶有PDSS2變量的人會比沒有這種變量的人少喝很多咖啡。
When the researchers replicated the study with a group of 1,731 study participants from the Netherlands, they noticed similar results.
當研究者們在荷蘭對1731名研究對象重復這項研究的時候,他們得出了相似的結果。
This variant is very common, and around 50% of the European population has either one or two copies of it, Pirastu said. More research is needed to determine the variant’s prevalence in other populations as well as to clarify its biological link with caffeine.
Although different statistical models were used, the previous research tested a few of the same genetic variations included in the new study. However, an association with coffee consumption was not found, said Marilyn Cornelis, assistant professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University who led the 2014 study.
Therefore, it seems that the newfound variant’s impact on coffee consumption may be minor compared with the previously identified genetic variants, said Cornelis, who was not involved in the new research.
The [new] study is small relative to the previous genome-wide association studies of coffee consumption, Cornelis said.
康奈利說:“新的研究和之前的全組基因與咖啡消費行為的研究相關甚微。”
Genes can exist in different forms from one person to the next. We can have ’fast’ and ’slow’ acting forms, and depending on what we’ve inherited, it can impact how our body processes or metabolizes nutrients or food constituents like caffeine, said Ahmed El-Sohemy, professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Toronto, who was not involved in the new research.
People generally tend to self-regulate how much coffee they consume based on a balance of how caffeine in the beverage has positive benefits, such as mood-enhancing effects, and negative outcomes, such as anxiety or "jitters," he added.