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NIV TASTE LAB

From molecules to meaning

How taste receptors recognize the world

 

Institute of Biochemistry, Food Science and Nutrition

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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About the lab

At the Niv Taste Lab, we decode the chemical language of taste. We study how bitter (TAS2Rs) and sweet (TAS1Rs) taste receptors recognize diverse molecules - from food compounds to plant toxins and pharmaceuticals. These receptors are key to how organisms sense and respond to their chemical environment.

Our research integrates computational modeling, cryo-EM and structural biology, and cell-based functional assays to uncover the molecular basis of ligand recognition and receptor activation. We also develop tools to predict bitterness and explore how taste connects to toxicity, species evolution, and chemical ecology.

By linking receptor structure to function, we reveal how taste guides decision-making - both in human taste perception, in physiology mediated by extraoral taste receptors, and in the broader biological world.

Our Research Topics

Taste

cheminformatics

 Bitter taste

receptors

across species

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Sensory data

and analysis 

Sweet taste

receptors

Lab life

Open Positions

Contact us

Prof. Masha Niv

Institute of Biochemistry, Food Science and Nutrition,
Robert H. Smith Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment,
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 
Herzl 229, Rehovot 7610001, ISRAEL

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