Do we have taste receptors in other parts of our body?

Taste receptors have been found far beyond the tongue, but do they help perceive taste or work like the ones in our mouths?

Little boy licking ice cream in a cone during summertime.
Taste buds on our tongues enable us to perceive sweet, salty, sour, bitter and umami. But are there taste receptors elsewhere in our bodies?
(Image credit: wundervisuals via Getty Images)

Most of the cell types in your body appear in many places — for example, humans have photoreceptors throughout our nervous systems, not just our eyes. So it seems strange that taste receptors would only be found on the tongue.

Turns out, you actually have taste receptors throughout your body; you just can't taste what they're tasting, said Nirupa Chaudhari, a professor of physiology and biophysics at the Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami.

Ashley Hamer Pritchard
Live Science Contributor

Ashley Hamer Pritchard is a contributing writer for Live Science who has written about everything from space and quantum physics to health and psychology. She's the host of the podcast Taboo Science and the former host of Curiosity Daily from Discovery. She has also written for the YouTube channels SciShow and It's Okay to Be Smart. With a master's degree in jazz saxophone from the University of North Texas, Ashley has an unconventional background that gives her science writing a unique perspective and an outsider's point of view.