Why Does Saltwater Taste Salty?

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Elemental sodium is toxic, and while chlorine is a gas, sodium chloride (table salt) is safe and well-known for its taste. When salt dissolves in water, it dissociates into sodium and chloride ions, but the taste primarily comes from sodium ions. The protein ENaC in neurons allows sodium ions to enter, reducing the neuron's negative charge and triggering an action potential, signaling the presence of salt. Other ions like potassium and lithium can also taste salty, but chloride ions do not activate the same response as they increase the membrane potential instead. There is also another type of salt receptor that may play a significant role in our perception of saltiness, though it is less understood. Sodium chloride is a distinct compound with properties that differ from its constituent elements, similar to how cake has a different taste than its raw ingredients. The human body requires sodium, which explains the sensitivity to its taste even in various forms.
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Elemental sodium is poisonous so presumably we don't know what it tastes like. Chlorine is a gas, I believe. But we know well the taste of salt, sodium chloride. But dissolving the stuff in water breaks up the molecules into ions which I presume spread around widely. So what are we tasting in saltwater, the sodium ions or the chlorine ions or something else?
 
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You are tasting the sodium ions.

One way this works is that there is a protein called ENaC that forms a tiny pore to allow sodium ions to enter a neuron. Normally, the inside of a neuron is negatively charged relative to the outside. When sodium enters, this negative charge is reduced. When it gets reduced enough, the neuron "fires" an action potential, signalling to the brain that salt is present.

The pore is shaped so that ions other than sodium ions have trouble going through. Potassium ions and lithium ions, which are similar in size, can fit, so those ions taste salty too (though not as salty as sodium). Anions like chloride, even if they can fit through the pore, don't trigger an action potential because they increase the membrane potential of the neuron instead of decreasing it.

This is not the whole story of salty tastes in humans. There's apparently another kind of salt receptor that doesn't rely on ENaC, but much less is known about it. The other receptor may be more important than the ENaC receptors, at least for conscious awareness of the "salty" taste.
 
bowlegged said:
Elemental sodium is poisonous so presumably we don't know what it tastes like. Chlorine is a gas, I believe. But we know well the taste of salt, sodium chloride. But dissolving the stuff in water breaks up the molecules into ions which I presume spread around widely. So what are we tasting in saltwater, the sodium ions or the chlorine ions or something else?

Sodium chloride is NOT a mixture of sodium and chlorine, it is a new, separate compound. In general, when new compounds are created their properties have nothing to do with properties of the reactants.

Think about it this way: cake is made by mixing (between other things) eggs and flour - but it doesn't taste like mixed raw eggs and flour, "reaction" that took place created something completely new & different.
 
eigenperson said:
You are tasting the sodium ions.
One way this works is that there is a protein called ENaC that forms ...
Great answer, many thanks! A body needs a heap of sodium and so I guess we're rigged to taste its presence even when it's in a somewhat adulterated form.
 
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