Stinky? It's not his sweat, it's your nose

By Julie SteenhuysenTue Sep 18, 3:01 AM ET

When it comes to a man's body odour, the fragrance -- or stench -- is in the

nose of the beholder, according to U.S. researchers who suggest a single gene

may determine how people perceive body odour.

The study, published online on Sunday in the journal Nature, helps explain why

the same sweaty man can smell like vanilla to some, like urine to others and

for about a third of adults, have no smell at all.

"This is the first time that any human odorant receptor is associated with how

we experience odours," Hiroaki Matsunami of Duke University in North Carolina

said in a telephone interview.

Matsunami and colleagues at Duke and Rockefeller University in New York focused

on the chemical androstenone, which is created when the body breaks down the

male sex hormone testosterone.

Androstenone is in the sweat of men and women, but it is more highly

concentrated in men. How one perceives its smell appears to have a lot to do

with variations in one odour receptor gene called OR7D4.

"It is well known that people have different perceptions to androstenone. But

people didn't know what was the basis of it," Matsunami said.

To find out, researchers in Matsunami's lab tested sweat chemicals on most of

the 400 known odour receptors used by the nose to sniff out smells and

chemicals.

They found the OR7D4 gene reacted strongly with the sex steroid androstenone.

Next, they tested whether variations in this gene had an impact on how people

perceived the smell of androstenone in male sweat.

They took blood samples and sequenced the DNA of 400 people who participated in

a smell perception test done in Leslie Vosshall's lab at Rockefeller.

What they found is slight genetic variations determine whether androstenone has

a pungent smell, a sweet, vanilla-like smell or no smell at all.

The role of androstenone is not well understood in humans, but in pigs it sends

a powerful sex signal that puts sows in the mood for love.

"It facilitates the courtship behaviour in females," Matsunami said.

"There is some evidence published showing this chemical can modify the mood or

hormone levels in humans," he said. "What we don't know is whether the receptor

we found was in any way involved in this process."

He and colleagues will further study this aspect to understand how smelling

these chemicals might affect human social and sexual behaviour.