Newswise, August 3, 2016 — The
tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is one of the most valuable fruit crops in
the world with an annual global value in excess of $50bn.
We eat so many they also play an
important role in our diet providing valuable vitamins, minerals and health
promoting phytochemicals. Plant breeders are working continuously to supply
high yielding, better tasting, more nutritious and longer lasting tomato
varieties, but some of the best tasting varieties soften rapidly and can have a
short shelf life.
The precise mechanisms involved in
tomato softening have remained a mystery until now. Research led by Graham
Seymour, Professor of Plant Biotechnology in the School of Biosciences at The
University of Nottingham, has identified a gene that encodes an enzyme which
plays a crucial role in controlling softening of the tomato fruit.
The results, published today, Monday
25 July 2016, in the academic journal Nature Biotechnology, could
pave the way for new varieties of better tasting tomatoes with improved
postharvest life through conventional plant breeding.
The TomNet study was carried out by
Professor Seymour in collaboration with Professor Paul Fraser at Royal
Holloway, University of London. It was funded by the Biotechnology and
Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and Syngenta Seeds, a supplier of
vegetable seeds to the global market.
Professor Seymour said: “To support
the tomato industry and further improve consumer satisfaction with new tomato
varieties, a major scientific goal has been to identify genes that allow the
targeted control of fruit softening without impacting other aspects of ripening.
Such work would permit excellent fruit flavour and colour development, combined
with enhanced shelf life.”
Major breakthrough in plant biology and fruit development
In the modern supply chain shelf
life is critical. To reduce wastage this is often extended by developing
hybrids that are bred to include natural mutations that slow the whole ripening
process. But improving shelf life this way can often have a detrimental effect
on flavour and colour.
The question of how the tomato fruit
disassembles its cell walls and softens during ripening has perplexed
researchers for over two decades. This research has found the key to uncoupling
softening from the other aspects of fruit quality.
Professor Seymour and his team have
identified a gene that encodes a pectate lyase which normally degrades the
pectin in the tomato cell walls during ripening.
Professor Seymour said: “In
laboratory experiments we have demonstrated that if this gene is turned off,
the fruit soften much more slowly, but still show normal changes in colour and
the accumulation of taste compounds such as acids, sugars and aroma volatiles.
Natural variation exists in the levels of pectate lyase gene expression in wild
relatives of cultivated tomato and these can be used for conventional breeding
purposes. This discovery can provide a means to refine the control of fruit
softening in modern tomato cultivars.”
This latest discovery follows the
sequencing of the tomato genome – research published in Nature in
May 2012 and funded by BBSRC. Professor Seymour spearheaded the UK
contribution to this international project with colleagues from Imperial
College and the James Hutton Institute. The work also builds on BBSRC
activities lead by Professor Fraser on advancing the tomato metabolome
published in Nature Scientific Reports.
Dr Charles Baxter from Syngenta
said: “This discovery has relevance for the development of new tomato varieties
via conventional plant breeding and is a significant step forward in
understanding processes involved in fruit development, allowing more refined
control of this process in plant breeding.”
Using conventional plant breeding,
tomato wild species can be readily crossed with the cultivated tomato. One wild
species, Solanum pennellii, has low levels of pectate lyase gene expression in
the fruit. This genetic variation can be used to breed slow softening
cultivated tomatoes.
Paul Fraser, Professor of
Biochemistry at Royal Holloway said: “The study also shows how you can
precisely alter fruit ripening properties without adverse effects on the
chemical composition of the fruit. In this way the consumer traits such as
taste, colour, and nutritional quality are not adversely affected and in some
cases enhanced.”
Professor Seymour said: “We already
have a line harboring a very small section of the S. pennellii genome with the
alternative form of the pectate lyase gene.
“This line can be crossed with an
elite tomato variety. DNA sequence differences between the pectate lyase genes
from the cultivated tomato and S. pennellii can then be used as markers to
screen the progeny from this cross. Individuals can be selected that represent
the elite line background, but also contain the S.pennellii variant of the
gene.
“Then repeated backcrossing is
undertaken to the elite line to fully recover this genetic background. The
chosen lines are then self-pollinated a number of times to fix their genetic
characteristics.”
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