(Press-News.org) Tomatoes, said to be the world's most popular fruit, can be made both better-tasting and longer-lasting thanks to UK research with purple GM varieties.
"Working with GM tomatoes that are different to normal fruit only by the addition of a specific compound, allows us to pinpoint exactly how to breed in valuable traits," said Professor Cathie Martin from the John Innes Centre.
The research could also lead to GM varieties with better flavour, health and shelf life characteristics because even higher levels of the compounds can be achieved.
In research to be published in Current Biology, Martin and colleagues studied tomatoes enriched in anthocyanin, a natural pigment that confers high antioxidant capacity. The purple GM tomatoes have already been found to prolong the lives of cancer-prone mice and in the latest findings they also more double the normal shelf life of tomatoes from an average of 21 days to 48 days.
"Post-harvest losses due to rotting are such a serious problem for growers and supermarkets that even an increased shelf life of one day would make an enormous difference to them," said Yang Zhang, lead author from the John Innes Centre.
One way to improve shelf life is to pick tomatoes early when they are still green and induce them to ripen artificially with ethylene. However, this results in loss of flavour. Another method is to grow varieties that never fully ripen, but these also never develop a full flavour.
In the current study, anthocyanins were found to slow down the over-ripening process that leads to rotting and softening, achieving a tomato with a long shelf life and full flavour. The purple tomatoes were also less susceptible to one of the most important postharvest diseases, grey mould caused by Botrytis cinerea.
Conventional tomatoes can now be screened for their antioxidant capacity. Those found to be highest in antioxidant compounds can be used as parental lines for breeding.
"Our research has identified a new target for breeders to produce tomato varieties that are fuller in flavour, and so more appealing to consumers, and more valuable commercially due to increased shelf life," said Martin.
The findings could also be applied to other soft fruit such as strawberries and raspberries.
Other varieties of JIC tomatoes high in a variety of compounds such as those found in red wine are being used by Essex company Biodeb to develop a range of skincare products.
### END
The world's favorite fruit only better-tasting and longer-lasting
Already more healthy, now more tasty and longer-lasting
2013-05-23
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Scientists announce top 10 new species
2013-05-23
Tempe, Ariz. — An amazing glow-in-the-dark cockroach, a harp-shaped carnivorous sponge and the smallest vertebrate on Earth are just three of the newly discovered top 10 species selected by the International Institute for Species Exploration at Arizona State University. A global committee of taxonomists — scientists responsible for species exploration and classification — announced its list of top 10 species from 2012 today, May 23.
The announcement, now in its sixth year, coincides with the anniversary of the birth of Carolus Linnaeus — the 18th century Swedish botanist ...
Protein preps cells to survive stress of cancer growth and chemotherapy
2013-05-23
LA JOLLA, CA---Scientists have uncovered a survival mechanism that occurs in breast cells that have just turned premalignant-cells on the cusp between normalcy and cancers-which may lead to new methods of stopping tumors.
In their Molecular Cell study, the Salk Institute researchers report that a protein known as transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β), considered a tumor suppressor in early cancer development, can actually promote cancer once a cell drifts into a pre-cancerous state.
The discovery-a surprise to the investigators-raises the tantalizing possibility ...
UBC engineer helps pioneer flat spray-on optical lens
2013-05-23
A University of British Columbia engineer and a team of U.S. researchers have made a breakthrough utilizing spray-on technology that could revolutionize the way optical lenses are made and used.
Kenneth Chau, an assistant professor in the School of Engineering at UBC's Okanagan campus, is a key investigator among colleagues at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Maryland. Their work – the development of a flat lens – is published in the May 23 issue of the journal Nature.
Nearly all lenses – whether in an eye, a camera, or a microscope – are presently ...
Hormone signal drives motor neuron growth, fish study shows
2013-05-23
A discovery made in fish could aid research into motor neuron disease.
Scientists have found that a key hormone allows young zebrafish to develop and replace their motor neurons – a kind of nerve cell found in the spinal cord.
The discovery may aid efforts to create neurons from stem cells in the lab, and support further research into a disorder for which there is still no cure.
In humans, motor neurons control important muscle activities such as speaking, walking and breathing. When these cells stop working, it causes difficulties in motor functions and leads ...
Second-generation TAVI device -- Lotus Valve -- shows good performance in REPRISE II
2013-05-23
22 May 2013, Paris, France: The Lotus Valve, a second-generation transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) device, was successfully implanted in all of the first 60 patients in results from REPRISE II reported at EuroPCR 2013, which showed good device performance and low mortality at 30 days.
"First generation TAVI devices provide significant clinical benefit, but there are opportunities for improvement," explained lead author Ian Meredith, Director of MonashHeart, Southern Health and Professor of Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. He suggested that ...
Milwaukee-York researchers forward quest for quantum computing
2013-05-23
Research teams from UW-Milwaukee and the University of York investigating the properties of ultra-thin films of new materials are helping bring quantum computing one step closer to reality.
An on-going collaboration between physicists from York and the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA, is focusing on understanding, tailoring and tuning the electronic properties of topological insulators (TI) - new materials with surfaces that host a quantum state of matter – at the nanoscale.
Understanding the properties of thin films of the new materials and integrating them with ...
Breakthrough on Huntington's disease
2013-05-23
Researchers at Lund University have succeeded in preventing very early symptoms of Huntington's disease, depression and anxiety, by deactivating the mutated huntingtin protein in the brains of mice.
"We are the first to show that it is possible to prevent the depression symptoms of Huntington's disease by deactivating the diseased protein in nerve cell populations in the hypothalamus in the brain. This is hugely exciting and bears out our previous hypotheses", explains Åsa Petersén, Associate Professor of Neuroscience at Lund University.
Huntington's is a debilitating ...
Researchers suggest boosting body's natural flu killers
2013-05-23
Jerusalem, May 13, 2013 – A known difficulty in fighting influenza (flu) is the ability of the flu viruses to mutate and thus evade various medications that were previously found to be effective. Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have shown recently that another, more promising, approach is to focus on improving drugs that boost the body's natural flu killer system.
Emergence of new influenza strains, such as the recent avian influenza (H5N1) and swine influenza (H1N1 2009), can lead to the emergence of severe pandemics that pose a major threat to the ...
Biochemistry: Unspooling DNA from nucleosomal disks
2013-05-23
The tight wrapping of genomic DNA around nucleosomes in the cell nucleus makes it unavailable for gene expression. A team of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich now describes a mechanism that allows chromosomal DNA to be locally displaced from nucleosomes for transcription.
In higher organisms the genomic DNA is stored in the cell nucleus, wrapped around disk-shaped particles called nucleosomes, each consisting of two pairs of four different histone proteins and accommodating two loops of DNA. Packed in this way to form chromatin, the DNA is protected, but ...
Anxious men fare worse during job interviews, study finds
2013-05-23
Nervous about that upcoming job interview? You might want to take steps to reduce your jitters, especially if you are a man.
People who are anxious perform more poorly in job interviews, and the effect is worse for men than women, according to new research from the University of Guelph.
"Most job applicants experience interview anxiety prior to and during interviews," said psychology professor Deborah Powell, who conducted the study with PhD student Amanda Feiler.
Anxiety often shows up as nervous tics, difficulty speaking and trouble coming up with answers, all of ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Increase in alcohol deaths in England an ‘acute crisis’
Government urged to tackle inequality in ‘low-carbon tech’ like solar panels and electric cars
Moffitt-led international study finds new drug delivery system effective against rare eye cancer
Boston stroke neurologist elected new American Academy of Neurology president
Center for Open Science launches collaborative health research replication initiative
Crystal L. Mackall, MD, FAACR, recognized with the 2025 AACR-Cancer Research Institute Lloyd J. Old Award in Cancer Immunology
A novel strategy for detecting trace-level nanoplastics in aquatic environments: Multi-feature machine learning-enhanced SERS quantification leveraging the coffee ring effect
Blending the old and the new: Phase-change perovskite enable traditional VCSEL to achieve low-threshold, tunable single-mode lasers
Enhanced photoacoustic microscopy with physics-embedded degeneration learning
Light boosts exciton transport in organic molecular crystal
On-chip multi-channel near-far field terahertz vortices with parity breaking and active modulation
The generation of avoided-mode-crossing soliton microcombs
Unlocking the vibrant photonic realm: A new horizon for structural colors
Integrated photonic polarizers with 2D reduced graphene oxide
Shouldering the burden of how to treat shoulder pain
Stevens researchers put glycemic response modeling on a data diet
Genotype-to-phenotype map of human pelvis illuminates evolutionary tradeoffs between walking and childbirth
Pleistocene-age Denisovan male identified in Taiwan
KATRIN experiment sets most precise upper limit on neutrino mass: 0.45 eV
How the cerebellum controls tongue movements to grab food
It’s not you—it’s cancer
Drug pollution alters migration behavior in salmon
Scientists decode citrus greening resistance and develop AI-assisted treatment
Venom characteristics of a deadly snake can be predicted from local climate
Brain pathway links inflammation to loss of motivation, energy in advanced cancer
Researchers discover large dormant virus can be reactivated in model green alga
New phase of the immune response uncovered
Drawing board rather than salt shaker
Engineering invites submissions on AI for engineering
In Croatia’s freshwater lakes, selfish bacteria hoard nutrients
[Press-News.org] The world's favorite fruit only better-tasting and longer-lastingAlready more healthy, now more tasty and longer-lasting