(Press-News.org) Does your salad know what time it is? It may be healthier for you if it does, according to new research from Rice University and the University of California at Davis.
"Vegetables and fruits don't die the moment they are harvested," said Rice biologist Janet Braam, the lead researcher on a new study this week in Current Biology. "They respond to their environment for days, and we found we could use light to coax them to make more cancer-fighting antioxidants at certain times of day." Braam is professor and chair of Rice's Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology.
Braam's team simulated day-night cycles of light and dark to control the internal clocks of fruits and vegetables, including cabbage, carrots, squash and blueberries. The research is a follow-up to her team's award-winning 2012 study of the ways that plants use their internal circadian clocks to defend themselves from hungry insects. That study found that Arabidopsis thaliana -- a widely used model organism for plant studies -- begins ramping up production of insect-fighting chemicals a few hours before sunrise, the time that hungry insects begin to feed.
Braam said the idea for the new research came from a conversation with her teenage son.
"I was telling him about the earlier work on Arabidopsis and insect resistance, and he said, 'Well, I know what time of day I'll eat my vegetables!' Braam said. "That was my 'aha!' moment. He was thinking to avoid eating the vegetables when they would be accumulating the anti-insect chemicals, but I knew that some of those chemicals were known to be valuable metabolites for human health, so I decided to try and find out whether vegetables cycle those compounds based on circadian rhythms."
Arabidopsis and cabbage are related, so Braam's team began their research by attempting to "entrain" the clocks of cabbage in the same way they had Arabidopsis. Entrainment is akin to the process that international travelers go through as they recover from jet lag. After flying to the other side of the globe, travelers often have trouble sleeping until their internal circadian clock resets itself to the day-night cycle in their new locale.
Using controlled lighting in a sealed chamber, Rice graduate student and study lead author Danielle Goodspeed found she could entrain the circadian clocks of postharvest cabbage just as she had those of Arabidopsis in the 2012 study. Following the success with cabbage, Goodspeed and co-authors John Liu and Zhengji Sheng studied spinach, lettuce, zucchini, carrots, sweet potatoes and blueberries.
"We were able to entrain each of them, even the root vegetables," Goodspeed said. She and Braam said the findings suggest that storing fruits and vegetables in dark trucks, boxes and refrigerators may reduce their ability to keep daily rhythms.
"We cannot yet say whether all-dark or all-light conditions shorten the shelf life of fruits and vegetables," Braam said. "What we have shown is that keeping the internal clock ticking is advantageous with respect to insect resistance and could also yield health benefits."
In the cabbage experiments, Braam, Goodspeed and Rice co-authors John Liu, Zhengji "Jim" Sheng and Wassim Chehab found they could manipulate cabbage leaves to increase their production of anti-insect metabolites at certain times of day. One of these, an antioxidant called glucoraphanin, or 4-MSO, is a known anti-cancer compound that has been previously studied in broccoli and other vegetables.
Braam's team has already begun follow-up research, which is supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, into whether light and other stimuli, like touch, may be used to enhance pest resistance of food crops in developing countries.
"It's exciting to think that we may be able to boost the health benefits of our produce simply by changing the way we store it," Goodspeed said.
INFORMATION:
Additional co-authors include Marta Francisco and Daniel Kliebenstein, both of the University of California at Davis. The research was supported by the National Science Foundation and by a 2011 Medical Innovation Award from the Rice University Institute of Bioscience and Bioengineering.
VIDEOS are available at:
Does your salad know what time it is?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2zzgpPpln5k
A time-lapse comparison of caterpillars eating postharvest lettuce:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oP-99pOM4Yg
Broadcast-quality B-roll:
http://tinyurl.com/lettuceBroll
A copy of the Current Biology paper is available at:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2013.05.034
Braam and Chehab describe the group's award-winning 2012 study in this podcast:
http://www.pnas.org/site/misc/CozzarelliClassVI-Podcast.mp3
This release can be found online at news.rice.edu.
Follow Rice News and Media Relations via Twitter @RiceUNews
Located on a 300-acre forested campus in Houston, Rice University is consistently ranked among the nation's top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has highly respected schools of Architecture, Business, Continuing Studies, Engineering, Humanities, Music, Natural Sciences and Social Sciences and is home to the Baker Institute for Public Policy. With 3,708 undergraduates and 2,374 graduate students, Rice's undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is 6-to-1. Its residential college system builds close-knit communities and lifelong friendships, just one reason why Rice has been ranked No. 1 for best quality of life multiple times by the Princeton Review and No. 2 for "best value" among private universities by Kiplinger's Personal Finance. To read "What they're saying about Rice," go to http://tinyurl.com/AboutRiceU.
Does your salad know what time it is?
Managing vegetables' 'internal clocks' postharvest could have health benefits
2013-06-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Lab reproduction of a marine compound with antibiotic properties
2013-06-20
This news release is available in Spanish. Bacterial resistance to drugs leads pharmaceutical labs to be in constant search for new antibiotics to treat the same diseases. For the last thirty years, the sea bottom has yielded a wealth of substances with properties of interest to the pharmaceutical industry. Isolated from a marine microorganism off the coast of Alicante by the company BioMar, baringolin shows promising antibiotic activity at a very low concentration. The Combinatorial Lab headed by Fernando Albericio at the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB ...
Too green to be true? Researchers develop highly effective method for converting CO2 into methanol
2013-06-20
Quebec City, June 20, 2013—Université Laval researchers have developed a highly effective method for converting CO2 into methanol, which can be used as a low-emissions fuel for vehicles. The team led by Professor Frédéric-Georges Fontaine presents the details of this discovery in the latest issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
Researchers have been looking for a way to convert carbon dioxide into methanol in a single step using energy-efficient processes for years. "In the presence of oxygen, methanol combustion produces CO2 and water," explained Professor ...
American Chemical Society global program tackles safe drinking water in Colombia
2013-06-20
The Global Innovation Imperatives (Gii) program, administered by the American Chemical Society (ACS) Office of International Activities, today issued a white paper outlining possible solutions for increasing access to safe drinking water in the rural areas of the world. Although focused on the community of Chocontá, in Colombia, the suggested solutions have broader application.
Chocontá residents rely on rural aqueducts for their water, but supplies are vulnerable to pollution from nearby agriculture and largely go untreated. City officials asked ACS, the world's largest ...
'Forrest Gump' mice show too much of a good thing, can be bad
2013-06-20
VIDEO:
This video shows a control mouse doing a task to test cognitive skills. The mouse must start the test, then scan and touch the screen at the spot where...
Click here for more information.
A line of genetically modified mice that Western University scientists call "Forrest Gump" because, like the movie character, they can run far but they aren't smart, is furthering the understanding of a key neurotransmitter called acetylcholine (ACh). Marco Prado and his team at Robarts ...
Rhode Island Hospital reduces incidence of hospital-associated C. difficile by 70 percent
2013-06-20
PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Rhode Island Hospital has reduced the incidence of hospital-associated Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) infections by 70 percent and reduced annual associated mortality in patients with hospital-associated C. difficile by 64 percent through successive implementation of five rigorous interventions , as reported in the July 2013 issue of The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety.
Clostridium difficile is a toxin-producing bacterium that lives in the colon. A major cause of morbidity and mortality in the U.S., it can cause life-threatening ...
Virus combination effective against deadly brain tumor, Moffitt Cancer Center study shows
2013-06-20
A combination of the myxoma virus and the immune suppressant rapamycin can kill glioblastoma multiforme, the most common and deadliest malignant brain tumor, according to Moffitt Cancer Center research. Peter A. Forsyth, M.D., of Moffitt's Neuro-Oncology Program, says the combination has been shown to infect and kill both brain cancer stem cells and differentiated compartments of glioblastoma multiforme.
The finding means that barriers to treating the disease, such as resistance to the drug temozolomide, may be overcome. The study, by Forsyth and colleagues in Canada, ...
Making a beeline for the nectar
2013-06-20
Bumblebees searching for nectar go for signposts on flowers rather than the bull's eye. A new study, by Levente Orbán and Catherine Plowright from the University of Ottawa in Canada, shows that the markings at the center of a flower are not as important as the markings that will direct the bees to the center. The work is published online in Springer's journal, Naturwissenschaften - The Science of Nature.
The first time bees go out looking for nectar, which visual stimuli do they use to identify that first flower that will provide them with the reward they are looking ...
Scientists design a potential drug compound that attacks Parkinson's disease on 2 fronts
2013-06-20
JUPITER, FL-- Scientists from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have found a compound that could counter Parkinson's disease in two ways at once.
In a new study published recently online ahead of print by the journal ACS Chemical Biology, the scientists describe a "dual inhibitor"- two compounds in a single molecule-- that attacks a pair of proteins closely associated with development of Parkinson's disease.
"In general, these two enzymes amplify the effect of each other," said team leader Phil LoGrasso, a TSRI professor who has been a pioneer ...
Total amount of exercise important, not frequency, research shows
2013-06-20
A new study by Queen's University researchers has determined that adults who accumulated 150 minutes of exercise on a few days of the week were not any less healthy than adults who exercised more frequently throughout the week.
Ian Janssen and his graduate student Janine Clarke studied 2,324 adults from across Canada to determine whether the frequency of physical activity throughout the week is associated with risk factors for diabetes, heart disease and stroke.
"The findings indicate that it does not matter how adults choose to accumulate their 150 weekly minutes of ...
Goal of identifying nearly all genetic causes of deafness is within reach
2013-06-20
New Rochelle, NY, June 20, 2013—At least half of all cases of deafness that develop from birth through infancy in developed countries have a genetic basis, as do many cases of later onset progressive hearing loss. To date, at least 1,000 mutations occurring in 64 genes in the human genome have been linked to hearing loss. Next-generation DNA sequencing technologies are enabling the identification of these deafness-causing genetic variants, as described in a Review article in Genetic Testing and Molecular Biomarkers, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Children’s Hospital Colorado Heart Institute earns national recognition for excellence in cardiomyopathy care
Trial shows alcohol-mimicking medication can give laryngeal dystonia patients back their voice
Cigarette smoke alters microbiota, aggravates flu severity
Landmark study reveals over 100,000 American youth living with inflammatory bowel disease
Diverse diets of civets in Borneo rainforest allow them to live in same geographical area
Virtual reality could be gamechanger in police-civilian crisis encounters
Recycled pacemakers function as well as new devices, international study suggests
Researchers eliminate the gritty mouth feel: How to make it easier to eat fiber-rich foods
An innovative antibiotic for drug-resistant bacteria
Garden produce grown near Fayetteville works fluorochemical plant contains GenX, other PFAs
CMU-Africa expands digital public infrastructure initiative across the continent
Study calls for city fashion waste shakeup
Scientists develop breakthrough culture system to unlock secrets of skin microbiome
Masseter muscle volume might be a key indicator of sarcopenia risk in older adults
New study unveils key strategies against drug-resistant prostate cancer
Northwestern Medicine, West Health, Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute collaboration to provide easier access to mental health care
New method reveals DNA methylation in ancient tissues, unlocking secrets of human evolution
Researchers develop clinically validated, wearable ultrasound patch for continuous blood pressure monitoring
Chromatwist wins innovate UK smart grant for £0.5M project
Unlocking the secrets of the first quasars: how they defy the laws of physics to grow
Study reveals importance of student-teacher relationships in early childhood education
Do abortion policy changes affect young women’s mental health?
Can sown wildflowers compensate for cities’ lack of natural meadows to support pollinating insects?
Is therapeutic hypothermia an effective treatment for hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, a type of neurological dysfunction in newborns?
Scientists discover the molecular composition of potentially deadly venomous fish
What are the belowground responses to long-term soil warming among different types of trees?
Do area-wide social and environmental factors affect individuals’ risk of cognitive impairment?
UCLA professor Helen Lavretsky reshapes brain health through integrative medicine research
Astronauts found to process some tasks slower in space, but no signs of permanent cognitive decline
Larger pay increases and better benefits could support teacher retention
[Press-News.org] Does your salad know what time it is?Managing vegetables' 'internal clocks' postharvest could have health benefits