PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study of chilli genetics could lead to greater variety on our plates

Study of chilli genetics could lead to greater variety on our plates
2021-03-24
(Press-News.org) Scientists investigating the genetics of chilli pepper species have discovered a whole host of new chilli hybrids that can be grown by crossing domesticated peppers with their wild cousins. This will allow plant breeders to create new varieties that have better disease resistance and could increase productivity.

Despite their huge world-wide culinary appeal, chillies are relatively difficult to cultivate, being prone to disease and sensitive to growing conditions.

There are 35 species of pepper in the Capsicum family, including five domesticated species. The most well-known of these is C. annuum, which includes several varieties with widely differing shapes and tastes, including bell peppers, jalapeños, New Mexico chiles, and cayenne peppers.

The team of scientists from the World Vegetable Center in Taiwan investigated the genetic relatedness between 38 samples of 15 species of wild and domesticated peppers collected from locations around the world.

Their findings, published in the journal, PLOS ONE, found that breeding compatibility between species was not necessarily connected to how closely related they were to each other.

They also discovered that four species were wrongly characterised.

Lead author of the study, Catherine Parry, collected the data whilst on a six-month work placement at the World Vegetable Center as part of her undergraduate degree in Biology at the University of Bath.

She said: "The main differences between peppers that are grown for culinary purposes and their wild counterparts are that the wild species have much smaller fruits and leaves.

"However, we have large gaps in our understanding of the wild relatives of the Capsicum family.

"It was previously thought that only a narrow range of species could be successfully hybridised for cultivation, but our research has shown that there is a much wider potential number of varieties that could be grown.

"Many of the wild species have better disease resistance and so our findings could be valuable for identifying candidates for future breeding programmes, potentially increasing productivity for food producers and maybe even creating some new flavours to explore too!"

The World Vegetable Center, Taiwan, holds the largest collection of Capsicum genetic material globally.

Dr Derek Barchenger, from the World Vegetable Center and second author on the study, said: "Unlike other crops in Solanaceae, the use of wild relatives in pepper/chilli/chile pepper breeding programs is extremely limited.

"In fact the phylogeny of Capsicum is still not completely resolved.

"There are many important abiotic and biotic stresses to which we lack sources of resistance and tolerance. "Therefore, we are interested in exploring the wild relatives of Capsicum to identity resistant sources to incorporate into our breeding program.

"This study provides a critical first step in the utilisation of Capsicum wild relatives in breeding by expanding our understanding of genetic and phenotypic similarities and crossability among wild and domesticated species."

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Study of chilli genetics could lead to greater variety on our plates

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Texas A&M researchers optimize materials design using computational technologies

2021-03-24
The process of fabricating materials is complicated, time-consuming and costly. Too much of one material, or too little, can create problems with the product, forcing the design process to begin again. Advancements in the design process are needed to reduce the cost and time it takes to produce materials with targeted properties. Funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), researchers at Texas A&M University are using advanced computational and machine-learning techniques to create a framework capable of optimizing the process of developing materials, cutting time and costs. "Our general focus ...

Curtin research finds first clues to start of Earth's supercontinent cycle

Curtin research finds first clues to start of Earths supercontinent cycle
2021-03-24
Curtin University research has uncovered the first solid clues about the very beginning of the supercontinent cycle of Earth, finding it was kick-started two billion years ago. Detailed in a paper published in Geology, a team of researchers from Curtin's Earth Dynamics Research Group found that plate tectonics operated differently before two billion years ago, and the 600 million years supercontinent cycle likely only started during the second half of Earth's life. Lead researcher Dr Yebo Liu from Curtin's School of Earth and Planetary Sciences said that the shift in plate tectonics marked a regime change in the Earth System. "This regime change impacted on the eventual emergence of complex life and even ...

News media keeps pressing the mute button on women's sports

2021-03-24
The talented athletes are there. The cheering fans are there. But the media? It's nowhere to be found. This is the reality of women's sports, which continue to be almost entirely excluded from television news and sports highlights shows, according to a USC/Purdue University study published on March 24th in Communication & Sport. The survey of men's and women's sports news coverage has been conducted every five years since 1989. In the latest study, researchers found that 95% of total television coverage as well as the ESPN sports highlights show SportsCenter focused on men's sports in 2019. They saw a similar lopsidedness ...

Glycans are crucial in COVID-19 infection

2021-03-24
A research group at the RIKEN Center for Computational Science (R-CCS) has found that glycans--sugar molecules--play an important role in the structural changes that take place when the virus which causes COVID-19 invades human cells. Their discovery, which was based on supercomputer-based simulations, could contribute to the molecular design of drugs for the prevention and treatment of COVID-19. The research was published in the Biophysical Journal. When SARS-CoV-2--the coronavirus that causes COVID-19--invades a human cell, a spike protein on its surface binds to an enzyme called ACE2 on the surface of the cell. The ...

Mixed reality gets a machine learning upgrade

Mixed reality gets a machine learning upgrade
2021-03-24
Osaka, Japan - Scientists from the Division of Sustainable Energy and Environmental Engineering at Osaka University employed deep learning artificial intelligence to improve mobile mixed reality generation. They found that occluding objects recognized by the algorithm could be dynamically removed using a video game engine. This work may lead to a revolution in green architecture and city revitalization. Mixed reality (MR) is a type of visual augmentation in which real-time images of existing objects or landscapes can be digitally altered. As anyone who has played Pokémon Go! or similar games knows, looking at a smartphone ...

Tuning in the noise? New electromagnetic circuit simulator visualizes radiation phenomena

Tuning in the noise? New electromagnetic circuit simulator visualizes radiation phenomena
2021-03-24
Osaka, Japan - Most of the devices used in our daily lives are operated and controlled by electricity. From the standpoint of safety and the tight supply and demand of electricity, circuit design that satisfies low electromagnetic noise and power saving is becoming increasingly important. In an electric circuit, electric signals transmit inside the conductor, and electromagnetic fields radiate outside the conductor. Furthermore, the electromagnetic field propagates through the air and is converted into signals for itself and other circuits, which leads to electromagnetic noise. Now, a research team at Osaka University has formulated a numerical method ...

Psychological forest: What trees reveal about Antarctic researchers

Psychological forest: What trees reveal about Antarctic researchers
2021-03-24
At the bottom of the world, there's a small island about four kilometers off the coast of Antarctica. In summer, temperatures climb to freezing with uninterrupted daylight for two months. In winter, they fall to minus 40 degrees Celsius without a single sunrise for two months. It is isolated and desolate, uninhabitable to all humans -- except for the Japanese Antarctic Research Expedition (JARE). Almost every year since 1956, a JARE team winters over on the island, staying in Syowa Station, from February to January to conduct various research projects. From 2004 to 2014, however, they were also research subjects themselves. As part of a joint project between the National Institute of Polar Research at the Research Organization of Information and Systems ...

Wafer-thin nanopaper changes from firm to soft at the touch of a button

2021-03-24
Materials science likes to take nature and the special properties of living beings that could potentially be transferred to materials as a model. A research team led by chemist Professor Andreas Walther of Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) has succeeded in endowing materials with a bioinspired property: Wafer-thin stiff nanopaper instantly becomes soft and elastic at the push of a button. "We have equipped the material with a mechanism so that the strength and stiffness can be modulated via an electrical switch," explained Walther. As soon as an electric current is applied, the nanopaper becomes soft; when the current flow stops, it regains its strength. From an application perspective, this switchability could be interesting for damping ...

E. Coli calculus: Bacteria find the derivative optimally

E. Coli calculus: Bacteria find the derivative optimally
2021-03-24
Tokyo, Japan - Scientists from the Graduate School of Information Science and Technology at The University of Tokyo calculated the efficiency of the sensory network that bacteria use to move towards food and found it to be optimal from an information theory standpoint. This work may lead to a better understanding of bacterial behavior and their sensory networks. Despite being single-celled organisms, bacteria such as E. Coli can perform some impressive feats of sensing and adaptation in constantly changing environmental conditions. For example, these bacteria can sense the presence of a chemical ...

New automated process makes nanofiber fabrication assessment 30% more accurate

2021-03-24
Imbued with special electric, mechanical and other physical properties due to their tiny size, nanofibers are considered leading-edge technology in biomedical engineering, clean energy and water quality control, among others. Now, researchers in Italy and UK have developed an automatic process to assess nanofiber fabrication quality, producing 30% more accurate results than currently used techniques. Details were published on January 2021 in IEEE/CAA Journal of Automatica Sinica, a joint publication of the IEEE and the Chinese Association of Automation. "In recent years, nanostructured materials have gained continuously growing interest both in scientific and industrial contexts, because of their research appeal and versatile applications," ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Antarctica’s only native insect’s unique survival mechanism

How Earth's early cycles shaped the chemistry of life

Ukraine war forces planes to take longer routes, raising CO2

Negative refraction of light using atoms instead of metamaterials

High BP may develop at different ages and paces in East & South Asian adults in the UK

Meet the newly discovered brain cell that allows you to remember objects

Engineered animals show new way to fight mercury pollution

The 3,000-year coral reef shutdown: a mysterious pause and a remarkable recovery

Worm surface chemistry reveals secrets to their development and survival

Splicing twins: unravelling the secrets of the minor spliceosome complex

500-year-old Transylvanian diaries show how the Little Ice Age completely changed life and death in the region

Overcoming nicotine withdrawal: Clues found in neural mechanisms of the brain

Survey: Women prefer female doctors, but finding one for heart health can be difficult

Leaf color mysteries unveiled: the role of BoYgl-2 in cabbage

NUS Medicine study: Inability of cells to recycle fats can spell disease

D2-GCN: a graph convolutional network with dynamic disentanglement for node classification

Female hoverflies beat males on long-distance migrations

Study finds consumer openness to smoke-impacted wines, offering new market opportunities

Why we need to expand the search for climate-friendly microalgae

Fewer forest fires burn in North America today than in the past—and that's a bad thing

Older people in England are happier now than before the COVID pandemic, new national study suggests

Texas A&M chemist wins NSF CAREER Award

Micro-nano plastics make other pollutants more dangerous to plants and intestinal cells

Study of female genital tract reveals key findings

Pitt Engineering Professor Fang Peng elected to National Academy of Engineering

Short-course radiation therapy effective for endometrial cancer patients

Breast cancer treatment advances with light-activated ‘smart bomb’

JSCAI article at THT 2025 sets the standard for training pathways in interventional heart failure

Engineering biological reaction crucibles to rapidly produce proteins

Minecraft: a gamechanger for children’s learning

[Press-News.org] Study of chilli genetics could lead to greater variety on our plates