Novel study reveals the accumulation mechanisms of purine alkaloids and catechins in theobromine-rich tea
2023-09-12
(Press-News.org)
Camellia ptilophylla, a low-caffeine or decaffeinated tea, is increasingly being recognized for its potential health benefits. However, there is intraspecific diversity in purine alkaloid and catechins components in C. ptilophylla populations. Analyzing the mechanisms behind the accumulation of these metabolites is important for improving tea quality.
Beverage Plant Research published online a paper by Associate Professor Binmei Sun and Shaoqun Liu’s team at South China Agricultural University entitled “Differential accumulation mechanisms of purine alkaloids and catechins in Camellia ptilophylla, a natural theobromine-rich tea” on 27 June 2023.
In this study, researchers first analyzed the accumulation of purine alkaloids in C. ptilophylla populations (32 plants) and showed that theobromine (TB) was the sole alkaloid in 26 individual plants, while the other six C. ptilophylla plants had higher caffeine and lower TB. Next, RNA-seq analysis of two C. ptilophylla plants with contrasting purine alkaloid contents showed that the expression of xanthine synthesis genes TCS-2, TCS-3 and MXMTs were up-regulated, while the genes of the purine alkaloids degradation pathway were significantly down-regulated in TB-rich plant. In addition, the expression pattern of catechin biosynthesis pathway genes was altered in TB-rich plants. These up-regulated catechin biosynthesis pathway genes were associated with phenylpropanoid and flavonoid biosynthesis, which are essential for the production of gallocatechin gallate (GCG). The co-expression networks constructed with 327 transcription factors identified by RNA-seq, purine alkaloids and catechin biosynthesis genes elucidated the potential regulatory mechanisms of gene expression in C. ptilophylla populations.
In conclusion, this study uncovers different accumulation mechanisms of purine alkaloids and catechins in C.ptilophylla populations. These insights will facilitate the breeding of low-caffeine or high GCG tea tree varieties to meet the different needs of consumers and lead to healthier consumption options.
###
References
Authors
Chentao Ying1, Jiawen Chen1, Jiahao Chen1, Peng Zheng1, Caibi Zhou2, Binmei Sun1*, & Shaoqun Liu1*
Affiliations
1. College of Horticulture, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou 510642, China
2. College of Biological Science and Agriculture, Qiannan Normal University for Nationalities, Duyun 558000, China
About Shaoqun Liu & Binmei Sun
Associate Professor Shaoqun Liu : He is currently the vice dean of the College of Horticulture, South China Agricultural University, and the deputy director of the Institute of Tea Science. He is passionate about tea science and has presided over 20 provincial and horizontal tea projects.
Associate Professor Binmei Sun: Her main research interests include genetic breeding and biotechnology of tea tree. She has published more than 20 academic papers in New Phytologist, Horticulture Research, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry and other well-known journals, and has obtained 2 authorized invention patents.
END
[Attachments] See images for this press release:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2023-09-12
Milan, Italy: For the first time, researchers have shown it is possible to repair damaged lung tissue in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) using the patients’ own lung cells.
The European Respiratory Society International Congress in Milan, Italy [1], heard that 17 patients who took part in a phase I clinical trial were able to breath better, walk further and had better quality of life after receiving the experimental treatment.
COPD kills approximately three million people worldwide every year. It is a severe respiratory disease that involves progressive damage to lung tissue. The affected tissue cannot be repaired ...
2023-09-12
Milan, Italy: A study of nearly 500,000 people has shown that smoking shortens the end fragments of chromosomes in the white blood cells of our immune systems. The length of these end fragments, called telomeres, is an indicator of how quickly we age and our cells’ ability to repair and regenerate.
In her presentation to the European Respiratory Society International Congress in Milan, Italy [1], Dr Siyu Dai, who is an assistant professor in the School of Clinical Medicine, Hangzhou Normal University, and also an honorary postdoctoral researcher in the department of paediatrics, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, said: “Our study shows that smoking status and ...
2023-09-11
https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.15212/CVIA.2023.0056
Announcing a new article publication for Cardiovascular Innovations and Applications journal. Durable left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) offer a viable option for patients with advanced heart failure and have been demonstrated to be superior to optimal medical therapy in terms of both mortality and quality of life, in selected patients. However, durable LVADs can be associated with severe morbidity. Because the rates of cardiac ...
2023-09-11
STARKVILLE, Miss.—How can positive experiences seem like the opposite for some?
A doctoral student in Mississippi State University’s Clinical Psychology program believes this phenomenon is true, and his recent research is featured in an upcoming issue of The Journal of Behavioral Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry.
Michael R. Gallagher’s article “A network analytic investigation of avoidance, dampening, and devaluation of positivity” focuses on how behaviors related to processing positive experiences may play a role ...
2023-09-11
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a pervasive endocrine disorder that affects millions of women globally, impacting their hormonal balance, fertility and overall well-being. It is notoriously difficult to treat, with widely varying symptoms and mysterious, complex underlying causes. Researchers at the University of Chicago recently unveiled a potential new PCOS treatment that may improve multiple PCOS symptoms by regulating body systems and reducing inflammation.
Recently published results demonstrate the promise ...
2023-09-11
DURHAM, N.C. – For much of the last century, many cities across the United States and Canada burned their trash and waste in municipal incinerators. Most of these facilities were closed by the early 1970s due to concerns about the pollution they added to the air, but a new Duke University study finds that their legacy of contamination could live on in urban soils.
“We found that city parks and playgrounds built on the site of a former waste incinerator can still have greatly elevated levels of lead in their surface soils many decades after the incinerator was closed,” ...
2023-09-11
HOUSTON – (Sept. 11, 2023) A new material that packs deadly heat for viruses on its outer surface while staying cool on the reverse side could transform the way we make and use personal protective equipment (PPE), cutting down the pollution and carbon footprint associated with current materials and practices.
The composite, textile-based material developed by Rice University engineers uses Joule heating to decontaminate its surface of coronaviruses like SARS-CoV-2 in under 5 seconds, effectively killing at least 99.9% of viruses. Wearable items made from the material can handle hundreds of uses with the potential for a single pair of gloves to prevent nearly ...
2023-09-11
LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Sept. 11, 2023 — A machine-learning algorithm demonstrated the capability to process data that exceeds a computer’s available memory by identifying a massive data set’s key features and dividing them into manageable batches that don’t choke computer hardware. Developed at Los Alamos National Laboratory, the algorithm set a world record for factorizing huge data sets during a test run on Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Summit, the world’s fifth-fastest supercomputer.
Equally efficient on laptops and supercomputers, ...
2023-09-11
Researchers at the University of Arizona Cancer Center discovered a new class of iron-targeting compounds that hamper the proliferation of cultured malignant cells in a laboratory setting. The results of the study were published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
“Cancer cells are what we call ‘addicted’ to iron, and so we are making compounds that are able to interfere with the availability of iron in cancer cells,” said Elisa Tomat, PhD, professor in the Department of Chemistry ...
2023-09-11
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Experimental physicist David Weld’s experimental research interest lies in a question that has been around for a long time, but which we’re only now approaching the ability to investigate.
“There’s a really old interest in the quantum act of measurement,” he said. “It’s something that’s at the foundations of quantum mechanics and has been puzzling people for more than a century.”
Called the “measurement problem” and famously illustrated by Erwin Schrödinger’s ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Novel study reveals the accumulation mechanisms of purine alkaloids and catechins in theobromine-rich tea