This item is important because we
may just have a genetic protocol for producing seedless plants on demand. It
may not be ready yet for prime time, but the possibility is now with us.
We forget that the seedless
cultivars we do have were never anyone’s first choice in terms of flavor and
many other characteristics. Suddenly we
can plan to optimize a variety and then proceed to produce a seedless
version.
How about a better banana?
If this methodology can be
adapted to the rest of our universe of cultivars, we are about to witness a
revolution in flavor and quality.
My first nominee is to produce a
proper sweet seedless watermelon. From that
we can also produce dried watermelon without fuss. Both would have tremendous commercial value.
Just how many varieties of grapes
are there? I would love to eat a
strongly flavored concord grape without the seeds while retaining the interior
structure.
Seedless cherimoya, the next banana?
Mark Twain called it "the most delicious fruit known to man."
But the cherimoya, or custard apple, and its close relations the sugar apple
and soursop, also have lots of big, awkward seeds. Now new research by plant
scientists in the United States
and Spain
could show how to make this and other fruits seedless.
Going seedless could be a big step for the fruit, said Charles Gasser,
professor of plant biology at
UC Davis.
"This could be the next banana -- it would make it a lot more
popular," Gasser said. Bananas in their natural state have up to a hundred
seeds; all commercial varieties, of course, are seedless. A paper describing
the work is published March 14 in the journal Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
Researchers José Hormaza, Maria Herrero and graduate student Jorge Lora
at the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas in Malaga and Zaragoza,
Spain, studied the seedless variety of sugar apple. When they looked closely at
the fruit, they noticed that the ovules, which would normally form seeds,
lacked an outer coat.
They looked similar to the ovules of a mutant of the lab plant
Arabidopsis discovered by Gasser's lab at UC Davis in the late 1990s. In
Arabidopsis, the defective plants do not make seeds or fruit. But the mutant
sugar apple produces full-sized fruit with white, soft flesh without the large,
hard seeds.
The Spanish team contacted Gasser, and Lora came from Malaga to work on the project in Gasser's
lab. He discovered that the same gene was responsible for uncoated ovules in
both the Arabidopsis and sugar apple mutants.
"This is the first characterization of a gene for seedlessness
in any crop plant," Gasser said.
Seedless varieties of commercial fruit crops are usually achieved by
selective breeding and then propagated vegetatively, for example through
cuttings.
Discovery of this new gene could open the way to produce seedless
varieties in sugar apple, cherimoya and perhaps other fruit crops.
The discovery also sheds light on the evolution of flowering plants,
Gasser said. Cherimoya and sugar apple belong to the magnolid family of plants,
which branched off from the other flowering plants quite early in their
evolution.
"It's a link all the way back to the beginning of the
angiosperms," Gasser said.
Provided by University of California - Davis
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