Oct. 4, 2006
Vegetables, Like People, Urged to Live Up to Potential
Writer: Kathleen Phillips, 979-845-2872,ka-phillips@tamu.edu
Contact: Dr. Luis Cisneros, 979-845-3244,lcisnero@tamu.edu
COLLEGE STATION – Carrots may be underachievers. Healthy and good for
one's eyes, yes, but they could be so much more, researchers say.
A major stress in a carrot's life – like the slash of a kitchen knife –
and the tapered tuber kicks in the juice and pumps up its phytochemicals.
That's the finding of Dr. Luis Cisneros, Texas Agricultural Experiment
Station food scientist. He calls it abiotic stress – pushing the button,
so to speak, on a crop after it has been harvested.
"What happens is that on many occasions, plants do not express their
real potential. They can actually express more if they are challenged to a
point," he said.
"It's something similar to what would happen with people. You stress
people, and people tend to respond more to the challenges in front of
them," he added. "In this case, when you stress plants, you actually
trigger this genetic response, and the plant will synthesize chemical
compounds. You end up with a carrot that is healthier than the original
carrot in a short period of time with a very cheap and easy stressor."
A key to his research was understanding the plant's pathway to a
specific, desired compound and getting it to increase only that one. So
far, his lab has successfully increased the amount of antioxidant activity
in carrots up to five times.
The finding is important for food processors, Cisneros said, because as
companies increasingly seek ways to add healthier components to foods, the
technique could yield more of those desired substances.
One kilogram of anthocyanin extract is valued at $1,000 in the
marketplace, Cisneros said. Anthocyanin is the red pigment in vegetables
which is associated with a reduced risk of cancer and heart disease.
"So, if you stress (carrots) and they accumulate more anthocyanin, that
means more money," he said. "Now imagine using that carrot to make a juice
or making an extract of it that could be added to bread or some other
product. You end up with an array of different products that you can
benefit from."
Growers also stand to gain, he said. In traditional vegetable
marketing, the only way for a producer to make more money is to harvest
higher yields.
"But with this process, a grower could market not for the yield in
tonnage, but for the percent of phytochemicals," he explained.
Other current research on producing phytochemicals in foods focuses on
breeding fruits and vegetables to have increased amounts of the compounds,
Cisneros noted. While that is beneficial, the ability to quadruple the
phytochemical with a simple, post-harvest technique would add even more
value.
In his lab, the "wounded," or cut, carrots were placed under an
ultraviolet light for a few seconds. Analysis a couple of days after that
simple treatment showed a "huge increase" in antioxidants, he said.
"Abiotic stress has been known for decades," he said. "But our work is
new because we targeted something specific to accumulate what we wanted.
We used stress to manipulate."
The finding opens the door for more research, he said.
"We are trying to see if these responses can be duplicated in other
types of plants – different types of fruits and vegetables," he said. "We
want to see the signal molecule that is promoting these types of responses
to maybe improve the way we are applying these stresses."
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