Gene Tweaks Promise Vitamin Drenched Food
Makarand writes "Scientists have identified a gene in ripe strawberries that holds the promise
of creating vitamin-drenched food of the future according to
this
article in the Taipei Times.
The gene encodes an enzyme in strawberry plants that helps to convert a protein
called D-galacturonic acid to vitamin C.
In a recent study, the same gene tweaked to overexpress the enzyme
in a weed called thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana),
the plant equivalent of the laboratory mouse,
churned out two or three times the normal amounts of vitamin C.
The study suggests that other plants that use these genes can be engineered to have high
vitamin levels."
The gene encodes an enzyme in strawberry plants that helps to convert a protein called D-galacturonic acid to vitamin C.
:(
going back to high school chemistry, vitamin C is citric acid, aka the slightly sour stuff in oranges, and more potent in lemons/lemon juice. stawberries always appealed to me because of their sweetness, not their acridness
moox. for a new generation.
For example, humans produce a different form of hemoglobin while in the womb. This different hemoglobin protein has a higher affinity for oxygen, so it can effectively absorb oxygen from the mothers blood. This gene is not as good after you are born because it holds on to the oxygen too tightly and can't efficiently deliver it to the organs. The gene shuts off after you are born so that you are more adapted to your environment.
So...the strawberries may turn on production of the vitamin C gene because they need it to do the actual ripening of the fruit or something.
"Eat your fruit young man!" -granny