Beneficial Natural Compounds in Tomato
Beneficial Natural Compounds in Tomato
Scientists at the John Innes
Centre have found a way to produce industrial quantities of useful natural
compounds efficiently, by growing them in tomatoes.
The compounds are
phenylpropanoids like Resveratrol, the compound found in wine which has been
reported to extend lifespan in animal studies, and Genistein, the compound
found in soybean which has been suggested to play a role in prevention of
steroid-hormone related cancers, particularly breast cancer.
As a result of the research led
by Dr Yang Zhang and Dr Eugenio Butelli working in Professor Cathie Martin's
lab at the John Innes Centre, one tomato can produce the same quantity of
Resveratrol as exists in 50 bottles of red wine. One tomato has also produced
the amount of Genistein found in 2.5kg of tofu.
Dr Zhang and Butelli have been
studying the effect of a protein called AtMYB12 which is found in Arabidopsis
thaliana, a plant found in most UK gardens and used as a model plant in
scientific investigation.
The protein AtMYB12 activates a
broad set of genes involved in metabolic pathways responsible for producing
natural compounds of use to the plant. The protein acts a bit like a tap to
increase or reduce the production of natural compounds depending on how much of
the protein is present.
What was interesting about the
effect of introducing this protein into a tomato plant was how it acted to both
increase the capacity of the plant to produce natural compounds (by activating
phenylpropanoid production) and to influence the amount of energy and carbon
the plant dedicated to producing these natural compounds. In response to the
influence of the atmyb12 protein, tomato plants began to create more
phenylpropanoids and flavanoids and to devote more of energy to doing this in
fruit.
Introducing both AtMYB12 and
genes from plants encoding enzymes specific for making Resveratrol in grape and
Genistein in legumes, resulted in tomatoes that could produce as much as 80mg
of novel compound per gram of dry weight -- demonstrating that industrial scale
up is possible.
Tomatoes are a high yielding crop
-- producing up to 500 tons per hectare in countries delivering the highest
yields (FAOSTAT 2013) and require relatively few inputs, therefore production
of valuable compounds like Resveratrol or Genistein in tomatoes could be a more
economical way of producing them than relying on artificial synthesis in a lab
or extracting them in tiny quantities from traditional plant sources (e.g.,
grapes, soybeans, etc.). The tomatoes can be harvested and juiced and the
valuable compounds can be extracted from the juice. The tomatoes themselves
could potentially become the source of increased nutritional or medicinal
benefit.
Professor Cathie Martin said:
"Our study provides a general tool for producing valuable phenylpropanoid
compounds on an industrial scale in plants, and potentially production of other
products derived from aromatic amino acids. Our work will be of interest to
different research areas including fundamental research on plants,
plant/microbe engineering, medicinal plant natural products, as well as diet
and health research."
Dr. Yang Zhang, said:
"Medicinal plants with high value are often difficult to grow and manage,
and need very long cultivation times to produce the desired compounds. Our
research provides a fantastic platform to quickly produce these valuable medicinal
compounds in tomatoes. Target compounds could be purified directly from tomato
juice. We believe our design idea could also be applied to other compounds such
as terpenoids and alkaloids, which are the major groups of medicinal compounds
from plants."