logo
Evolutionary Origins Of Potato Revealed. And A Tomato Was Involved

Evolutionary Origins Of Potato Revealed. And A Tomato Was Involved

NDTV2 days ago
WASHINGTON:
The potato is one of the world's food staples, first cultivated thousands of years ago in the Andes region of South America before spreading globally from the 16th century. But despite its importance to humankind, the evolutionary origins of the potato have remained puzzling - until now.
A new analysis of 450 genomes from cultivated potatoes and 56 genomes of wild potato species has revealed that the potato lineage originated through natural interbreeding between a wild tomato plant and a potato-like species in South America about 9 million years ago.
This hybridization event led to the appearance of the nascent potato plant's tuber, an enlarged structure housing nutrients underground, according to the researchers, who also identified two crucial genes involved in tuber formation. Whereas in a tomato plant, the edible part is the fruit, in the potato plant, it is the tuber.
"Potatoes are truly one of humanity's most remarkable food staples, combining extraordinary versatility, nutritional value and cultural ubiquity in ways few crops can match," said Sanwen Huang, a genome biologist and plant breeder at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences and senior author of the study published on Friday in the journal Cell.
"People eat potatoes using virtually every cooking method - baking, roasting, boiling, steaming and frying. Despite being stereotyped as carbohydrates, potatoes offer vitamin C, potassium, fibre and resistant starch, and are naturally gluten-free, low-fat and satiating - a nutrient-dense calorie source," Huang added.
Resistant starch is a type of carbohydrate that resists digestion in the small intestine and ferments in the large intestine, feeding beneficial bacteria in the gut.
The modern-day potato plant's scientific name is Solanum tuberosum. Its two parents identified in the study were plants that were the ancestors of a potato-like species now found in Peru named Etuberosum, which closely resembles the potato plant but lacks a tuber, and the tomato plant.
These two plants themselves shared a common ancestor that lived about 14 million years ago, and were able to naturally interbreed when the fortuitous hybridization event occurred five million years after they had diverged from each other.
"This event led to a reshuffling of genes such that the new lineage produced tubers, allowing these plants to expand into the newly created cold, dry habitats in the rising Andes mountain chain," said botanist Sandra Knapp of the Natural History Museum in London, a co-author of the study.
This hybridization event coincided with the rapid uplift of the Andes. With a tuber, the potato plant was able to adapt to the changing regional environment and thrive in the harsh conditions of the mountains.
"Tubers can store nutrients for cold adaptation, and enable asexual reproduction to meet the challenge of the reduced fertility in cold conditions. These allowed the plant to survive and rapidly expand," Huang said.
The study's findings, according to the researchers, may help guide improved cultivated potato breeding to address environmental challenges that crops presently face due to factors such as climate change.
There are currently roughly 5,000 potato varieties. The potato is the world's third most important food crop, after rice and wheat, for human consumption, according to the Peru-based International Potato Center research organization. China is the world's leading potato producer.
"It always is hard to remove all the deleterious mutations in potato genomes in breeding, and this study opens a new door to make a potato free of deleterious mutations using the tomato as the chassis of synthetic biology," Huang said.
The study also may open the door to generating a new crop species that could produce tomato fruit above ground and potato tubers below ground, according to Zhiyang Zhang, a postdoctoral researcher at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences.
The potato and tomato are members of the nightshade family of flowering plants that also includes tobacco and peppers, among others. The study did not investigate the evolutionary origins of other tuberous root crops that originated in South America, such as the sweet potato and yuca, which are members of different families of flowering plants.
While the parts of the tomato and potato plants that people eat are quite different, the plants themselves are very similar.
"We use different parts of these two species, fruits in tomatoes and tubers in potatoes," Knapp said. "If you look at the flowers or leaves, they are very similar. And if you are lucky enough to let your potato plant produce fruits, they look just like little green tomatoes. But don't eat them. They are not very nice."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Potatoes Came From Tomatoes? It Happened 9 Million Years Ago On This Continent
Potatoes Came From Tomatoes? It Happened 9 Million Years Ago On This Continent

News18

time13 hours ago

  • News18

Potatoes Came From Tomatoes? It Happened 9 Million Years Ago On This Continent

You may have heard that tomatoes and potatoes belong to the same plant family. But scientists have now uncovered a fascinating secret. According to new research, the humble potato, often hailed as the king of vegetables, actually evolved from tomatoes. A genetic study shows that tomatoes came first. Around9 million years ago in South America, a natural hybridisation between a wild tomato and a potato-like plant gave rise to what we now know as the potato. (News18 Hindi) These findings, published in the prestigious science journal Cell, are based on genome analysis of over 450 cultivated potatoes and 56 wild species. Researchers found that every potato variety contains DNA from both tomatoes and a lesser-known plant called Etuberosum, which played a key role in this natural experiment. (News18 Hindi) 3/6 Until now, it was believed that potatoes were directly linked to Etuberosum. However, this species lacked a critical feature, the tuber, which stores food underground. The new research reveals that the tomato family donated the SP6A gene, responsible for signalling the plant to form tubers. Etuberosum, in turn, contributed the IT1 gene, which controls tuber development. Without this genetic collaboration, the potato as we know it wouldn't exist. (News18 Hindi) Interestingly, this genetic fusion took place during a turbulent time in Earth's history, as the Andes mountains were still forming. The newly formed plant survived dramatic changes in weather and terrain. By storing food in its tubers, it adapted quickly and spread across diverse environments, from warm plains to freezing mountain valleys. (News18 Hindi) The potato also developed a unique ability to reproduce without seeds or pollen. A new plant could sprout directly from a tuber, making it independent of insects, seasons, or climate. This self-sufficiency allowed the potato to become one of nature's most resilient crops, capable of multiplying with minimal intervention. (News18 Hindi) These days, the potato is far more than a staple vegetable. It is one of humanity's most reliable food sources, rich in carbohydrates, fibre, potassium, and magnesium. Potatoes grow with less water, need little space, and emit fewer greenhouse gases compared to many other crops. (News18 Hindi)

Our love-hate relationship with the potato — and where it all began
Our love-hate relationship with the potato — and where it all began

Indian Express

time14 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Our love-hate relationship with the potato — and where it all began

French fries and tomato ketchup may be a match made in fast food heaven, but the meet-cute that changed the world occurred nine million years ago in the freezing cold of the Andean slopes. A recent study published in Cell has traced the origin of the beloved potato to another pantry essential, the tomato, and its fling with a wild potato species known as the Etuberosum. The research conducted by a team at the Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen, China, solves a mystery that has long gripped the world of botany: How is it that the potato plant, which bears a strong outward resemblance to its wilder relative, is genetically closer to the tomato? The discovery is exciting for at least two reasons. One, it shows that genomes can help solve the mystery of how much of today's flora evolved — a significant breakthrough considering the rarity of plant fossils (soft vegetative matter doesn't preserve as well as, for example, the hard shells of marine invertebrates like snails). Two, it shows how looking to a plant's past may help preserve its future; the potato, it turns out, could only evolve because a key gene in the tomato unlocked the tuber-producing gene in the Etuberosum, with the resulting hybrid growing a new starchy organ that resembles the modern spud. Given its importance to food security — potatoes only rank behind rice, wheat and maize in global production volume — there are already attempts to use tomato genes to create even hardier varieties of the tuber. Despite its wholesomeness and endless flexibility, adding heft, texture and flavour to cuisines everywhere since the Spanish shipped it to Europe in the 16th century, the potato has all too often been reduced to playing a supporting role in meals. In a world obsessed with limiting carbs, it has been vilified and villainised, held responsible for ballooning weights and expanding girths. Could the discovery of the Miocene-epoch romance, a random encounter that led to the birth of a food that can feed billions of the Earth's hungry, help rehabilitate its image? The world says potayto, genetics says tomahto.

Evolutionary Origins Of Potato Revealed. And A Tomato Was Involved
Evolutionary Origins Of Potato Revealed. And A Tomato Was Involved

NDTV

time2 days ago

  • NDTV

Evolutionary Origins Of Potato Revealed. And A Tomato Was Involved

WASHINGTON: The potato is one of the world's food staples, first cultivated thousands of years ago in the Andes region of South America before spreading globally from the 16th century. But despite its importance to humankind, the evolutionary origins of the potato have remained puzzling - until now. A new analysis of 450 genomes from cultivated potatoes and 56 genomes of wild potato species has revealed that the potato lineage originated through natural interbreeding between a wild tomato plant and a potato-like species in South America about 9 million years ago. This hybridization event led to the appearance of the nascent potato plant's tuber, an enlarged structure housing nutrients underground, according to the researchers, who also identified two crucial genes involved in tuber formation. Whereas in a tomato plant, the edible part is the fruit, in the potato plant, it is the tuber. "Potatoes are truly one of humanity's most remarkable food staples, combining extraordinary versatility, nutritional value and cultural ubiquity in ways few crops can match," said Sanwen Huang, a genome biologist and plant breeder at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences and senior author of the study published on Friday in the journal Cell. "People eat potatoes using virtually every cooking method - baking, roasting, boiling, steaming and frying. Despite being stereotyped as carbohydrates, potatoes offer vitamin C, potassium, fibre and resistant starch, and are naturally gluten-free, low-fat and satiating - a nutrient-dense calorie source," Huang added. Resistant starch is a type of carbohydrate that resists digestion in the small intestine and ferments in the large intestine, feeding beneficial bacteria in the gut. The modern-day potato plant's scientific name is Solanum tuberosum. Its two parents identified in the study were plants that were the ancestors of a potato-like species now found in Peru named Etuberosum, which closely resembles the potato plant but lacks a tuber, and the tomato plant. These two plants themselves shared a common ancestor that lived about 14 million years ago, and were able to naturally interbreed when the fortuitous hybridization event occurred five million years after they had diverged from each other. "This event led to a reshuffling of genes such that the new lineage produced tubers, allowing these plants to expand into the newly created cold, dry habitats in the rising Andes mountain chain," said botanist Sandra Knapp of the Natural History Museum in London, a co-author of the study. This hybridization event coincided with the rapid uplift of the Andes. With a tuber, the potato plant was able to adapt to the changing regional environment and thrive in the harsh conditions of the mountains. "Tubers can store nutrients for cold adaptation, and enable asexual reproduction to meet the challenge of the reduced fertility in cold conditions. These allowed the plant to survive and rapidly expand," Huang said. The study's findings, according to the researchers, may help guide improved cultivated potato breeding to address environmental challenges that crops presently face due to factors such as climate change. There are currently roughly 5,000 potato varieties. The potato is the world's third most important food crop, after rice and wheat, for human consumption, according to the Peru-based International Potato Center research organization. China is the world's leading potato producer. "It always is hard to remove all the deleterious mutations in potato genomes in breeding, and this study opens a new door to make a potato free of deleterious mutations using the tomato as the chassis of synthetic biology," Huang said. The study also may open the door to generating a new crop species that could produce tomato fruit above ground and potato tubers below ground, according to Zhiyang Zhang, a postdoctoral researcher at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences. The potato and tomato are members of the nightshade family of flowering plants that also includes tobacco and peppers, among others. The study did not investigate the evolutionary origins of other tuberous root crops that originated in South America, such as the sweet potato and yuca, which are members of different families of flowering plants. While the parts of the tomato and potato plants that people eat are quite different, the plants themselves are very similar. "We use different parts of these two species, fruits in tomatoes and tubers in potatoes," Knapp said. "If you look at the flowers or leaves, they are very similar. And if you are lucky enough to let your potato plant produce fruits, they look just like little green tomatoes. But don't eat them. They are not very nice."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store