James and the Giant Corn Genetics: Studying the Source Code of Nature

January 26, 2010

“New” Cruciferous Vegetables

Filed under: food,Genetics,Plant breeding,Plants — Tags: , , , , — James @ 7:02 pm

A stalk of brussels sprouts photo credit: cbmd, flickr (click for photo in original context)

Last week Greg over at Pie-ence was talking about the amazing variety of vegetable crops breed out of a handful of species within the genus Brassica, specifically Brassica rapa and Brassica oleracea.* I’m referring to these as cruciferous vegetables, which is actually a wider category including all the vegetables within the mustard family of plants (scientifically this is called the Brassicaceae). But one of the cool things about having so many kinds of vegetables within the same couple of species is that, because they’re the same species, they can still be interbreed with each other to create “new”** vegetables.

I still remember the first time I saw such a new vegetables, the broccoflower***. I didn’t even LIKE vegetables back then but I was still fascinated by this strange new plant in the produce aisle. Needless to say, others didn’t share my excitement as the broccoflower did not, in fact end up taking the world by storm (I’m not bitter!), although I do still spot them from time to time at the grocery store. I was able to dig up this very enthusiastic article on the broccoflower from twenty years ago. The internet is a wonderful thing.

The internet is also responsible for telling me about the latest development in cruciferous vegetables. The “flower sprout”, the result of breeding work using brussels sprouts and kale, both breeds of the species Brassica oleracea. Right now they’re only available in England, otherwise I’d have tried it already. How could I resist a vegetable described as:

“a purple and green triffid-like crop”

Assorted colorful cauliflowers (orange ones make lots carotenoids the group of molecules that includes pre-vitamin A, the purple ones make anthocyanins another kind of plant pigment). photo: Le Grande Farmers' Market, flickr (click to see photo in its original context)

Assorted colorful cauliflowers (orange ones make lots carotenoids the group of molecules that includes pre-vitamin A, the purple ones make anthocyanins another kind of plant pigment). photo: Le Grande Farmers' Market, flickr (click to see photo in its original context)

Both the links in the above paragraph are to stories that also contain pictures of the flower sprout.

I guess my point here is that plant breeders can produce all kinds of cool new vegetables given the chance. The limiting factor really is what people will buy, not the variability of plants.

*Brassica oleracea is responsible for Broccoli, Brussels sprouts, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Collard Greens, Kale, and Kohlrabi. Brassica rapa is responsible for Bok choy, Komatsuna, Mizuna, Rapini, Chinese cabbage, and Turnips. And Brassica napus, a species that resulted from the hybridization of Brassica rapa and Bassica oleracea adds Rutabaga and Canola (not a vegetable, but a key crop none the less) to the count.

**I’m putting new in quotes throughout this article because I don’t know what the actual definition of what makes vegetable different enough to qualify as a new type is.

An Arabidopsis flower (also a member of the mustard family that produces so many kinds of vegetables). The name cruciferous vegetables comes from the pattern of four petals. Apparently it looks like a cross to some people, hence cruciferous. In Arabidopsis the flowers are only a few millimeters big. photo: BlueRidgeKitties, flickr (click to see the photo in its original context)

***From everything I was able to read the broccoflower really is the result of a cross between broccoli and cauliflower (followed by many more generations of selective breeding of course). It is generally lumped in with the cauliflowers because its head is made of up inflorescence stem tissue, while broccoli heads are made up of immature flower buds. Cauliflower plants (and broccoflower plants) have broken copies of the CAL gene, which (when it isn’t broken) is helps the plant decide to switch from producing stems that were bear flowers to the flowers themselves. Without a functional version of CAL, cauliflowers just keep making denser and denser stems, producing the distinctive heads of cauliflower. If you have journal access, you can read more about the CAL gene at this science paper: http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.7824951

Since the effect of breaking this gene suggests to me that it is probably a recessive mutation (it won’t have an effect on the plant unless the plant inherits a broken copy from both parents) I imagine developing the broccoflower involved mating the offspring of a broccoli / cauliflower mating and mating them with normal cauliflowers again, since plants with one cauliflower and one broccoli parent should inherit a working copy of the CAL gene from their dad (or mom) the broccoli. But this last paragraph is purely my own speculation.

11 Comments »

  1. The morphological variation in this group is really spectacular. I would really be interested in seeing what kinds of genome wide differences there are across the different varieties. Don’t get me wrong single large effect genes are pretty cool but there is definitely more to it then that…
    I wonder if that ole genome triplication event played a role…

    On another note ‘flower spout’? don’t get me wrong its really cool but that is the best name they could came up with?

    Comment by Greg — January 26, 2010 @ 9:15 pm

  2. Oh I’m certain the triplication played a major role. Someone once suggested to me that the reason maize and arabidopsis ended up as such major model systems (before the arabidopsis genome was sequenced), was that in both there’s still enough redundancy from previous whole genome duplications that knocking genes out tends to create interesting, but non-lethal, mutant phenotypes. (Note: I don’t even know if this is a biologically sound argument, let alone logically sound, but it was cool to think about)

    Dozens or hundreds or thousands of weird, but non-lethal, mutant phenotypes piled on top of each other seems like a reasonable explanation for how a couple of species have been bred to create such a wide range of forms.

    Comment by James — January 26, 2010 @ 9:44 pm

  3. The ‘new’ crop I’d like to create is: vegetable arabidopsis! I know they have the mutants to make it into mini-cauliflower, I’m betting you could do cabbage and so forth pretty easily too. Wouldn’t they be cute little tiny vegetables?

    While I’m speaking about arabidopsis, whoever suggested to you that arabidopsis became a model due to lots of redundancy in the genome is wrong. Arabidopsis has a TINY genome — which was a reason for it being a model — easy to sequence. Corn became a model just because it is an important crop, and probably because the bajillion transposons make mutation common. Redundancy in the genome actually makes genes much harder to study — because more mutants have no effect whatsoever.

    Comment by Joseph Tychonievich — January 27, 2010 @ 5:51 am

  4. Tiny arabidopsis vegetables! I love it.

    Surely the importance of Arabidopsis can’t rest solely on having a sequenced genome. I’d at least include the floral dip method of plant transformation, being sexually self compatible and an incredibly short generation time to the list, although you’re right it probably didn’t become THE plant model system until it became the first plant to have its genome sequenced.

    As far as gene redundancy, I was picturing cases of partial subfunctionalization (the arabidopsis tetraploidy is tens of millions of years old) where there’s still enough over lap in function to moderate the effect of mutant phenotypes. But since no examples of this happening are coming to mind, I can’t make much of an argument for the point.

    Comment by James — January 27, 2010 @ 9:03 am

  5. Oh, I’m not suggesting the small genome size is the only reason — I think short generation time and small over all size are probably the biggest ones (floral dip transformation, I think, was discovered after it was well established as a model) my point was that a large, highly redundant genome would probably be an argument against being a model organism, not for.

    Comment by Joseph Tychonievich — January 27, 2010 @ 9:56 am

  6. “a large, highly redundant genome would probably be an argument against being a model organism, not for.”

    I agree with your point. This is why I’m in awe of the people who manage to do genetics in wheat. I just have two caveats related to the different between recent tetraploids (plants like wheat, potato and octoploid strawberries) and ancient ones (which, if you look far enough back, includes every plant genome sequenced so far).

    1. An ancient tetraploid doesn’t necessarily have a large genome (relative to grape, arabidopsis has gone through two whole genome duplications, yet the grape genomes is ~3 times as big) and it certainly isn’t highly redundant. Very few genes get retained by chance over tens of millions of years in plants, generally if there are still two copies it is because there is a fitness cost of losing either one, either because the two genes have specialized in somewhat different functions and losing either one will make the plant less fit, or as a result of dosage (if the plant loses one copy of gene X or gene Y but still has two copies of the other gene the balance of X and Y is off causing problems and, presumably, reduced fitness).

    2. Reading back over what I wrote, I see that it wasn’t clear that I wasn’t suggest that arabidopsis or maize became popular model systems because people knew the species were ancient tetraploids. For one thing I don’t know that anyone suspected arabidopsis was an ancient tetraploid back when it was first becoming popular. I meant to convey was that if ancient tetraploids have a higher incidence of interesting non-lethal mutant phenotypes when mutagenesis knocked out members of gene pairs retained for the reasons I mention above (pure conjecture), the result might be to attract interest in working with the system from more plant researchers (not knowing that the plant was an ancient tetraploid something that would make life complicated for genomics researchers when the genome was sequenced decades later), contributing to a species becoming a popular model system.

    Comment by James — January 27, 2010 @ 11:55 am

  7. My boss told me that at one of the recent plant molecular biology meetings, the salad on the final day of the conference included arabidopsis leaves.

    Comment by Matt — January 27, 2010 @ 2:09 pm

  8. […] sprouts off on brassicas […]

    Pingback by Nibbles: Amman again, DNA hype, Blight-resistant spuds, Seeds, Sorghum, Brassicas, UK Food Security — February 2, 2010 @ 6:11 am

  9. […] sprouts off on brassicas […]

    Pingback by Science Report » Blog Archive » Nibbles: Amman again, DNA hype, Blight-resistant spuds, Seeds, Sorghum, Brassicas, UK Food Security — February 2, 2010 @ 6:15 am

  10. If I remember rightly from surveys 20+ years ago (some of which were published in a journal called Cruciferae Newsletter) Brassica juncea has even more different agromorphological forms that B rapa or B oleracea. For example B. oleracea never really produced any crop in which the root is the edible portion and B rapa lacks the sprout type and one or two other “oleracea” types while I think you can find some of these in B juncea.

    Comment by Toby Hodgkin — February 8, 2010 @ 2:51 am

  11. I didn’t know there were varieties of B juncea grown for their roots, clearly I’ve been neglecting indian mustard in my recent reading on the Brassicas. An oversight I’ll now be sure to correct. Thanks!

    Comment by James — February 8, 2010 @ 8:03 am

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