Temple Daily Telegram - tdtnews.com
Email     Print     Listen
News

Fungus can’t defeat pepper’s protective kick

Ricardo Alatriste grabs handfuls of green chili peppers for a customer at the Chile Traditions stand in Albuquerque, N.M. Peppers produce a built-in pesticide called capsaicinoids, a chemical compound that defends against fungus and gives the pepper its zesty taste. (Melanie Dabovich/Associated Press)
Los Angeles Times

If you like your chili peppers hot, thank a fungus.

The spicy fruits developed their kick to ward off invading pathogens bent on destroying chili seeds before they could grow into new plants, according to a study published Tuesday. The bigger the threat from microbial invaders, the more pungent the pepper.

“It is a great example of the power of natural selection,” said Joshua Tewksbury, the University of Washington biologist who led the study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Chilies are native to South America, where heat and humidity nurture the toxic fungus Fusarium semitectum. The fungus enters chilies through puncture holes made by hungry insects.

Chili peppers responded by growing built-in pesticides - “capsaicinoids,” the chemical compounds that give chilies their distinctive zesty taste.

Scientists had surmised that capsaicinoids evolved as a defense against invading bugs, be they insects or fungi. The recent discovery of wild chilies with varying amounts of capsaicinoids allowed Tewksbury and his team to test that hypothesis.

The researchers collected samples from seven distinct chili populations in a 618-square-mile area of southeastern Bolivia. They counted the scars on the peppers to gauge the extent of the fungal threat in each group and examined the seeds inside. For any given number of scars, the chilies with more capsaicinoids had fewer infected seeds, according to the study.

Then the team exposed pristine peppers to fungus-carrying bugs. Fungal loads in spicy chilies were 45 percent to 55 percent lower than in their mild counterparts, the researchers reported.

The team also engineered fake fruit with varying degrees of capsaicinoids in lab dishes and found the chemicals combated the fungus in a dose-dependent way.

Those antifungal properties may have been the reason why people first domesticated chilies more than 6,000 years ago, said Paul Sherman, a professor of neurobiology and behavior at Cornell University who has studied the use of spices.

Without refrigeration, ancient cooks would have needed a way to keep microbes from spoiling fresh food.

Chili peppers “make us healthier by cleansing what we will eat of food-borne pathogens and parasites,” said Sherman, who wasn’t involved in the study. “Humans have borrowed the plant’s evolutionary recipes for survival and reproduction.”

 

more from Aug. 16

related articles

most popular

classifieds

 

Home | News | Sports | Classifieds | Real Estate | Entertainment | Extra | Help | Subscribe | Advertising
Temple Daily Telegram
Copyright © 2009, Temple Daily Telegram