Mar. 7, 2013 — An international team of scientists
headed by Wageningen University, part of Wageningen UR, has discovered a
genetic mechanism which allows potato plants to develop tubers during the long
days of spring and summer in northern latitudes. Wild potatoes, which originate
in the Andes of South America, were brought to Europe by Spanish sailors in the
late 16th century.
Naturally occurring near the Equator, Andean potatoes
develop tubers on days which are relatively shorter than those in high latitude
summer. Newly discovered mutations in a single potato gene are likely to have
contributed to the widespread success of the potato, which is the third most
important food crop in the world today.
Although the potato was probably domesticated
as long as 10,000 years ago, the distribution of this crop plant was initially
restricted to farming communities in what are today Chile, Bolivia and Peru.
Only after the Spanish conquest was the potato imported to Europe. Since the
European growing season of spring and summer is characterised by long days and
short nights, native South American potato varieties would only begin making
tubers in autumn, when the days last 12 hours or less. However, modern potato
varieties show a wide variation in the timing of tuber formation, with early
varieties starting as early as April. The mutations in the newly discovered
regulator of tuber formation allow potatoes to escape the original short day
regulation mechanism suited to the Andes, so that potatoes can grow and be
cultivated in northern Europe and other northern latitudes throughout the
world.
The team of scientists, headed by Wageningen UR
Plant Breeding, has published its findings on the gene allowing potato to grow
and flourish far from its Andean origins in the international scientific
journal Nature. The authors also describe a
variety of mutations in the tuber formation regulator gene which occur in
different combinations in modern potato cultivars, giving rise to early, medium
and late varieties, depending on the combination of the gene variants present
in the tetraploid crop. Knowledge of the genes underlying the mechanism of
early development will allow plant breeders to tailor new potato varieties to
various geographic locations.
The research was co funded by the European
Union, Technology Foundation STW and Wageningen UR.
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