Solved: The Mystery of the Blood Orange
Cold induction of retroelement expression causes
"blood” color
Blood oranges present both a culinary delicacy and a
vexing agricultural and scientific mystery: strong "blood” color develops only if
the plant is exposed to cold during fruit development or post-harvest. A study
published in The Plant Cell solves
this mystery, finding the locus responsible for color development and revealing
its regulation.

Contacts:
Cathie Martin
cathie.martin@jic.ac.uk
John Innes Centre
Norwich Research Park,
Norwich NR4 7UH, UK
Telephone:
+44 1603 450275
Jennifer Mach
jmach@aspb.org
Science Editor, The Plant Cell
American Society of Plant Biologists
Telephone: 773-368-8021
The anthocyanin pigments that provide the "blood”
color of blood oranges are not produced in significant amounts unless the fruit
is exposed to cold conditions during its development or post-harvest. No cold
exposure means poor anthocyanin production and the loss of the entire crop. This
means that blood oranges can be grown in many areas of the world, but they are
most likely to be exposed to the correct temperature conditions in only a few
regions, including their major area of production in Sicily. Solving the
mystery of why cold exposure causes anthocyanin production would benefit both
agriculture and health; like many other anthocyanin-rich foods, blood oranges
have notable human health benefits. Indeed, blood oranges have the healthful
vitamin C, fiber, and carotenoids of regular "blonde” oranges, with the added
antioxidant punch provided by anthocyanins. However, unreliable production
limits the availability and consumption of these delicacies.
Blood oranges arose
as a mutation of sweet orange and were documented in Italy as early as the
1600s. In a study published in The Plant Cell, an international group
coordinated by Cathie Martin of the John Innes Centre in the U.K. set out to determine
why blood oranges develop anthocyanin pigments. This group found a
transcriptional regulator gene, which they named Ruby; in blood oranges, Ruby
increases the expression of anthocyanin-encoding genes. Indeed, when expressed
in tobacco, Ruby produced red leaves
by increasing anthocyanin. As one might expect, Ruby is expressed at high levels in blood oranges, and its
expression correlates with the amount of anthocyanin present, with Ruby not expressed at all in blonde oranges.
Examination of the sequence of Ruby in different varieties of Citrus,
such as mandarins, pummelo, and sweet oranges, also allowed the scientific team
to infer the lineage of different orange types and to determine the origin of
the blood orange. All of the Citrus species
examined contain homologs of Ruby (highly
similar sequences), but some are non-functional sequences that can't be
transcribed into proteins. For example, some types, such as mandarin, contain two
non-functional variants of Ruby,
indicating that they could not give rise to a "blood” variety. Differences
in Ruby sequence between different
varieties also provided lineage information that supported the long-standing
idea that sweet orange arose as a hybrid between pummelo and mandarin. Blood oranges subsequently
arose from an ancient sweet orange variety of Mediterranean origin, and there
is evidence that one blood orange variety arose independently in China. The
most interesting finding came from examination of the Ruby sequence in blood oranges, where a mobile genetic element
called a retrotransposon was found to be inserted in the genome upstream of the
Ruby protein coding sequences. This retrotransposon can be actively transcribed and, in blood oranges, its
transcription induces Ruby gene expression.
Because retrotransposons and other mobile genetic elements can wreak genomic
havoc by inserting into essential genes, plants have evolved mechanisms to
suppress mobile element transcription. However, this suppression can be
released under stressful conditions, including cold. Thus the induction of
retrotransposon transcription by cold in blood orange varieties also induces the
expression of Ruby, which increases
anthocyanin production and produces the blood color.
Finding the mechanism by which cold induces the deep color
of blood oranges brings us closer to more reliable worldwide production of
these healthful culinary delicacies. Indeed, the future holds many interesting
possibilities for Citrus research, as
Cathie Martin states: "Cold-independent
blood oranges could be made by genetic engineering, which would allow blood
orange production in the major growing areas of Florida and Brazil, to
facilitate production of healthier orange juice.”
This research was supported by the
EU FP6 FLORA project, the EU FP7 ATHENA collaborative project, the Biological
and Biotechnological Science Research Council (UK), and the Agronanotech
project, MIPAF.
###
The research paper
cited in this report is available at the following link:
http://www.plantcell.org/content/early/2012/03/14/tpc.111.095232.abstract
###
Butelli, E.,
Licciardello, C., Zhang,Y., Liu, J.,
Mackay, S., Bailey, P., Reforgiato-Recupero, G., and Martin, C. (2012). Retrotransposons control
fruit-specific, cold-dependent accumulation of anthocyanins in blood oranges.
Plant Cell. 10.1105/tpc.111.095232.
The
Plant Cell
(http://www.plantcell.org/) is
published by the American Society of Plant Biologists. For more information
about ASPB, please visit http://www.aspb.org/.
Figure credits: Zoe Dunford and Angie
Walker (photograph of blood and blonde varieties), and Dr. Giuseppe Russo (photograph
of Cetti drawing from Histoire Naturelle
des Orangers, published in 1818 by P. A. Poiteau and J. A. Risso).
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