Chemicals that make chili peppers hot also protect them from microbial attack
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Monday, August 11th, 2008

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QUIT BUGGING MEA flesh-rotting mold that infects chili peppers arrives via sap-sucking bugs that visit the plants. Capsaicinoids, the chemicals that give hot peppers their zing, protect the plants’ seeds by slowing fungal growth.
Tomas Carlo
Some do not like it hot — including a fungus that rots the
flesh of chili peppers, data from lab experiments and field studies show. The
new research provides convincing evidence that the bitter and sometimes toxic
chemicals found in many fruits serve to prevent microbial attack — a popular
idea that has been difficult to demonstrate.
From a plant’s point of view, a fruit is any product of
plant sex. A fruit’s job is to bear seeds, and move them away from the parent
plant (maple helicopters, poppy heads and milkweed pods are all fruits). Plants
that make fleshy fruits, such as peppers and berries, are usually dispersed by
birds and mammals, versus wind and water. But fruit succulence comes at a cost
— it may attract critters that will damage rather than disperse the precious
seeds.
“It’s an evolutionary paradox,” says Josh Tewksbury, who led
the new study, to appear in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“You use fats and sugars to attract birds and large mammals,
but the problem is, everyone likes fats and sugars,” says Tewksbury,
of the University of Washington in Seattle.
“So you end up attracting not only birds and mammals, but insects, small
chewing wasps, microbes or a fungus — these are equally attracted to fruit but
they harm it and never disperse the seeds.”
The best defense being a good offense, the noxious compounds,
such as the cyanide in apple seeds, in
fruits or parts of them are often cited as being a pre-emptive strike against
microbial attack.
“The question is, what function does a given spice serve
within a living plant in its natural setting, before domestication or
harvesting?” comments Rob Raguso of Cornell
University. “Many people
love hot food but have no idea why on earth a plant would be spicy. It’s almost
a religious question. Let’s not forget why Columbus
sailed from Spain
in the first place; spices were big business before refrigeration.”
But it has been difficult to cleanly demonstrate that less
spice means more microbes, Tewskbury says. The discovery that the amount of
spiciness varies from plant to plant in particular species of chili pepper
provided a nice testing ground for the microbial defense hypothesis, he adds.
Led by Tewksbury, the
researchers investigated wild Capsicum chacoense chili plants along a 300-kilometer
stretch of southeastern Bolivia.
In the southern region of the area, almost all of the plants are super spicy — due
to chemicals known as capsaicinoids. But in the area’s north and east, there
are more and more bland plants and among the northernmost populations, fewer
than 30 percent of the plants make pungent capsaicinoids.
The researchers speculated that the non-pungent plants would
be infested with Fusarium, a black fungus that is delivered to the plant via
the mouthparts of a tiny sap-sucking bug. Sure enough, seed infection rates in
blander chili peppers were twice as high as infection rates in the super spicy
chilis. The researchers also found that in regions that had a lot of the fungus-delivering
bugs, populations of Capsicum chacoense had more spicy plants. Lab experiments on
cell culture spiked with capsaicinoids verified Fusarium’s distaste for the
spice.
“Much of the evidence for this paper — and the inferences
that led the authors to their conclusions — accumulated over years of study,” Raguso
notes. “So it’s a nice example of a satisfying ending that emerged after
several lines of evidence converged.”
Found in: Botany, Ecology and Life
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