Cranberry hybrid high in antioxidants.USDA-ARS USDA-ARS United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service scientists and colleagues are suiting up a wholesome cranberry variety with a newly isolated genetic trait. Using traditional breeding methods, they have created an experimental cranberry line that has a high level of absorbable antioxidants. The cultivated, typical American cranberry, Vaccinium macrocarpon, has long been prized for its brilliant red fruit. The deep-colored pigments are made up of anthocyanins, which are a subclass of flavonoids flavonoids, n.pl common plant pigment compounds that act as antioxidants, enhance the effects of vitamin C, and strengthen connective tissue around capillaries. . The many plant chemicals in this large group are widely studied for their purported health benefits, including their role as antioxidants. It turns out that a cranberry species from Alaska, Vaccinium oxycoccus, is genetically similar enough to the American cranberry. This makes possible interspecies hybridization hybridization /hy·brid·iza·tion/ (hi?brid-i-za´shun) 1. crossbreeding; the act or process of producing hybrids. 2. molecular hybridization 3. , producing fertile progeny. The Alaskan species is attractive to the breeders because its fruit anthocyanins are mostly linked to glucose. Here's why that's good. In nature, anthocyanins are mostly bound to sugars. Anthocyanins that are bound to the sugar glucose are very high in antioxidant capacity. And flavonoids bound to glucose have been found to be more readily absorbed in the human gut. But the anthocyanins found in the American cranberry are bound mainly to other, less-absorbable sugars, namely galactose and arabinose arabinose Biochemistry A pentose that occurs in d and l configurations . Generally, less than 5% of the anthocyanins in the typical cranberry are glucose-linked. By crossing the American and Alaskan species, researchers have created a cranberry with high levels of more bioavailable antioxidants. The progeny of these crosses also deliver the proanthocyanidins known for keeping E. coli from adhering to the lining of the bladder and causing urinary tract infections. The first-generation hybrids contained up to 50% anthocyanin anthocyanin red-colored agent in fruit. linked to glucose. Through backcrossing Backcrossing is a crossing of a hybrid with one of its parents. In plants Advantages
Any variety of a plant, originating through cloning or hybridization (see clone, hybrid), known only in cultivation. In asexually propagated plants, a cultivar is a clone considered valuable enough to have its own name; in sexually propagated plants, a for growers to use. Further information. James Polashock, USDA-ARS Fruit Laboratory, 125A Lake Oswego Rd., Chatsworth, NJ 08019; phone: 609-726-1590; fax: 609-726-1593; email: mjames.polashock@ars.usda.gov. |
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