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The search for what makes a tasty tomato

January 31, 2014  By Dennis O’Brien ARS communications specialist(


Jan. 31, 2014, Geneva, NY — Tomatoes are a $2 billion crop in the United
States, but a common complaint is that the varieties in supermarkets
often lack the flavour of locally grown varieties. To improve flavour,
breeders need to know more about the types of tomatoes that hold the
greatest potential for enhancing taste.

Jan. 31, 2014, Geneva, NY — Tomatoes are a $2 billion crop in the United States, but a common complaint is that the varieties in supermarkets often lack the flavour of locally grown varieties. To improve flavour, breeders need to know more about the types of tomatoes that hold the greatest potential for enhancing taste.

U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) molecular biologist Joanne Labate and plant geneticist Larry Robertson at Geneva, N.Y., worked with Dilip Panthee of North Carolina State University to explore tomato’s diversity in a study designed to help breeders develop tastier tomatoes.

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6000_tasty_tomato_ars
Homogenized tomato fruit sample used for measuring acids, sugars, and
vitamin C at the ARS Plant Genetics Resources Unit in Geneva, New York.
Researchers there are studying how these various compounds interact to
create flavour in tomatoes. This knowledge may help in future efforts to
breed a tastier tomato. PHOTO BY SUSAN M. SHEFFER/ARS

Labate and Robertson work at the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Plant Genetic Resources Unit at Geneva. ARS is USDA’s principal intramural scientific research agency, and this research supports the USDA priority of promoting international food security.

The team raised 173 varieties on test plots in North Carolina, trained 10 volunteers in sensory analysis, and asked them to rate the varieties on a scale of one to five in four sensory areas: odour, taste, flavour and texture.

The varieties were selected from the approximately 6,000 accessions in the ARS Tomato Germplasm Collection in Geneva because they represent a cross-section of the world’s tomato diversity.

The results, published in Plant Genetic Resources: Characterization and Utilization (2013), represent one of the most comprehensive efforts to date for identifying sources for boosting flavour among commercial varieties and lines used for breeding.

They also are a treasure trove for breeders, offering a comprehensive set of rankings on flavour qualities, sweetness, vitamin C content, sugar and acid content, and other characteristics.

THE SWEETER THE TOMATO, THE MORE FLAVOUR IT CONTAINED

The findings show that although thousands of compounds go into determining flavour and other characteristics, two components play a key role: the amounts of sugar and acid. There also was a positive correlation between sweetness and flavour. The sweeter the tomato, the more flavour it contained.

The findings are good news for breeders because they show a lot of variation and a broad range of possibilities for adjusting sugar levels and developing more flavorful tomatoes.

Breeding to enhance flavour shouldn’t be that difficult because both sugar and acid content can be reliably and inexpensively measured, according to the researchers.

Read more about this research in the October 2013 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.


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