Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T20:12:52.517Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Genetic differences in macro-element mineral concentrations among 52 historically important tomato varieties

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 March 2018

Joanne A. Labate*
Affiliation:
Plant Genetic Resources Unit, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, 630 W. North St., Geneva, NY 14456, USA
Andrew P. Breksa III
Affiliation:
Western Regional Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, 800 Buchanan St., Albany, CA, 94710, USA
Larry D. Robertson
Affiliation:
Plant Genetic Resources Unit, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, 630 W. North St., Geneva, NY 14456, USA
Benjamin A. King
Affiliation:
Western Regional Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, 800 Buchanan St., Albany, CA, 94710, USA
Darwin E. King
Affiliation:
Western Regional Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, 800 Buchanan St., Albany, CA, 94710, USA
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) fruit quality and yield are highly dependent on adequate uptake of nutrients. Potassium, magnesium and calcium are essential elements that influence fruit quality traits such as colour, uniformity of ripening, hollow fruit, fruit shape, firmness and acidity. Sodium is not an essential element for tomato and can detrimentally compete with the absorption of potassium and calcium. Daily intakes of potassium, magnesium and calcium in human diets are typically below healthful levels, while sodium intake is often excessive. The objective of this study was to compare 52 diverse commercially important varieties of tomato for concentrations of potassium, magnesium, calcium and sodium in fruits. The tomatoes were produced in replicated plots in Geneva, NY in 2010 and 2011. Multiple fruits per plot were harvested vine-ripe, homogenized and assayed for cations. Analysis of variance showed significant differences among the 52 varieties for all four traits, i.e. cation concentrations (df = 51, P < 0.0001–0.0034) and no significant differences between years for any trait (df = 1, P = 0.3432–0.6770). Factor analysis showed a strong interrelationship between potassium and magnesium that was independent of calcium and sodium. Potassium and magnesium were highly significantly correlated with each other (r = 0.64, P < 0.0001). No other correlations between pairs of traits were observed. Results supported a genetic basis for potassium, magnesium, calcium and sodium concentrations that was consistent across environments (i.e. years). Results can contribute to the development of cultivars with favourable cation profiles in terms of human health and fruit quality.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
This is a work of the U.S. Government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States.
Copyright
Copyright © NIAB 2018

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

These authors contributed equally to this work.

Author is deceased.

References

Adams, P (1986) Mineral nutrition. In: Atherton, JG and Rudich, J (eds) The Tomato Crop: A Scientific Basis for Improvement. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, pp. 281334.Google Scholar
Adams, P (2002) Nutritional control in hydroponics. In: Savvas, D and Passam, HC (eds) Hydroponic Production of Vegetables and Ornamentals. Athens, Greece: Embryo Publications, pp. 211261.Google Scholar
Akundabweni, L, Mulokozi, G and Maina, D (2010) Ionomic variation characterization in African leafy vegetables for micronutrients using XRF and HPLC. African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development 10: 43204339.Google Scholar
Apse, MP and Blumwald, E (2002) Engineering salt tolerance in plants. Current Opinion in Biotechnology 13: 146150.Google Scholar
Barker, AV and Ready, KM (1994) Ethylene evolution by tomatoes stressed by ammonium nutrition. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science 119: 706710.Google Scholar
Breksa, AP, Robertson, LD, Labate, JA, King, BA and King, DE (2015) Physicochemical and morphological analysis of ten tomato varieties identifies quality traits more readily manipulated through breeding and traditional selection methods. Journal of Food Composition and Analysis 42: 1625.Google Scholar
Capel, C, Yuste-Lisbona, FJ, López-Casado, G, Angosto, T, Heredia, A, Cuartero, J, Fernández-Muñoz, R, Lozano, R and Capel, J (2017) QTL mapping of fruit mineral contents provides new chances for molecular breeding of tomato nutritional traits. Theoretical and Applied Genetics 130: 903913.Google Scholar
Chaïb, J, Lecomte, L, Buret, M and Causse, M (2006) Stability over genetic backgrounds, generations and years of quantitative trait locus (QTLs) for organoleptic quality in tomato. Theoretical and Applied Genetics 112: 934944.Google Scholar
Cunningham, J, Milligan, G and Trevisan, L (2001) Minerals in Australian fruits and vegetables - a comparison of levels between the 1980s and 2000. Food Standards Australia. New Zealand. available at: http://www.foodstandards.gov.au/publications/Documents/minerals_report.doc (accessed 16 November 2017).Google Scholar
Davies, JN, Hobson, GE and McGlasson, WB (1981) The constituents of tomato fruit - the influence of environment, nutrition, and genotype. Critical Reviews in Food Science & Nutrition 15: 205280.Google Scholar
Davis, DR, Epp, MD and Riordan, HD (2004) Changes in USDA food composition data for 43 garden crops, 1950 to 1999. Journal of the American College of Nutrition 23: 669682.Google Scholar
Economic Research Service/USDA. (2017) Ag and Food Statistics, Charting the Essentials, 2017, Administrative Publication Number 075, pp. 28.Google Scholar
Fernández-Ruiz, V, Olives, AI, Cámara, M, de Cortes Sánchez-Mata, M and Torija, ME (2011) Mineral and trace elements content in 30 accessions of tomato fruits (Solanum lycopersicum L.,) and wild relatives (Solanum pimpinellifolium L., Solanum cheesmaniae L. Riley, and Solanum habrochaites S. Knapp & D.M. Spooner). Biological Trace Element Research 141: 329339.Google Scholar
Giuffrida, F, Martorana, M and Leonardi, C (2009) How sodium chloride concentration in the nutrient solution influences the mineral composition of tomato leaves and fruits. HortScience 44: 707711.Google Scholar
Hartz, TK, Johnstone, PR, Francis, DM and Miyao, EM (2005) Processing tomato yield and fruit quality improved with potassium fertigation. HortScience 40: 18621867.Google Scholar
Huang, J and Snapp, SS (2004) A bioassay investigation of calcium nutrition and tomato shoulder check cracking defect. Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis 35: 27712787.Google Scholar
Karppanen, H, Karppanen, P and Mervaala, E (2005) Why and how to implement sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium changes in food items and diets? Journal of Human Hypertension 19: S10S19.Google Scholar
Kaushik, P, Andújar, I, Vilanova, S, Plazas, M, Gramazio, P, Herraiz, FJ, Brar, NS and Prohens, J (2015) Breeding vegetables with increased content in bioactive phenolic acids. Molecules 20: 1846418481.Google Scholar
Kidson, EB, Watson, J and Hodgson, L (1953) Nutrient uptake by glasshouse tomato plants. New Zealand Journal of Science and Technology Section A 35: 127134.Google Scholar
Kleiber, T (2014) Changes of nutrient contents in tomato fruits under the influence of increasing intensity of manganese nutrition. Ecological Chemistry and Engineering S 21: 297307.Google Scholar
Kumssa, DB, Joy, EJ, Ander, EL, Watts, MJ, Young, SD, Walker, S and Broadley, MR (2015) Dietary calcium and zinc deficiency risks are decreasing but remain prevalent. Scientific Reports 5: 10974.Google Scholar
Kusano, M, Baxter, I, Fukushima, A, Oikawa, A, Okazaki, Y, Nakabayashi, R, Bouvrette, DJ, Achard, F, Jakubowski, AR and Ballam, JM (2015) Assessing metabolomic and chemical diversity of a soybean lineage representing 35 years of breeding. Metabolomics 11: 261270.Google Scholar
Lichter, A, Dvir, O, Fallik, E, Cohen, S, Golan, R, Shemer, Z and Sagi, M (2002) Cracking of cherry tomatoes in solution. Postharvest Biology and Technology 26: 305312.Google Scholar
Mayer, A-M (1997) Historical changes in the mineral content of fruits and vegetables. British Food Journal 99: 207211.Google Scholar
Mir-Marqués, A, Cervera, ML and de la Guardia, M (2016) Mineral analysis of human diets by spectrometry methods. TrAC Trends in Analytical Chemistry 82: 457467.Google Scholar
Nour, V, Trandafir, I and Ionica, ME (2013) Antioxidant compounds, mineral content and antioxidant activity of several tomato cultivars grown in southwestern Romania. Notulae Botanicae Horti Agrobotanici Cluj-Napoca 41: 136142.Google Scholar
Ordóñe-Santos, LE, Vázque-Odériz, ML and Romer-Rodríguez, M (2011) Micronutrient contents in organic and conventional tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum L.). International Journal of Food Science & Technology 46: 15611568.Google Scholar
Ozturkoglu-Budak, S and Aksahin, I (2016) Multivariate characterization of fresh tomatoes and tomato-based products based on mineral contents including major trace elements and heavy metals. Journal of Food & Nutrition Research 55: 214221.Google Scholar
Passam, HC, Karapanos, IC, Bebeli, PJ and Savvas, D (2007) A review of recent research on tomato nutrition, breeding and post-harvest technology with reference to fruit quality. The European Journal of Plant Science and Biotechnology 1: 121.Google Scholar
Pohl, HR, Wheeler, JS and Murray, HE (2013) Sodium and potassium in health and disease. Metal Ions in Life Sciences 13: 2947.Google Scholar
Powles, J, Fahimi, S, Micha, R, Khatibzadeh, S, Shi, P, Ezzati, M, Engell, RE, Lim, SS, Danaei, G and Mozaffarian, D (2013) Global, regional and national sodium intakes in 1990 and 2010: a systematic analysis of 24 h urinary sodium excretion and dietary surveys worldwide. BMJ Open 3: e003733.Google Scholar
Prarthana, S, Prasad, DT and Shivanna, MB (2014) Identification of RAPD markers associated with morphological, biochemical and ionomic characteristics in Indian tomato genotypes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, India Section B: Biological Sciences 84: 5564.Google Scholar
Rahim, M (2015) Role of vegetables for solving micronutrient deficiency (hidden hunger) in Bangladesh. Proceedings of the regional symposium on sustaining small-scale vegetable production and marketing systems for food and nutrition security (SEAVEG2014), 25–27 February 2014, Bangkok, Thailand, pp. 84–88.Google Scholar
Sager, M (2017) Main and trace element contents of tomatoes grown in Austria. Journal of Food Science and Engineering 7: 239248.Google Scholar
Sands, DC, Morris, CE, Dratz, EA and Pilgeram, AL (2009) Elevating optimal human nutrition to a central goal of plant breeding and production of plant-based foods. Plant Science 177: 377389.Google Scholar
SAS Institute Inc. (2011) Base SAS® 9.3 Procedures Guide SAS Institute Inc. Cary, NC.Google Scholar
Sokal, RR and Rohlf, FJ. (1981) Biometry: The Principles and Practice of Statistics in Biological Research, 2nd edn. New York: W.H. Freeman and Co., pp. 411412.Google Scholar
Stommel, JR. (2007) Genetic enhancement of tomato fruit nutritive value. In: Razdan, MK and Matoo, AK (eds) Genetic Improvement of Solanaceous Crops. Enfield, NH: Science Publishers, pp. 193238.Google Scholar
Walker, DJ, Cerdá, A and Martínez, V (2000) The effects of sodium chloride on ion transport in potassium-deficient tomato. Journal of Plant Physiology 157: 195200.Google Scholar
Watanabe, T, Maejima, E, Yoshimura, T, Urayama, M, Yamauchi, A, Owadano, M, Okada, R, Osaki, M, Kanayama, Y and Shinano, T (2016) The ionomic study of vegetable crops. PLoS ONE 11: e0160273.Google Scholar
Weaver, CM (2013) Potassium and health. Advances in Nutrition: An International Review Journal 4: 368S377S.Google Scholar
Webb, M, Fahimi, S, Singh, GM, Khatibzadeh, S, Micha, R, Powles, J and Mozaffarian, D (2017) Cost effectiveness of a government supported policy strategy to decrease sodium intake: global analysis across 183 nations. BMJ 356: i6699.Google Scholar
White, PJ and Broadley, MR (2009) Biofortification of crops with seven mineral elements often lacking in human diets–iron, zinc, copper, calcium, magnesium, selenium and iodine. New Phytologist 182: 4984.Google Scholar
Zhang, J, Zhao, J, Liang, Y and Zou, Z (2016) Genome-wide association-mapping for fruit quality traits in tomato. Euphytica 207: 439451.Google Scholar
Zoran, IS, Nikolaos, K and Ljubomir, Š (2014) Tomato fruit quality from organic and conventional production. In: Pilipavicius, V (ed.) Organic Agriculture Towards Sustainability. Rijeka, Croatia: InTech. pp. 147169. doi: 10.5772/58239.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Labate et al. supplementary material 1

Supplementary Tables and Figures

Download Labate et al. supplementary material 1(File)
File 1.9 MB