
Scientists have discovered a gene involved in determining the melting point of cocoa butter, a critical attribute of the substance widely used in foods and pharmaceuticals.The finding could lead to new and improved products, say researchers.
The finding by plant geneticists could also lead to new varieties of the cocoa plant that could extend the climate and soil-nutrient range for growing the crop and increase the value of its yield, they say, providing a boost to farmers’ incomes in the cocoa-growing regions of the world.
Cacao, Theobroma cacao L., is an understory tropical tree domesticated in the Amazon basin and today widely cultivated in West Africa, Central and South America, and Southeast Asia.
Around the world, more than five million cocoa farmers—and more than 40 million people total—depend on cocoa for their livelihood, according to the World Cocoa Foundation, which puts annual cocoa production worldwide at 3.8 million tons, valued at $11.8 billion.
Cacao pods, each containing around 40 seeds, are harvested approximately 20 weeks after pollination. The seeds contain about 50 percent total lipids (cocoa butter), which provide a main raw ingredient for chocolate manufacturing as well as ingredients for pharmaceutical and cosmetic products.
NEW KINDS OF CHOCOLATE?
Cocoa butter with altered melting points may find new uses in specialty chocolates, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals, says lead researcher Mark Guiltinan, professor of plant molecular biology at Penn State.
For example, a chocolate with a higher or lower melting point would be useful for production of chocolate with specific textures and specialty applications.
“The ‘snap’ and ‘melt’ of chocolate are two very important textural features that determine the appeal of chocolate to consumers, and having new varieties of the cocoa plant that produce butter with different melting points would be a valuable resource to control those characteristics,” Guiltinan explains.
“Medical applications could include production of drug-delivery products with slower release of drugs than is possible with current cocoa-butter-based systems.”
In a previous study, a stearoyl-acyl carrier protein desaturase (SAD) gene family was first described in the chocolate tree, by Guiltinan’s laboratory and collaborators from the International Cocoa Genome Consortium, which sequenced the entire genome of the plant.
MELTING TEMPERATURE
In this follow-up research, described this month online in Frontiers in Plant Science, the SAD gene family is examined in detail, and the expression patterns of each SAD gene in various cacao tissues is explored along with functional analysis to study how the enzyme works.
Researchers discovered that a single gene—TcSAD1—is primarily involved in the synthesis of cocoa butter and is responsible for its melting point.
“The other SAD genes appear to play other roles in the growth of the chocolate tree, such as flower and leaf development, where these fatty acids play important roles as key components of various membrane systems,” Guiltinan says.
“This information can be used to develop biomarkers for screening and breeding of new cacao varieties with novel fatty acid compositions of cocoa butter.”
Posted by Jeff Mulhollem-Penn State on April 17, 2015
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