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The Secret of the Beefsteak05-28-15 | News
The Secret of the Beefsteak





Scientists at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory recently discovered what genetically determined the difference between the tiny fruit produced by early, wild tomato plants and the one-pound tomatoes of today (pictured here next to a standard globe tomato)..


As recently reported by Peter Tarr, senior science writer for Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, a team of scientists at that facility not only identified the genes that control stem cell production in tomatoes, but discovered that mutations in these genes led to beefsteak tomatoes, and indicate how to purposely affect fruit size in other plants.

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Even though original wild tomato plants produced tiny, berry-sized fruits, by the time the first tomatoes made their way to Europe from Mexico, among them were huge beefsteaks, the evolution of which, according to the findings of CSHL Associate Professor Zachary Lippman and colleagues, has to do with the number of stem cells in the plant's growing tip, or meristem. Specifically, the team traced an unusual increase of stem cells to a naturally occurring mutation in a certain gene.

Overall, the research is reported to show that by adjusting this gene, and through other mutations, it is possible to customize fruit size.

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory specializes in biomedical research and education with programs in cancer, neuroscience, plant biology and quantitative biology. The private, not-for-profit laboratory has eight Nobel Prize winners among its more than 600 researchers and technicians.








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