Giving thanks: Rutgers works to build a better cranberry
(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- Building better cranberries is Nicholi Vorsa鈥檚 business, a process that can鈥檛 be rushed.聽
Vorsa, director of the Phillip E. Marucci Center for Blueberry and Cranberry Research, part of Rutgers鈥 New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, has developed 聽three new cranberry varieties during his career. One took 11 years; the other two took 19 years.聽
Now Vorsa is working on a fourth variety. And this Thanksgiving, he can be thankful for the genomic tools at Rutgers that could speed up the work involved in building healthier, hardier, and tastier cranberries.
He鈥檚 awaiting the arrival of 20,000 cranberry genes from the Genome Cooperative in the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences that yield information about the fruit鈥檚 genetic characteristics.
聽The genes, which Vorsa refers to as 鈥渘ice, big chunks of cranberry genome,鈥 are the result of a comprehensive process that builds 鈥済ene models鈥 for cranberries using bioinformatics, the application of computer science and information technology to biology.
Until now, the cranberry genome has been a blank slate. Cranberry 聽breeders like Vorsa have faced a sort of genetic Wheel of Fortune, in which they try to deduce a message from very limited information.聽
鈥淒eveloping a new variety of cranberry takes years of experiments, crossing existing varieties,鈥 said Vorsa, whose lab is a complex of cranberry bogs at the Marucci Center in Chatsworth, Burlington County, New Jersey. 鈥淲e have to search for the traits we want without knowing which genes have which functions. You cross two cultivars (varieties) and get, say, 150 seeds,鈥 Vorsa said. 鈥淭hen you grow a plant from each seed in plots 25 feet square.鈥 Researchers then evaluate the resulting plants for yield, color, acidity, fruit rot, berry size and shape compared to the current varieties.聽
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This week the Genome Cooperative will give Vorsa a set of 20,000 annotated genes 鈥 genes for which location and function have been determined.聽 The cooperative, led by Debashish Bhattacharya, professor of ecology, evolution and natural resources, is a group of collaborating faculty and their lab members who share resources to enable rapid growth in genomics and genomic tools at Rutgers.聽
Vorsa and his colleagues will then know the function of those genes, and which chromosomes they reside on.
Using powerful computers and specialized software, Rutgers bio-informatics specialist Ehud Zelzion matches cranberry genes 聽with unknown functions against a database of genes with known functions in other species.聽
鈥淚f a cranberry gene turns up in another species performing a certain function, there鈥檚 a pretty good chance that it has a similar function in a cranberry,鈥 Zelzion said.
New Jersey growers still cultivate about 3,500 acres of the fruit, producing about 550,000 barrels a year. Southern New Jersey鈥檚 soil, which is sandy on top, mucky below and highly acidic, are especially good for growing cranberries. Rutgers patented cranberry varieties are available o commercial cranberry growers in the U.S. and Canada, under license from Rutgers University.
Provided by Rutgers University