For immediate release
18 June 2003
Science of strawberries
Goran
Ivanisevic's offer to serve strawberries at this year's Wimbledon
may be a more useful job than he imagined. As well as delicious
with cream, this symbol of the summer could help fight cancer
according to scientists.
Research has shown that natural plant chemicals in strawberries can inhibit the growth of cancer cells. And now scientists at the Institute of Food Research have begun work to identify the compounds responsible.
"The modern strawberry is just one of hundreds of varieties cultivated worldwide. There are also about twenty wild species. They all have different properties - visible in the size, shape and colour of the fruit, or the size and abundance of flowers. The aim of our project is to identify the properties that play a role in inhibiting carcinogenesis", says Professor Richard Mithen, Head of Plant Foods for Health Protection at IFR.
The
wild ancestors of the most commonly cultivated strawberry
today, Fragaria ananassa, can be white, yellow, taste
like pineapples, or the stalks can even point the fruit towards
the sun. The Institute of Food Research will study both wild
and cultivated varieties, and is growing white and pale yellow
strawberries as well as red.
In the future, the work could help the team to develop new varieties in which the anticarcinogenic compounds are enhanced.
One
of the strawberry chemicals that may play a role against cancer
is ellagic acid. Strawberries and raspberries are the main
dietary source of ellagic acid in the west. Research by Dr
Yannick Ford at Horticulture
Research International [1] has highlighted the variation
in ellagic acid content between varieties, with some white-fruited
strawberries having particularly high levels.
Professor Mithen says, "The great thing about doing research on the health benefits of strawberries is that people enjoy eating them, as I'm sure we'll see at Wimbledon next week!"
Other strawberry facts:
- Professor Mithen's research is part of a long term project,
and one of many IFR projects analysing the health benefits
of fruits and vegetables.
- IFR scientists have also developed a rapid spectroscopy method for detecting adulteration of hand-pressed fresh strawberry and raspberry purees.
- The modern strawberry, Fragaria ananassa, is a hybrid between Fragaria chiloenis from Chile and the North American Fragaria virginiana. The Chilean strawberry, transported to France in 1714, was mainly selected for its large size, while the North American for its hermaphroditism. Hermaphrodite flowers simplify crop production as they enable a crop to be cultivated from a single source.
- The native British wild strawberry is a "diploid" - it has two sets of chromosomes, as in humans. The most commonly cultivated strawberry, Fragaria ananassa, is an octoploid with eight sets. This makes it a good candidate for demonstrating DNA extraction - with eight copies of each gene in the strawberry genome, strawberries are packed full of it.
- The strawberry has a unique structure and is known as a "false" fruit. Unlike any other fruit, the seeds are the true fruits of the plant and are the black dots on the surface. The fleshy 'berry' to which they are attached is an enlarged, softened receptacle.
- Both the strawberry and the raspberry belong to the rose family. The English word strawberry comes from the erratic straying habit of the plant, which it shares with many other members of the rose family such as the blackberry.
- A variety developed in 1821 by English market gardener Michael Keens is the ancestor of virtually all modern varieties commercially cultivated today. Its size and flavour caused a sensation.
- The Latin name fraga refers to the fruit's fragrance.
- ends -
Notes to Editors
- Please contact Zoe Dunford, IFR Media Manager, for further details, photos and to arrange an interview with Professor Mithen: 01603 255111 / 07768 164185. email: zoe.dunford@ifr.ac.uk
- Photographs available (credited to HRI):
- Girl eating strawberry
- White and white & red strawberries
- Girl eating strawberry
- The research is funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC).
- [1] Dr Yannick Ford is in the natural product group at
HRI-East Malling. The research on ellagic acid was funded
by the Worshipful Company of Fruiterers.
The information and images contained within these pages are © Institute of Food Research unless otherwise stated. Information may be downloaded for educational and research purposes as long as the source is clearly credited.

