Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print New research reveals why chili peppers are hot

New research reveals why chili peppers are hot

August 12, 2008

GAINESVILLE, Fla. --- Despite the popularity of spicy cuisine among Homo sapiens, the hotness in chili peppers has always been something of an evolutionary mystery.

A plant creates fruit in order to entice animals to eat and disperse its seeds, so it doesn't make sense for that fruit to be painfully hot, said University of Florida zoology professor and evolutionary ecologist Douglas Levey.




But according to new research by Levey and six colleagues from other universities, chilies have a very good reason to make themselves hot. It boils down to protection.

Based on research on wild chili plants in rural Bolivia, the scientists found that the leading cause of seed mortality is a fungus called Fusarium. The fungus invades the fruits through wounds made by insects and destroys the seeds before they can be eaten and dispersed.

Capsaicin, the chemical that makes the peppers hot, drastically slows microbial growth and protects the fruit from Fusarium. And while capsaicin deters local mammals, such as foxes and raccoons, from consuming the chilies, birds don't have the physiological machinery to detect the spicy chemical and continue to eat the peppers and disperse seeds, Levey said.

The researchers' findings will be released today in a paper published online by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Levey and his colleagues were able to arrive at these conclusions because at least three of the approximately 15 species of chilies that grow in the Bolivian wild are polymorphic for pungency, which means that some individuals of those species produce pungent fruit and others produce non-pungent fruit. This provided the researchers with natural experimental conditions under which they could compare Fusarium attack on fruits with and without capsaicin.

Upon studying various chili pepper plants, the researchers observed a clear correlation between high levels of capsaicin and low seed mortality due to fungal growth, Levey said.

And the chemical doesn't just help the plants that produce it, either. Levey said the consumption of chilies can help protect humans from the dangerous diseases that are so plentiful in tropical climates.

"The use of chili peppers as a spice has spread to nearly every culture within 20 degrees of the equator, and it tends to decline as you move toward the poles," Levey said.

The capsaicin in chilies, one of the first plants domesticated in the New World, may have been used to protect human food from microbial attack long before refrigeration or artificial preservatives were available, he said.

One question Levey and his colleagues are still pondering is why any nonhot chilies remain if capsaicin is so beneficial. Their hypothesis is that the production of the chemical comes at a steep price for chili plants.

Levey said the plants that produced hot chilies had seeds with very thin coats - a presumed consequence of sacrificing the production of lignin, a complex molecule that makes up the protective seed coat, in favor of the production of capsaicin.

This phenomenon represents an interesting tradeoff between chemical and physical seed protection and demonstrates the power of natural selection, Levey said.

At higher elevations, where moisture is high and Fusarium fungus is rampant, the scientists found that 100 percent of the plants produced hot chilies. In the drier lowlands, where fungus is less of a problem, only 40 percent of the plants produced fiery fruits. The remainder spent more resources developing thick seed coats, which protect against the devastating ant populations common to lower areas.

While all of the plants look identical, telling the difference between hot and non-hot chilies is not difficult, Levey said.

"Just pop one in your mouth," he said. "You'll find out pretty quick."

University of Florida



Related Chili Peppers Current Events and Chili Peppers News Articles Chili Peppers Current Events and Chili Peppers News RSS Chili Peppers Current Events and Chili Peppers News RSS
Hot peppers really do bring the heat
Chili peppers can do more than just make you feel hot, reports a study in the August 1 Journal of Biological Chemistry; the active chemical in peppers can directly induce thermogenesis, the process by which cells convert energy into heat.

Drought tolerance in potatoes
Climate change is expected to exacerbate drought events throughout the world, resulting in large-scale ecosystem alteration and failure of drought-sensitive crops.

Evolution of fruit size in tomato
Domesticated tomatoes can be up to 1000 times larger than their wild relatives. How did they get so big? In general, domesticated food plants have larger fruits, heads of grain, tubers, etc, because this is one of the characteristics that early hunter-gatherers chose when foraging for food.

The 21st century tomato
When tomatoes ripen in our gardens, we watch them turn gradually from hard, green globules to brightly colored, aromatic, and tasty fruits.

Pain Receptor in Brain May Be Linked to Learning and Memory
Scientists have long known that the nervous system receptor known as TRPV1 can affect sensations of pain in the body. Now a group of Brown University scientists has found that these receptors - a darling of drug developers - also may play a role in learning and memory in the brain.

Smoked cannabis proven effective in treating neuropathic pain
Smoked cannabis eased pain induced in healthy volunteers, according to a study by researchers at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) Center for Medical Cannabis Research (CMCR.) However, the researchers found that less may be more.

Treatment blocks pain without disrupting other functions
A combination of two drugs can selectively block pain-sensing neurons in rats without impairing movement or other sensations such as touch, according to a new study by National Institutes of Health (NIH)-supported investigators.

Tarantula venom and chili peppers target same pain sensor
Venom from a West Indian tarantula has been shown to cause pain by exciting the same nerve cells in mice that sense high temperatures and the hot, spicy ingredient in chili peppers.
More Chili Peppers Current Events and Chili Peppers News Articles


Red Hot Chili Peppers - Greatest Hits: Piano/Vocal/Guitar Edition
by Red Hot Chili Peppers

A P/V/G collection of 16 of the Peppers' finest, including: Breaking the Girl * By the Way * Californication * Give It Away * Higher Ground * My Friends * Under the Bridge * and...



Red Hot Chili Peppers: Give It Away: The Stories Behind Every Song
by Rob Fitzpatrick

Red Hot Chili Peppers front man Anthony Kiedis grew up in Hollywood, hustling a living with his actor father. He eventually discovered music and fell in with Hillel Slovak, Jack Irons, and Michael "Flea" Balzary to form the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Fired up by 1970s funk, rock, ska, and soul, the band fought, split, kissed, made up, and then fought again. This collision of singular personalities...



Red Hot Chili Peppers - Stadium Arcadium: Special Edition Guitar Book with 2 CDs (Guitar Recorded Versions)
by Red Hot Chili Peppers

This first-of-its-kind publication allows you to hear John Frusciante's guitar tracks and Flea's bass tracks like never before! According to the All Music Guide, "The string instruments are the reason to listen to Stadium Arcadium ... they push and pull, rave and rumble, lie back and rock out." The CDs isolate the guitar and bass tracks from the original recording, so you can listen as you learn...



Me and My Friends - the "Red Hot Chili Peppers"
by Tony Woolliscroft

Although, at this point, this book is not strictly official it has the backing of the band members who have been close friends with the photographer, Tony Woolliscroft, for years. His work will also be known to fans around the world as it has featured on multi-million album covers such as Californication etc. Tony has travelled the world with the Chili Peppers since 1990 and has 'crashed' in...



Red Hot Chili Peppers - By the Way
by Red Hot Chili Peppers

Note-for-note transcriptions of every instrument part on all 16 songs from the Red Hot Chili Peppers' latest release: By the Way * Cabron * Can't Stop * Don't Forget Me * Dosed * I Could Die for You * Midnight * Minor Thing * On Mercury * Tear * This Is the Place * Throw Away Your Television * Universally Speaking * Venice Queen * Warm Tape * The Zephyr Song. Includes lyrics and guitar and bass...



Chili Peppers 2009 Square Wall Calendar
by BrownTrout Publishers Inc



Red Hot Chili Peppers - Stadium Arcadium: Deluxe Bass Edition: Book/2-CD Pack (Book & CD)
by Red Hot Chili Peppers

The two CDs included with this awesome book/CD pack feature isolated recordings of Flea's actual bass lines (and John Frusciante's searing guitar parts) straight from the Peppers' smash-hit double album! Follow along with the exact note-for-note transcriptions with tab while listening to Flea's tracks and you will master every song on Stadium Arcadium. 28 songs: Dani California * Hard to...



Fornication: The Red Hot Chili Peppers Story
by Jeff Apter

Softcover edition. How can a band that started as a joke become of music's most unstoppable forces? These sonic soulmates have endured death, addiction, an unstable line-up and have stilled managed to produce some of the most vital rock'n'roll of the past three...



Red Hot Chili Peppers - BloodSugarSexMagik (Essexntial Groups & Artists)
by Red Hot Chili Peppers

Includes exact transcribed scores for the megahits "Give It Away," "Suck My Kiss," "Under the Bridge" and 14 more: Apache Rose Peacock * Blood Sugar Sex Magik * Breaking the Girl * Funky Monks * The Greeting Song * I Could Have Lied * If You Have to Ask * Mellowship Slinky in B Major * My Lovely Man * Naked in the Rain * The Power of Equality * The Righteous and the Wicked * Sir Psycho Sexy *...



Red Hot Chili Peppers - Blood Sugar Sex Magik (Essexntial Groups & Artists)
by Red Hot Chili Peppers

All 17 songs from their smash hit album, including: Give It Away * The Power of Equality * Suck My Kiss * Under the Bridge * and...

© 2008 BrightSurf.com