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Scientists Identify Gene Responsible for Olive Oil’s Aroma

Researchers determined that manipulating the 13-HPL gene could allow farmers to predict olive oil aroma or create new cultivars with specific aromas.
Two women participating in an olive oil tasting session, holding blue glasses and examining the aroma. - Olive Oil Times
Photo: NYIOOC
By Paolo DeAndreis
Jun. 22, 2022 13:31 UTC
Summary Summary

Spanish researchers have dis­cov­ered how to manip­u­late the expres­sion of the 13-HPL gene in olive trees, affect­ing the aroma of olive oil pro­duced. This dis­cov­ery could allow grow­ers to select spe­cific cul­ti­vars for desired aro­mas or breed new cul­ti­vars with pre-deter­mined aro­mas, poten­tially enhanc­ing the fruity or pun­gent qual­i­ties of the oil.

A team of Spanish researchers has inves­ti­gated a key genetic trait of the olive tree and devised a way to manip­u­late the asso­ci­ated gene’s expres­sion with rel­e­vant con­se­quences on olive oil aroma.

The dis­cov­ery may allow grow­ers to select cul­ti­vars to pro­duce olive oils with spe­cific aro­mas or researchers to breed new cul­ti­vars with pre-deter­mined aro­mas. Genetically mod­i­fied olives could fea­ture a more fruity or pun­gent aroma.

Plants pro­duce and emit a huge diver­sity of volatile organic com­pounds, which are released from dif­fer­ent tis­sues such as leaves, fruits, flow­ers and roots,” the researchers wrote. From a chem­i­cal point of view, these plant volatiles are organic lipophilic mol­e­cules char­ac­ter­ized by low boil­ing points and high vapor pres­sures at ambi­ent tem­per­a­tures.”

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Volatile com­pounds are mol­e­cules that, once released by their source, reach the olfac­tory recep­tors and cre­ate the aroma.

The 13-HPL gene has been inves­ti­gated for decades as it plays a piv­otal role in the syn­the­sis of the main volatile com­pounds that make up the aroma of vir­gin olive oils.

It was not until approx­i­mately a decade ago that we were able to iso­late and char­ac­ter­ize the 13-HPL gene from the olive tree, as well as to demon­strate the puta­tive [com­monly thought] func­tion­al­ity of the pro­tein it encodes, the 13-HPL enzyme,” Carlos Sanz, the leader of the bio­chem­istry and plant food tech­nol­ogy research group at the Spanish National Research Council’s Fat Institute, told Olive Oil Times.

The 13-HPL is an enzyme that pro­duces the six-car­bon C6 aliphatic alde­hy­des hexa­nal or hex­e­nals from polyun­sat­u­rated fatty acids with a hydroper­ox­ide group at car­bon 13.

These volatile alde­hy­des, and their alco­hol and ester deriv­a­tives, are com­po­nents of the aroma of the fruits of dif­fer­ent plant species. In olives, they are also respon­si­ble for the smell of cut grass that is pro­duced when the plant leaves are crushed.

The 13-HPL is an enzyme that is part of the lipoxy­ge­nase path­way, which is a highly con­served bio­chem­i­cal path­way in plants that func­tions in dif­fer­ent plant organs,” Sanz said. We have ver­i­fied in pre­vi­ous stud­ies that the pro­file of volatile com­pounds obtained after crush­ing the olive leaf is basi­cally the same as that obtained after crush­ing the olive fruit since, in both organs, the dam­age to the tis­sue trig­gers the func­tion­ing of the lipoxy­ge­nase path­way and con­se­quently the syn­the­sis of volatile com­pounds.”

This is essen­tially the ori­gin of the aroma of vir­gin olive oil,” he added. This aroma is only pro­duced when the integrity of the olive fruit is destroyed in the milling stage of the vir­gin olive oil extrac­tion process.”

The study also found that there is only a sin­gle 13-HPL gene in the olive, unlike in other meta­bolic steps in syn­the­siz­ing these volatile com­pounds, in which a con­sid­er­able num­ber of genes with the same func­tion may be involved.

Well, once the gene had been iden­ti­fied and char­ac­ter­ized, the next step was to deter­mine its func­tion­al­ity in vivo, that is, to ver­ify that this gene is expressed in the olive to pro­duce 13-HPL and that this enzyme works as it does in vitro,” Sanz said.

See Also:The Flavors of Extra Virgin Olive Oil

To ver­ify this, researchers grew two sets of olive trees, one in which the gene was silenced and the other in which it was ampli­fied to its high­est pos­si­ble level. From there, the sci­en­tists at the Fat Institute and the University of Malaga ana­lyzed the result­ing volatile com­pounds.

The researchers found that silenc­ing the gene brings unwanted con­se­quences.

The mod­i­fi­ca­tion of the expres­sion of the 13-HPL gene in olive trees not only pro­duces a large decrease in C6 volatiles… it also causes less plant growth,” Sanz said. This shows that the 13-HPL activ­ity is essen­tial for the nor­mal growth and devel­op­ment of the olive plant.”

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One of the rea­sons for this might be the role the 13-HPL gene plays in elim­i­nat­ing polyun­sat­u­rated fatty acid hydroper­ox­ides that are toxic to the plant. An excess of the hydroper­ox­ide deriv­a­tives in the plan­t’s tis­sues prob­a­bly affects its growth.

On the other hand, we must not for­get that the lipoxy­ge­nase path­way is the ori­gin of dif­fer­ent phys­i­o­log­i­cal reg­u­la­tors, so an increase in the con­tent of these hydroper­ox­ides can lead to an increase in the con­cen­tra­tion and activ­ity of some of these reg­u­la­tors with the observed phe­no­typic effect,” Sanz said.

According to the researchers, the study’s results would make it pos­si­ble to pro­duce plants with a mod­i­fied gene expres­sion. But it would only affect the char­ac­ter­is­tics of the green attribute of the oil’s aroma,” Sanz said.

An increase in the expres­sion of the gene would enhance the green fruity attrib­utes of the aroma. On the con­trary, a con­trol of the expres­sion of this gene would cause… the oils to have green aro­mas but with a less fruity and more pun­gent char­ac­ter, which are appre­ci­ated by some sec­tors of con­sumers,” he said.

The infor­ma­tion we got con­firms the sus­pi­cions we had about the func­tion­ing of the 13-HPL gene and enzyme and their involve­ment in the syn­the­sis of the main com­pounds respon­si­ble for the aroma of vir­gin olive oil,” Sanz added.

Although it would be fea­si­ble to obtain trans­genic lines that carry a mod­i­fied expres­sion of this gene, in my opin­ion, the main use of this knowl­edge would be in olive breed­ing pro­grams to develop mol­e­c­u­lar mark­ers for the marker-assisted selec­tion of new olive cul­ti­vars that pro­duce oils with an improved aroma,” he con­cluded.



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