The tomatoes your great-grandparents ate probably tasted
little like the ones you eat today. In fact, tomatoes "were once so flavorful
that you could take one in your hand and eat it straight away just like we
regularly eat apples or peaches," according to plant scientist Alan Bennett. He
belongs to a team of international scientists who now think they know one reason
why the fruit has lost so much flavor. Although some unripe
tomatoes have a dark green patch near the stem, farmers prefer that their unripe
tomatoes are the same shade of green all over. The consistent coloring makes it
easier for them to know when the fruit should be picked. But
tomatoes without the dark green patch are also missing an important genetic
ingredient that helps the fruit make more sugar and other tasty molecules. So by
breeding tomatoes for that consistent color, Bennett’s team says, crop
scientists may have accidentally contributed to also making this fruit
bland. "It is a good illustration of unintended consequences," Harry Klee
told Science News. Tomatoes make sugars in compartments called
chloroplasts (叶绿体). Bennett and his colleagues found that tomatoes need the
correct version of a gene (one called S1GLK2) to form chloroplasts properly in
the fruit. A gene acts as a biological instruction book that tells cells which
molecules to make. Tomatoes without the dark green patch have
the wrong version of this gene, the researchers report in Science. As these
fruits ripen, they can’t make as many chloroplasts. And chloroplasts that they
do produce are smaller. One result: The tomatoes make less sugar—and don’t taste
as good. Tomatoes also produce gases responsible for some of
the odors we associate with the fruit. Even though you only breathe them, these
gases affect the way that you perceive flavor. Tomatoes with weak chloroplasts
can’t make as much of these gases, further reducing flavor. But
the newfound gene change is "not the whole story of why modern tomatoes are so
bad, by a long shot," Klee told Science News. Tomatoes are also blander when
they are picked too early or stored in the fridge. The word "bland" (Para. 3) probably means ______.
A. less nutritious
B. less tasteful
C. more colorful
D. more productive