onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Notification
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Reading: How the Potato Got Its Start Nine Million Years Ago—Thanks to a Tomato
Share
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Search
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • Advertise
  • Advertise
© 2025 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.
Tech

How the Potato Got Its Start Nine Million Years Ago—Thanks to a Tomato

Last updated: July 31, 2025 8:36 pm
Oliver James
Share
4 Min Read
How the Potato Got Its Start Nine Million Years Ago—Thanks to a Tomato
SHARE

Nine million years ago, in the shadow of the rising Andes Mountains, a key ancestor of the beloved modern-day potato was born. And now new research shows this pivotal event—and the mashed, baked and fried bounty it routinely delivers today—only happened with crucial help from another treasured kitchen staple: the tomato.

According to a study published on Thursday in Cell, the prehistoric potato precursor was a hybrid of nearby-growing plants in the lineages of the tomato and Etuberosum, a section of species in the genus Solanum. The latter visually resembles the modern-day cultivated potato plant, which is part of the lineage of the Solanum section Petota. But it lacks the ability to produce the distinctive tubers that store all that useful nutrition in a convenient, fist-sized underground package,

“We have always thought that these three lineages were closely related,” says study co-author Sandra Knapp, a research botanist at the Natural History Museum in London. “But what the relationships between those three lineages were [was] not clear; different genes told us different stories. Our group came together to look into the why!”

[Sign up for Today in Science, a free daily newsletter]

The potato is one of the world’s most widely used staple crops (along with corn, wheat and rice). But until now, its genetic backstory had been elusive to scientists. Though potatoes resemble Etuberosum and were known to share some genes with tomatoes, scientists hadn’t managed to pin down the evolutionary story that somehow tied these plants together.

Knapp and her international team of researchers began by analyzing more than 100 genomes from modern-day potatoes and tomatoes, as well as the largest collection of Etuberosum genomes ever analyzed. The scientists found that each potato genome carried a balanced mosaic of genes from the tomato and Etuberosum lineages. Team members pieced together all the possible phylogenetic trees that could have related the three lineages—and they found strong evidence that the potato was likely not a sister of either the tomato or Etuberosum. The team could then conclude that the potato was a result of a hybridization between the two.

But another mystery remained: neither the tomato nor Etuberosum have tubers, thick parts of the stem that burrow underground and store nutrients for plants such as potatoes, yams and taros. So how did tubers develop in potato plants?

The researchers found that each ancestral parent contained one key gene that—when combined—allowed tubers to grow. Tomatoes contributed the SP6A gene, which acts like a master switch to begin tuber formation. And from the Etuberosum side, another gene called IT1 controls the growth of stems that become tubers.

“We are aware that hybridization generates new traits and new species,” says the study’s senior researcher Sanwen Huang, an agriculturist at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences. “However, this study is the first to show that hybridization generated a new type of organ, the tuber, which later became [a key part of] one of the staple foods of humanity.”

Tomatoes and Etuberosum likely hybridized during a period of rapid uplift in the Andes range. The resulting tubers enabled the potato’s ancestors to reproduce asexually and thus survive in new, higher-elevation habitats. Today tubers allow potatoes to grow resiliently in a range of environments and climates, supporting our ever growing assortment of potato-based foods.

“Now we have a story to tell about potato origins,” says Walter De Jong, a plant geneticist at Cornell University, who was not involved in the study, “another addition to our growing understanding of what makes a potato a potato.”

You Might Also Like

Brutal heat continues in 28 US states: When will temperatures drop?

1,000 artists release ‘silent’ album to protest UK copyright sell-out to AI

Xbox consoles see price hike amid ‘market conditions’

Lopez vs. Apple: What to know about case involving Siri that triggered $95M settlement

Big Tech is vibe coding with these winning AI startups

Share This Article
Facebook X Copy Link Print
Share
Previous Article Quantum computing occurs naturally in the human brain, study finds Quantum computing occurs naturally in the human brain, study finds
Next Article Red Sox acquire RHP Dustin May from Dodgers but fall short of a front-line starter Red Sox acquire RHP Dustin May from Dodgers but fall short of a front-line starter

Latest News

15 Must-Have Amazon Gadgets Under  That Make Life Easier
15 Must-Have Amazon Gadgets Under $20 That Make Life Easier
Finance August 1, 2025
Figma IPO’s surprise winner is a charity with 13 million shares—and a famous backstory that sparked a bitter feud over an oil fortune decades ago
Figma IPO’s surprise winner is a charity with 13 million shares—and a famous backstory that sparked a bitter feud over an oil fortune decades ago
Finance August 1, 2025
8 Popular Car Brands To Stay Away From in Retirement
8 Popular Car Brands To Stay Away From in Retirement
Finance August 1, 2025
I’m a Boomer Traveler: This Is the Most Expensive Place I’ve Visited (and How Much It Costs)
I’m a Boomer Traveler: This Is the Most Expensive Place I’ve Visited (and How Much It Costs)
Finance August 1, 2025
//
  • About Us
  • Contact US
  • Privacy Policy
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
© 2025 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.