Chiles' live-and-let burn philosophy
August4, 2008
is good for humans, bad for fungus
What happens after you eat hot chile peppers reads like a list of drug side effects: burning
pain, sweating, teary eyes and panic followed by lingering numbness.

University of Washington
A new study suggests that chile peppers evolved their heat to ward off a destructive
fungus that is spread by insects boring into the fruit. |
The plant makes its mouth-torching ingredients, called capsaicinoids (cap-SAY-sin-oyds), to stop
animals from munching its fruit, biologists say. Strange, then, how human cooks have avidly
embraced the chile for more than 6,000 years.
University of Washington scientists now propose an explanation: Spiciness evolved as a chemical
defense against microbial attacks. And people might have developed a taste for the powerful chile
to take advantage of its anti-microbial powers.
“That may not have been an accident,” said University of Washington biologist
Joshua Tewksbury, lead author of the study. “Eating chiles might ve been very
beneficial.”
Chile peppers in their native habitat wage an ongoing battle against a highly
destructive fungus. Aphidlike insects spread the fungus by boring into fruit,
and once the fungus is inside, even tiny amounts can quickly destroy all the
seeds.
In lab tests, chile capsaicinoids poisoned the fungus, blocking its growth. The
University of Washington researchers and a Bolivian colleague also measured the
spiciness of a wild chile growing at different locations throughout Bolivia and
found that capsaicinoid levels rose with increasing numbers of the
fungus-spreading bugs. In areas with few insects – and less danger of fungal
attack – most of the plants lacked heat entirely.
The plants hit an evolutionary home run when they began producing
capsaicinoids, which defeat microbes and repel mice and other small animals that
might eat seeds. But the compounds don't faze the birds that chile plants need
to spread their seeds.
“It shows just how nuanced evolution can be,” Tewksbury said.
Success as a spice has given the South American native a secure niche
worldwide. Before Columbus, Asians and Europeans had no experience with chile
peppers. After Columbus, the plant swept India and much of Asia in less than 20
years.
Paul Sherman, a Cornell University professor who was not involved with
Tewksbury's study, said it provides more evidence that our taste for pungent
plant ingredients arose because of the substances' ability to kill or retard the
growth of microbes in food, an idea he has long championed. Without
refrigeration, bacteria and fungi multiply rapidly, releasing toxins that can
make people sick or reaching numbers that overwhelm a person's immune system
once ingested.
“Humans have borrowed the plant's evolutionary recipes for survival and
reproduction to use for essentially the same thing: to make us healthier by
cleansing what we will eat,” Sherman said.
Paul Bosland, director of the Chile Pepper Institute at New Mexico State
University, said the idea seems plausible. Ancient Mayan texts name chiles as
ingredients in remedies for a variety of infectious illnesses. “We've known for
a long time that capsaicins in humans have anti-microbial effects,” Bosland said.
But Linda Perry, a researcher at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural
History, said spicing up bland food was reason enough for people to exploit the
chile pepper, an easily grown fruit that is simple to preserve by drying.
Last year, Perry and colleagues reported the earliest evidence to date of
chile cultivation and seasoning of food: 6,250 years ago in Ecuador. Since the
site was far from the wild plant's origin, domestication took place even
earlier.
“In areas where staple crops are bland, peppers offer an excellent way to
spice up cuisine,” said Perry, who has her own criterion for the perfect heat
level: “I like where it will make my nose run, but it won't make me cry.”
Tewksbury doesn't doubt that a big part of the chile's allure is sensory –
the mind-blotting instant of pain followed by mild euphoria.
“It's fantastic,” he said. “It's not so different from a runner's high,
except you don't have to go running.”
Your humble Ace Reporter
Bob