Tasty transgenics
Posted by Jennifer Welsh
[Entry posted at 28th July 2010 02:41 PM GMT]
AquaBounty Technologies made big news when they announced they were getting close to approval for their fast-growing transgenic salmon, but this isn't the only transgenic project with its eyes on our food supply. Several other projects are underway to develop transgenic animals that may eventually make their way into agriculture's mainstream and end up in your grocery aisle. And scientists aren't just interested in bigger animals -- they're also looking at making meat that's more environmentally friendly, and healthier.
A cleaner pig
Normal pigs can't digest phytate, which makes up around 50-75 percent of phosphorus present in cereal grains, corn and soybeans -- the pig's main food. This excess phytate comes out in their waste, and they need to be fed additional phosphorus in a digestible form. The Enviropig contains a gene from E. coli called phytase, which encodes an enzyme which metabolizes phytate molecules into readily absorbed phosphate. As a result, it eats less feed and produces less waste, including 30-65 percent less phytate waste, which in turn decreases the chemical contamination of agriculture drainage areas. "We originally set out to help farmers around the world reduce the environmental impact of raising pigs," said Richard Moccia. The University owns the rights to the pig, and has been in the process of getting approval from both the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Health Canada since 2007. Health Canada is satisfied that the Enviropig does what it says it does, and will not harm the environment, but the university is still in the process of assembling documentation of the safety of Enviropigs for human consumption. Approval, if it happens, is at least a few years off, said Moccia. Fat-friendly meats
"We realize the huge imbalance in omega-6 to omega-3 in the human diet," said Jing Kang at Harvard Medical School. "We want to decrease the omega-6 and increase the omega-3." Kang has inserted the fat-1 gene from C. elegans into pigs, which allows them to convert the omega-6 fats found in their normal feed into omega-3s. Kang is currently working on other animals, such as chicken and fish, and also vegetables which don't usually contain omega-3, like tomatoes. Kang is looking for a company to commercialize the technology, and to help with the time and expense of dealing with regulatory issues, and couldn't offer a projection of when the food could hit the market. A fatter salmon
In theory, the AquaAdvantage salmon could provide relief to the ongoing pressure on natural fisheries, and, because it is grown in pens built on land, cut down on the environmental impact of shipping fish from the coasts. The AquaAdvantage salmon is the transgenic animal closest to getting FDA approval for human consumption, having passed five sections of the FDA's seven-part application. The company has submitted all the remaining required information, and is expecting a decision soon. AquaBounty is also working on implementing the same growth-hormone technology in tilapia, shrimp and other important aquacultures, said Val Giddings, a consultant who worked for the food and agriculture division of the Biotechnology Industry Organization for a decade and has worked with AquaBounty. Big fish, mutant cows, flu-resistant birds - Terry Bradley, an aquaculture researcher at the University of Rhode Island, has produced rainbow trout with six-pack "abs" and hulk-like shoulders by blocking the fish's myostatin gene, which inhibits muscle differentiation and growth. - BioDak, LLC is producing cows that are resistant to bovine spongiform encephalopathy (the prion-based "mad cow disease"), as well as cows that don't produce antibodies, for research purposes. - Laurence Tiley from Cambridge Veterinary School is working with Helen Sang of the Roslin Institute to produce chickens that are immune to the flu virus, hopefully decreasing the impact of avian flu on chicken stocks. Their technique includes introducing the antiviral protein Mx into the chickens and inserting small RNAs to disrupt the flu virus. |
Read more: Tasty transgenics - The Scientist - Magazine of the Life Sciences http://www.the-scientist.com/blog/display/57577/#ixzz1ryaUVLAf
Available in: http://classic.the-scientist.com/blog/display/57577/
Entry author: Astrid Espinosa Sánchez.
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