Biotech develops heart-friendly bacon
Paul Elias
SAN FRANCISCO — A microscopic worm may be the key to heart-friendly
bacon.
Geneticists have mixed DNA from the roundworm C. elegans and pigs
to produce swine with significant amounts of omega-3 fatty acids
- the kind believed to stave off heart disease.
Researchers hope they can improve the technique in pork and do the
same in chickens and cows. In the process, they also want to better
understand human disease.
“We all can use more omega-3 in our diet,” said Dr.
Jing Kang, the Harvard Medical School researcher who modified the
omega-3-making worm gene so it turned on in the pigs.
Kang is one of 17 authors of the paper appearing Sunday in an online
edition of the journal Nature Biotechnology.
The cloned, genetically engineered pigs are the latest advance in
the agricultural biotechnology field, which is struggling to move
beyond esoteric products such as bug-repelling corn and soy resistant
to weed killers.
Hoping to create healthier, cheaper and tastier products that consumers
crave, Monsanto Co. of St. Louis and its biotech farming competitors
like DuPont are developing omega-3-producing crops that yield healthier
cooking oils. Kang said 30 academic laboratories are now working
with his omega-3 gene, presumably pursuing similar projects.
“Consumers have responded pretty positively when asked their
opinion of food modified to improve food quality and food safety,
just as long as the taste isn’t altered negatively,”
said Christine Bruhn, director of the Center for Consumer Research
at the University of California, Davis.
Earlier experiments have succeeded in manipulating animals’
fat content but most never made it out of the lab because of taste
problems.
While boosting Omega-3s doesn’t decrease the fat content in
pigs, the fatty acids are also important to brain development and
may reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s disease and depression.
The American Heart Association recommends at least two weekly servings
of fish, particularly fatty fish like trout and salmon, which are
naturally high in omega-3s.
People already eat genetically engineered soy beans in all manner
of processed food, but biotech companies run into what bioethicists
call the “yuck factor” when they begin tinkering with
animals.
The Food and Drug Administration has never approved food derived
from genetically engineered animals. Unlike crops, the FDA treats
such animals as medicine and requires extensive testing before approval.
“We understand that this research is in the very early stages,”
FDA spokeswoman Rae Jones said. “This technology will not
likely reach meat counters for many years.”
The FDA is still considering Waltham, Mass.-based Aqua Bounty Technologies’
application to market a salmon genetically engineered to grow faster,
the only such request pending with the agency. Aqua Bounty began
its federal application process about nine years ago and there is
no indication when the FDA will rule.
In the meantime, the researchers of the latest project said they
will use their genetically engineered pigs to study human disease,
especially heart conditions.
(Associated Press )
|
|