Some say genetic engineering (genetic modification, GM) is needed to end
world hunger.
However, here are success stories of new, very useful, food crops
produced WITHOUT genetic engineering. Some use MAS--marker assisted selection--a
high-tech version of conventional selective breeding.
GM WATCH daily
http://www.gmwatch.org
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GM WATCH COMMENT:
Here's another non-GM success story - wheat with boosted levels of protein, iron
and zinc - produced with genetic knowledge but without transgenics.
While much hyped GM crops like Golden Rice are still years away from
going into farmers' fields, this biofortified wheat joins a growing list of
non-GM successes, SOME OF WHICH ARE ALREADY BEING TRIED OUT BY
FARMERS:
Dream (non-GM) rice to curb
malnutrition
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=7078
Natural
'golden millet' rivals 'golden rice'
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=7182
Vitamin A Fortified
Potato to Combat Blindness
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=7248
Non-GM maize boosts
vitamin A
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=7079
EXTRACT: The
UC Davis team is already making such varieties, not by genetic engineering but
through crossing domesticated wheat plants with wild relatives. The key is a
technology called Marker Assisted Selection (MAS).
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Wheat's lost
gene helps nutrition
BBC NEWS, 24 November
2006
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6179912.stm
Wild wheat
contains a more functional variety of the key gene
Turning on a gene
found in wheat could boost levels of protein, iron and zinc, scientists have
discovered.
The gene occurs naturally in wheat, but has largely been
silenced during the evolution of domestic varieties.
Researchers found
evidence that turning it back on could raise levels of the nutrients in wheat
grains.
Writing in the journal Science, they suggest that new varieties
with a fully functioning gene can be created through cross-breeding with wild
wheat.
"Wheat is one of the world's major crops, providing approximately
one-fifth of all calories consumed by humans," said project leader Professor
Jorge Dubcovsky from the University of California at Davis.
"Therefore,
even small increases in wheat's nutritional value may help decrease deficiencies
in protein and key micronutrients."
'Spectacular' results
The
researchers identified a gene called GPC-B1, GPC standing for Grain Protein
Content.
It is found in both wild and domesticated varieties of wheat,
but in subtly different forms, indicating that it has been changed by the long
history of domestication.
Working with a variety of wheat called
Bobwhite, a staple crop whose grains are commonly used in bread, scientists
"turned down" GPC-B1 activity even further using RNA interference.
RNA
interference is a recently-discovered technique which blocks the expression of
genes.
"The results were spectacular," said Professor Dubcovsky.
"The grains from the genetically modified plants matured several weeks
later than the control plants and showed 30% less grain protein, zinc and iron,
without differences in grain size.
"This experiment confirmed that this
single gene was responsible for all these changes."
The researchers
deduced that the reverse process - enhancing GPC-B1 activity - ought to produce
plants which have higher levels of these nutrients in their grains and mature
faster.
The UC Davis team is already making such varieties, not by
genetic engineering but through crossing domesticated wheat plants with wild
relatives.
The key is a technology called Marker Assisted Selection
(MAS). This allows scientists to select which plants to cross using genetic
information, rather than simply choosing them by their attributes, as farmers
have done throughout the history of agriculture.
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