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Science

Ghana Scientist Tries Gene Editing To Create Healthier Sweet Potatoes (cornell.edu) 61

The Cornell Alliance for Science seeks to build "a significant international alliance of partners" to "correct misinformation and counter conspiracy theories" slowing progress on climate change, synthetic biology, agricultural innovations, and other issues.

Slashdot reader wooloohoo shares their article about research on Ghana's first gene-edited crop — a high-yielding sweet potato with increased beta carotone content. "For sweet potatoes, we want to look at how we can use the CRISPR-Cas9 system to increase beta carotene," said Samuel Acheampong of the University of Cape Coast's Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, who has been working on the project for the past year. "Beta carotene is a big deal for us because as animals, when we eat beta carotene, our cells are able to convert them into vitamin A."

The World Health Organization estimates that between 250,000 and 500,000 children in developing nations go blind every year as a result of vitamin A deficiency, making it the world's leading preventable cause of childhood blindness. Some 50 percent of them die within a year of losing their sight. Respiratory illnesses and infectious and diarrheal diseases in children also have been linked to vitamin A deficiency. Acheampong is using CRISPR-Cas9 to knock out the genes responsible for the production of an enzyme in the sweet potato that converts beta carotene into other products. This will leave higher beta carotene content in the crop, which when consumed by humans will allow them to produce vitamin A. Sweet potato is a very popular vegetable in Ghana, making it ideal for a biofortification effort of this kind...

Additionally, Acheampong is researching how to increase the size of the crop's storage roots. "I'm looking at a set of genes which affects the transport of sugars in plants. So I'm trying to use the CRISPR genome editing to knock out some sets of genes so that there will be more flow of sugars in the crop, which will definitely lead to increase in the yield...."

He estimates it will take him up to five years to complete his research before any conversation can begin around putting the product in the hands of farmers. "Getting it to the market may take a long time, depending on regulations, etc.," he said.

In another article, The Alliance for Science cites a researcher with the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing who argues "it is unlikely that genome editing-based next generation breeding will completely displace conventional approaches; only when combined with other technologies, such as high-throughput phenotyping, genomic selection and speed breeding, can we guarantee the widespread implementation of genome editing in agriculture."

"This multidisciplinary approach will advance plant breeding to help secure a second Green Revolution in order to meet the increasing food demands of a rapidly growing global population under ever-changing climate conditions."
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Ghana Scientist Tries Gene Editing To Create Healthier Sweet Potatoes

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  • Done before (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Errol backfiring ( 1280012 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @08:08AM (#61089548) Journal

    More than a decade ago, somebody tried to create rice with all necessary nutrients, so poor people could have good health, even if they ate only rice. He deliberately avoided any new techniques or patented techniques, because he wanted his rice free to use for everyone.

    He gave up after he was sued for more than 20 patent infringements.

    • My best understanding is that golden rice is open for free use, and even during the patent period, agrotech that owned gmo patents made exemptions for small third world farms to grow and sell the rice. The opposition to golden rice I have seen has been from opponents of GMO, such as Greenpeace, who will go so far as to vandalize farms in the third world to destroy it. I'm interested in a source on the story of a guy sued for patent infringement about golden rice.
    • Re:Done before (Score:4, Interesting)

      by bws111 ( 1216812 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @09:17AM (#61089732)

      Bullshit. The project is 'golden rice', and here is what the project itself has to say about that (from http://www.goldenrice.org/Cont... [goldenrice.org]):

      Patents are tools to protect commercial interests and investments, but as the Golden Rice example shows, they are not an impediment to the use and dissemination of a technology. Apart from being national in scope and limited in time, their owners can decide to whom to license and under what conditions. Notwithstanding the fact that a number of patented technologies were involved in the production of Golden Rice (Kryder et al. 2000), Syngenta Seeds AG was able to negotiate access to all pieces of the puzzle actively necessary for the intended humanitarian purposes, providing the Golden Rice Humanitarian Board with the right to sublicense breeding institutions in developing countries free of charge.

      The patented key technology for Golden Rice production, invented by Prof emeritus Ingo Potrykus, of ETH-Zurich and Prof Peter Beyer, of the Univ of Freiburg, provided access to a package of ancillary technologies required to engineer the trait into rice. A license to those technologies was obtained from Syngenta. The package contained proprietary technologies belonging not only to Syngenta but also to Bayer AG, Monsanto Co, Orynova BV, and Zeneca Mogen BV.These companies provided access to the required technologies free of charge, for humanitarian purposes.

      Eliminating reach-through rights and technologies that don't show up in the most recently developed Golden Rice versions leaves us with only a few patented technologies, all of which have been made available for humanitarian purposes free of charge. The licensing process was quick and simple, contrary to what many onlookers believe. Similar projects are looking at this licensing agreement as a good example of how this kind of arrangements between the public and the private sector can be made, especially for humanitarian purposes.

      Golden rice wasn't impeded by 'da evil patents', it was impeded by anti-GMO morons.

    • That falsely implies that we even know all the necessary ingredients.

      In reality, most people who create such foods are so clueless, they never even heard of seconary and teritary protein stucture, denaturing, or prebiotic (not probiotic) effects on the digestive microbiome. Hell, they barely realize that you cannot digest certain vitamins without fat.

      They think you can combine a few highly denatured white powders of a standardized amount of what they know about, and it's food.
      Nevermind that it always depend

      • Ah, the crisp tang of vegan bullshit fills the air on this sunny morning! Golden rice is nothing but a splicing of the carotene gene into species that grow in the tropics. The flat-earth lobby hates golden rice because it's not Stone Age enough for their snowflake sensibilities. They are trying to bully developing countries into rejecting it for the same reasons they reject vaccines.

        What this Ghanaian has come up with is "golden sweet potato." This can grow in the drier areas that are unsuited to rice.

  • It's only a matter of time before somebody creates a gene drive that edits human genes to further a goal, and makes it spread like a virus. E.g. for warmongering or racist purposes.

    Who knows, maybe it already happened and we're about to find out, Children of Men style.

    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      Much sooner than that you're going to find wealthy families traveling to clinics in Uruguay or the Seychelles for germ line editing to have kids that are smarter/stronger/without hereditary defects (that last especially among the inbred European royalty). It won't stay that way for long though, the technology is improving at an exponential rate and very soon afterwards "designer babies" will be available to commoners. A generation later it will be the norm, because who wants to see their kid grow up the d

      • A generation later it will be the norm, because who wants to see their kid grow up the dumbest, weakest, sickest, and ugliest kid in school?

        This time it's not Uncle Chuck who is coming for the Greenpeacers, but intelligent design by humans.

        • by PPH ( 736903 )

          intelligent design by humans

          Our track record in this area isn't very good [starecat.com]. I don't think we want to try this on humans quite yet.

      • I saw that movie.
  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @01:42PM (#61090626)

    Screw beta carotene. If they want to do TRULY useful research, engineer the sweet potatoes so they naturally fall apart into fries.

    • Screw beta carotene. If they want to do TRULY useful research, engineer the sweet potatoes so they naturally fall apart into fries.

      As long as waffle cut is also an option I'll back that research.

  • Norman Borlog (Score:4, Informative)

    by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @02:19PM (#61090750) Journal
    I encourage everyone on Slashdot to read about Norman Borlaug, [wikipedia.org] and his work in Africa. [wikipedia.org]

    His work in genetically modified crops saved hundreds of millions of people from starvation in India. [wikipedia.org] When he tried to repeat his success in Africa, the anti-GMO crowd stopped him.
    • I prefer the predecessor story of Edgar McFadden which is much, much less known. His Hope Wheat he gave away, he successfully crossed a wheat with an older wheat that gave it stem rust resistance and then kept developing it. One plant survived in his land-lady's garden. It potentially saved millions from starvation during the World War 2 years. He likely doesn't receive his credit due, because he didn't have a doctorate, which is a crying shame. For a good video see the McFadden Symposium video on Youtube.
  • ...can he reprogram it so we receive fresh french fries?
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • I find it fascinating that science continues to progress for a better future in this case focused on healthy foods, it seems to me a perfect option to combat diseases caused by junk food such as diabetes or obesity, I would recommend you to click here https: // allianceforscience. cornell.edu/blog/2021/02/ghana-scientist-turns-to-gene-editing-to-improve-sweet-potato-crop/ to learn more about this fabulous project.

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