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Biotech Science

Scientists Create Tomatoes Genetically Edited To Bolster Vitamin D Levels (theguardian.com) 87

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Scientists have created genetically edited tomatoes, each containing as much provitamin D3 -- the precursor to vitamin D -- as two eggs or a tablespoon of tuna. Outdoor field trials of the tomatoes are expected to begin in the UK next month, and if successful, could provide an important new dietary source of vitamin D. The tomato plants were created by making tiny changes to an existing tomato gene using an editing technique called Crispr-Cas9. "It's like a pair of molecular tweezers, which you can use to precisely snip out a very small fragment of the gene to enhance a desirable trait in plants a lot quicker than traditional breeding process, and without introducing any foreign DNA from other species," said Jie Li at the John Innes Centre in Norwich, who led the research.

In this case, their focus was an enzyme found in tomato plants that normally converts provitamin D3 into cholesterol. By altering this enzyme, the researchers managed to block this pathway, meaning provitamin D3 accumulated in the tomatoes' fruits and leaves. They calculated that the amount of provitamin D3 in one tomato fruit -- if converted to vitamin D3 -- would be equivalent to levels present in two medium-sized eggs or 28 grams of tuna. To convert this into active vitamin D3, the fruit would still need to be exposed to UVB light, or they could potentially be grown outdoors, something the researchers plan to test in upcoming field trials. The research was published in Nature Plants.
"Unlike GMOs, the tomato plants do not contain genes from other organisms and could theoretically have been created through selective breeding -- albeit much more slowly," notes the Guardian. Therefore, they could be allowed under a proposed genetic technology (precision breeding) bill aimed to allow gene-edited plants to be treated differently to genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
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Scientists Create Tomatoes Genetically Edited To Bolster Vitamin D Levels

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  • Vitamin Salsa is gonna be a big seller at Whole Foods. These organic tomatoes had precision breeding and are Non-GMO.

    • Vitamin D in the Tomatoes, Vitamin E in the Onions, Vitamin K in the Coriander, and boosted Vitamin A.

      A Salsa of Death if you get greedy and pig out.

    • And the brilliant thing is that the tinfoil-hatters will now be forced to choose between more healthy tomatoes with GM and less healthy tomatoes without GM. Muahahaha!
      • by znrt ( 2424692 )

        well, they look good but it is still not clear that they are healthier. for starters, excess vitamin d is a health problem too, but other than that you can't really rule out that this modification has absolutely no other side effects. this will have to be tested.

        • you can't really rule out that this modification has absolutely no other side effects.

          The same is true for conventional tomatoes. Every generation has a few dozen random mutations. You can't rule out that they have absolutely no side effects either.

          The only safe option is to refuse to eat.

          • The only safe option is to refuse to eat.

            Vegans come fairly close to that don't they?

            • Not close enough!

              Bada boosh

            • by znrt ( 2424692 )

              nope, not even remotely. actually vegans would need to eat *more* as they tend to consume less energy dense food, but that cancels out with the fact that most people in developed countries (where veganism is a thing except india) overeat. the problem never was energy, but nutrients (aka, like provitamin d3 to stay on topic). so with the increased variety, while eating the same amount a vegan tipically obtains more than enough energy from food to sustain him/herself without becoming a fat butt, but gets a ri

          • by znrt ( 2424692 )

            bullshit. i mean, yes, but not the same. albeit possible, random mutations should statistically produce changes nowhere near as drastic as this targeted editing. this change completely neutralized one enzyme suppressing a chemical process that has been working for millions of years in tomatoes and in which accumulation of provitamin d3 is just one aspect. note that this particular research hasn't even measured the levels of provitamin d3, just "calculated them", let alone tracing the full implications of th

      • There are already commercially grown GM crops that are healthier than conventional varieties.

        Golden Rice [wikipedia.org]

      • Tomatoes don't have significant fat value shit for brains. D3 is fat soluble and needs a certain amount of fat to be present in the digestive system in order to be absorbed by the human body. So anyone eating one of these tomatoes without an accompanying fat source is not eating the more healthy tomato because it does jack fucking shit for them.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • RDA (Score:4, Informative)

    by michaelmalak ( 91262 ) <michael@michaelmalak.com> on Monday May 23, 2022 @11:07PM (#62560478) Homepage

    Or, the FDA could just correct the RDA, which was set based on a statistical error [nih.gov]. It needs to be increased by a factor of 13, from 600 IU to 8000 IU.

    This, BTW, is the reason one finds D-3 pill bottles labeled "5000 IU" with the odd instructions of "take one every other day". It's so the FDA doesn't get after them, even though everyone knows the FDA's RDA is based on an error.

    • Re:RDA (Score:4, Informative)

      by Vegan Cyclist ( 1650427 ) on Monday May 23, 2022 @11:59PM (#62560566) Homepage

      Dunno about that:

      To put those doses in context, 600 IU is the recommended daily amount of vitamin D for adults through age 70; 800 IU is recommended for people above age 70; 4,000 IU is considered to be the upper end of the tolerable intake level; and 10,000 IU is considered a megadose, well beyond what is typically advised, says Dr. Manson.

      Via: https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/too-much-vitamin-d-may-harm-bones-not-help [harvard.edu]

      My own supplement is 1000 IU, recommended once a day.

      • Have you had your own Vitamin D levels checked in a blood test?
        • by jbengt ( 874751 )
          Not the poster you were responding to, but my doctor has had my Vitamin D levels checked in blood tests. He prescribed 50,000 IU capsules to be taken once a week. Then, next time, he said that I could just buy off-the-shelf 5,000 IU vitamin D supplements and take them once a day.
          A lot depends on your exposure to sunlight and your diet. If you're a dark-skinned person working indoors in high latitudes in the winter, without taking supplements you're almost certainly deficient in vitamin D. My blood tes
        • Yup, well within healthy ranges. I race bikes tho, so probably get more sun than many in the PNW.

      • IIRC 10,000 IU is 1mg.

        It's not LSD-25.

    • Or you could just go outside more often. We're perfectly capable of making enough vitamin D ourselves when our skin is exposed to sunlight. Apparently, it doesn't take much. Dietary supplements have little to no scientific evidence of beneficial effects under usual circumstances (Although, Doctors do recommend them for specific people at specific times). Also, there's apparently still a lot we need to learn about interactions between micro-nutrient intake & health. I also remember reading an article abo
      • I can just see fast food chains being very interested in this: Supersize Big Mac, fries & a milkshake... but the slice of tomato has extra vitamin D!
  • by wakeboarder ( 2695839 ) on Monday May 23, 2022 @11:16PM (#62560492)

    Since vitamin D comes in just about every food product these days.

  • It's all very well to have essential nutrients edited into crops, but if they started with a sh*t tasting tomato it's not going to do anyone any good. The standard "bred for transport" ones we mostly see are just nasty, and no amount of vit-D is going to make them more attractive.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by vivian ( 156520 )

      I never knew what I was missing until I tasted some home grown cherry tomatoes from a friend that he grew from heirloom seed strain, that hadn't been refrigerated.
      Apparently even just refrigerating tomatoes destroys a lot of their flavour.
      I never tasted such a rich, full and delicious tomato flavour before in my life, and the pasta sauce I made from some of them was completely different too.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Pretty much all genetically modified tomatoes taste like shit compared to heirlooms. It doesn't even matter if they are grown home, and harvested and ate right off the vine, they still taste like tasteless watery crap compared to heirlooms. A large part of the reason is due to trying to get them to become disease resistant.

  • What does it taste like?

  • Or, and I'm just thinking out loud here, you can eat healthy and get plenty of sunshine.

    Crazy, but it might just work.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • I, too, shunned the daystar in my youth, but it's not our enemy.

        I like to think of it more as a cruel mistress.

        • It literally gives you skin cancer. Pass.

          • Think that's bad, just wait until you learn about the dangers of DHMO.

            It kills countless people every year, and they still put it in everything!

            • by jbengt ( 874751 )
              You make a joke, but for us light-skinned people, skin cancer from exposure to the sun is a serious possibility.
              My red-headed wife had melanoma; fortunately it was removed before it spread too far beyond the original tumor.
              Not as serious, but almost everyone in my family has gotten basal cell and/or squamous cell carcinoma in their old age (or earlier).
    • by jbengt ( 874751 )
      If you work indoors and live at high latitudes, you are very probably not getting enough sunshine to keep your vitamin D levels up, at least not in the winter, and especially not if you're dark-skinned.
  • by Grokew ( 8384065 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @02:05AM (#62560750)
    Tomatoes used to be sweet, with some umami hints. Now the ones sold at Walmart are flavorless. Some may have an almost salty or metallic taste. What's the point of "enhancing" something if you are going to ruin what made it special on the first place? Need vitamin D? Go outside for a while, reduce your caffeine intake.
    • by Required Snark ( 1702878 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @02:57AM (#62560794)
      Either buy at a farmer's market or get cherry/grape tomatoes.

      Even before GMO tomatoes were being bred to be more firm so they would ship and store better. Additionally they were bred to ripen uniformly so the top near the stem would not stay green and unripe. That was a purely marketing visual goal. All the pink bullet tomatoes you find at most grocery stores are the product of this horrible process. They have crappy texture and almost no flavor.

      Very small tomatoes ripen all at once and there was no need to make them more firm for shipping. Whatever genetic characteristics that were selected for have not had much impact on the taste. Farmer's markets produce is direct from the farm and the growers use varieties that are about flavor instead of shelf life and shipping. They are picked ripe as well.

      Personally I avoid grocery store produce and eat seasonally. It means I don't eat some veggies when they are not in season, but what I do eat is always fresh and flavorful.

      Spring carrots rock!

    • Tomatoes used to be sweet, with some umami hints. Now the ones sold at Walmart are flavorless. Some may have an almost salty or metallic taste. What's the point of "enhancing" something if you are going to ruin what made it special on the first place?

      Profit.

      And since you're a paying customer buying metallic tomatoes in stores, you kind of answered your own question with your wallet.

    • Exactly. Go outside and convert some cholesterol into vitamin D3. Its an absolute embarrassment to humanity that any of us are low on D3, because it shows we are indoors *way* to much. Couple that with the studies that show indoor air quality is usually *abysmal* and its no wonder health problems seem to be increasing.
    • It's not sweetness you're missing.

      It's sourness. Those tomatoes have PLENTY of sweetness, plenty of sugars. They lack the sourness/acidity that would allow you to notice the sweetness.

      As an experiment - take some of your bland tomatoes, and add a bit (like a teaspoon) of vinegar or lemon juice to them. Let it gel a bit, wipe them off, and they'll taste sweeter. Cook it into them, and it'll taste super-sweet. Salts can also help, but acid I find is the biggest missing element.

      Same thing with bland straw

  • Those pallid, pale, pasty vegans can now get their vitamin D, yay!
  • It's an old Dilbert joke. I thought it might have an audience here.

  • We are getting closer and closer to making Attack of the Killer Tomatoes a reality, I see.
  • > Scientists have created genetically edited tomatoes, each containing as much provitamin
    > D3 -- the precursor to vitamin D -- as two eggs or a tablespoon of tuna

    So that's two of the ingredients of a Salad Nicose that are no longer needed?

  • Tomatoes are much less tasty these days than genuine heritage tomatoes because they were bred to be a uniform red that appeals to consumers. Flavor was diminished but as usual uninformed consumers with uneducated palates let it pass.
    So now I wonder what the "cost" will be from this "tweak".
    TANSTAAFL is still the rule.

"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." -- Bertrand Russell

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