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Cottonseeds
to Check Malnourishment?
A new study claims to turn toxic cottonseeds
into nutritious dinners for millions of undernourished people
across the world. Keerti Rathore, a scientist at the Texas
Agricultural Experiment Station, has tinkered with the genes
in cottonseeds to stop the release of gossypol, its naturally-occurring
toxin.
If cottonseeds become edible, it is estimated
that the protein needs (cotton seeds contain 22 per cent high-quality
protein) of over 500 million people will be met.
And it will make cotton a multi-utility crop-use the cotton
for textiles and the seed as food. Rathore's work was published
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (online,
November 16, 2006).
Glandless Cotton
In the 1950s, a group developed 'glandless cotton' without
gossypol. But these varieties were weak in terms of pest-resistance.
Gossypol protects the plant's stems, leaves and seeds by inhibiting
breeding and multiplication of pests.
After the discovery of a glandless mutant,
several breeding programmes were launched in the us, Africa,
and Asia, to transfer the glandless trait into commercial
varieties to produce gossypol-free cottonseed. These programmes
provided cottonseed that could be fed to monogastric animals
that use feed more efficiently and was even deemed safe for
human consumption. However, these varieties were a commercial
failure. Besides, these were susceptible to pest-attacks and
farmers rejected the variety.
"What we did was a little different.
We used a technique called rna interface, or rna, to suppress
one of the key genes that was responsible for the production
of gossypol only in the seeds. This meant that the natural
supply of gossypol to the rest of the plant remained intact
but at the same time, the seeds became a no-entry zone. Thus
the plant had its armoury to fight pests while the seeds remained
non-toxic," Rathore said. Gossypol is also known to be
a strong male contraceptive-it deactivates sperms. By making
the seeds gossypol-free, the scientists have taken care of
any adverse side-effects.
The novelty of the team's research was
that they targeted the seeds' gossypol content. This toxin
is found in cottonseeds almost on its own without any association
with any other kind of toxin. However, in the rest of the
plant, gossypol shows up hand-in-hand with similar plant toxins
like heliocides h1, h2, h3 and h4. Rathore and his colleagues
used this information to overcome the shortcomings of the
glandless cotton variety developed earlier. They then used
molecular tools to find out the exclusive gossypol content
and suppress it.
Not fully proven
Rathore cautions that the research is still at the stage of
greenhouse trials. Field studies will be conducted over the
next five to six years. However, in experimental greenhouse
farms, the no-gossypol variety has stood its ground.
Gossypol values in the seeds from some
of the cottonseed lines produced by the group are well below
the limit deemed safe for human consumption by who and the
Food and Agriculture Organization. However, the introduction
of transgenic cottonseed may be delayed in India as the country's
top gm regulator, the Genetic Engineering Approval Committee,
is yet to approve any gm crop for human consumption.
Source: Invention
Intelligence, April 2007

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