Modified cotton could be human food
source after U.S. green light
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[October 19, 2018]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. regulators have
cleared the way for farmers to grow a cotton plant genetically modified
to make the cottonseed edible for people, a protein-packed potential new
food source that could be especially useful in cotton-growing countries
beset with malnutrition.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service on Tuesday lifted the regulatory prohibition on cultivation by
farmers of the cotton plant, which was developed by Texas A&M University
scientists. The plant's cottonseed cannot be used as food for people or
as animal feed yet in the United States because it lacks Food and Drug
Administration approval.
Cotton is widely grown around the world, with its fiber used to make
textiles and the cottonseed used among other things to feed animals such
as cattle and sheep that have multiple stomach chambers. Ordinary
cottonseed is unfit for humans and many animals to eat because it
contains high levels of gossypol, a toxic chemical.
With financial help from a cotton industry group, scientists led by
Texas A&M AgriLife Research plant biotechnologist Keerti Rathore used
so-called RNAi, or RNA interference, technology to "silence" a gene,
virtually eliminating gossypol from the cottonseed. They left gossypol
at natural levels in the rest of the plant because it guards against
insects and disease.
"To me, personally, it tastes somewhat like chickpea and it could easily
be used to make a tasty hummus," Rathore said of gossypol-free
cottonseed.
After cottonseed oil, which can be used for cooking, is extracted, the
remaining high-protein meal from the new cotton plant can find many
uses, Rathore said.
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An experimental cotton plant is shown at a Texas A&M research
facility in this handout image provided by the Texas A&M University
College of Agriculture and Life Sciences in College Station, Texas,
U.S., on October 17, 2018. Courtesy Lacey Roberts/Texas A&M
University/Handout via REUTERS
It can be turned into flour for use in breads, tortillas and other
baked goods and used in protein bars, while whole cottonseed
kernels, roasted and salted, can be consumed as a snack or to create
a peanut butter type of paste, Rathore added.
If all of the cottonseed currently produced worldwide were used for
human nutrition, it could meet the daily protein requirements of
about 575 million people, Rathore said.
Other countries would have to give regulatory approval for the new
cotton plant to be grown, though U.S. regulatory action often is
taken into consideration.
The new cottonseed's biggest commercial use may be as feed for
poultry, swine and farmed aquatic species like fish and shrimp,
Rathore said.
Many of the world's roughly 80 cotton-producing countries,
especially in Asia and Africa, have populations that face
malnutrition that could be addressed with the new plant, Rathore
added.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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