Chew on this: Scientists develop GM purple rice that can cut cancer, diabetes risk | Health - Hindustan Times
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Chew on this: Scientists develop GM purple rice that can cut cancer, diabetes risk

Press Trust of India, Beijing | By
Jun 28, 2017 02:24 PM IST

There have been many attempts to produce genetically modified purple rice in the past.

You may soon be buying genetically modified purple rice in your local supermarket. Chinese scientists have created genetically modified purple rice that can reduce the risk of certain cancers, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and other chronic disorders. Researchers developed approach capable of delivering many genes at once and used it to make rice endosperm - seed tissue that provides nutrients to the developing plant embryo - produce high levels of antioxidant-boosting pigments called anthocyanins.

Purple rice may reduce risk of certain cardiovascular disease and chronic disorders.(Shutterstock)
Purple rice may reduce risk of certain cardiovascular disease and chronic disorders.(Shutterstock)

“We have developed a highly efficient, easy-to-use transgene stacking system called TransGene Stacking II that enables the assembly of a large number of genes in single vectors for plant transformation,” said Yao-Guang Liu of the South China Agricultural University. “We envisage that this vector system will have many potential applications in this era of synthetic biology and metabolic engineering,” said Liu. To date, genetic engineering approaches have been used to develop rice enriched in beta-carotene and folate, but not anthocyanins. Although these health-promoting compounds are naturally abundant in some black and red rice varieties, they are absent in polished rice grains because the husk, bran, and germ have been removed, leaving only the endosperm.

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Previous attempts to engineer anthocyanin production in rice have failed because the underlying biosynthesis pathway is highly complex, and it has been difficult to efficiently transfer many genes into plants. To address this challenge, researchers first set out to identify the genes required to engineer anthocyanin production in the rice endosperm. To do so, they analysed sequences of anthocyanin pathway genes in different rice varieties and pinpointed the defective genes in japonica and indica subspecies that do not produce anthocyanins. Based on this analysis, they developed a transgene stacking strategy for expressing eight anthocyanin pathway genes specifically in the endosperm of the japonica and indica rice varieties.

The resulting purple endosperm rice had high anthocyanin levels and antioxidant activity in the endosperm. “This is the first demonstration of engineering such a complex metabolic pathway in plants,” Liu said. In the future, this transgene stacking vector system could be used to develop plant bioreactors for the production of many other important nutrients and medicinal ingredients. For their own part, the researchers plan to evaluate the safety of purple endosperm rice as biofortified food, and they will also try to engineer the biosynthesis of anthocyanins in other crops to produce more purple endosperm cereals.

“Our research provides a high-efficiency vector system for stacking multiple genes for synthetic biology and makes it potentially feasible for engineering complex biosynthesis pathways in the endosperm of rice and other crop plants such as maize, wheat, and barley,” Liu said.

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