Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Headlines | Photos | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  Scientists find way to increase corn's vitamin A
Last updated: 2008-01-18


Scientists find way to increase corn's vitamin A
2008-01-18

Category
Vitamins
University
Cornell University
U.S. scientists have developed a way to breed corn that can boost the vitamin A it gives people who eat it -- a potentially important advance for regions of the world burdened by vitamin A deficiencies.

Vitamin A deficiency is an important cause of eye disease and other health problems in developing countries.

Corn, also known as maize, is the dominant subsistence crop in much of Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa, where up to 30 percent of children under age 5 are vitamin A deficient.

Scientists want to come up with ways to increase -- or "bio-fortify" -- levels of specific nutrients in crops like corn. Corn has precursors to vitamin A -- compounds called "provitamins" including beta-carotene -- which the body uses to make vitamin A.

Writing on Thursday in the journal Science, the scientists identified a naturally mutated gene that enhances the provitamin A content of maize. Based on this, they developed an inexpensive way to select the parent stock for breeding corn with the highest provitamin A content.

Choosing varieties that have this mutated gene can provide on average three-fold higher levels of provitamin A, the researchers said.

There are thousands of different corn varieties, and they differ greatly in provitamin A levels, the scientists said. White corn does not have provitamin A, but yellow varieties have it in varying levels.

A common existing technique for assessing the provitamin A content of corn varieties can be prohibitively expensive for plant breeders, the researchers said, but the new one is vastly less expensive.

"We've come up with a way to detect varieties that will produce high levels of provitamin A inexpensively," said one of the researchers, geneticist Edward Buckler of the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.

Buckler said the method does not involve the genetic modification of corn.

"Vitamin A deficiency is a big problem throughout the world, and it causes a lot of childhood blindness and a lot of immune deficiencies," Buckler said in a telephone interview.

Experts say vitamin A plays a key role in vision, bone growth, regulating the immune system and other functions.

"In parts of Africa, they eat maize three meals a day. And so if you can bio-fortify what they're eating a lot of, even just a small amount, it adds up," Torbert Rocheford, a professor of plant genetics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign who also worked on the study, said in a telephone interview.

(Editing by Maggie Fox and Kristin Roberts)

 Cornell University   Vitamins 
  Profile1 News51Gallery21Links  
  Shock and caw: Pesky starlings still overwhelm (2009-09-07)
  Kids Prefer Veggies With Cool Names (2009-03-02)
  Loan Crisis Hits the MBA World (2009-01-26)
  America's Best High Schools (2009-01-16)
  Mosquitoes match wing beats before mating (2009-01-08)
  Wanted: More science and math teachers in the US (2008-12-29)
  Business Schools Urged to Diversify (2008-12-20)
  Office Emails Loaded with Lies (2008-09-25)
  Big Brother's cafe watches you eat (2008-09-22)
  US researchers call off controversial autism study (2008-09-18)
  Border Patrol also guards against foreign bugs (2008-09-04)
  Despite myth, old age is the happiest time, research says (2008-04-18)
  Gene studies confirm "out of Africa" theories (2008-02-20)
  In Microsoft vs. Google, search is true prize (2008-02-04)
  Scientists find way to increase corn's vitamin A (2008-01-18)
  Nanotech firms find room on campus (2007-12-10)
  Antidepressant warnings scared parents, doctors (2007-09-09)
  Mars rover to make risky crater descent (2007-06-28)
  Study: Fat workers cost employers more (2007-04-23)
  Novelist Kurt Vonnegut dies at age 84 (2007-04-12)
  Pet food recall expands to new wet brand (2007-03-31)
  Recall expanded to some dry cat food (2007-03-30)
  Spinal Disc Transplant Shows Promise Against Back Pain (2007-03-23)
  Scientists show that asteroids are solar powered (2007-03-07)
  Ice cream may aid fertility for some (2007-02-27)
Related Events
  • Chinese Scholar Arrest Case
  • China Diplomacy
  • U.S. Diplomacy
  • China-U.S.

  • Stories Coverages

    NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
     ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 
    [Afghan Terror War]: Obama sets new Afghan strategy, briefs allies (22:46 11/30)


    [2009 US Health Reform]: Emotions high, Senate opens partisan health debate (22:46 11/30)


    [111th Congress]: Emotions high, Senate opens partisan health debate (22:46 11/30)

    [Iran Nuclear Crisis]: Iran enrichment plans largely bluster, experts say (17:46 11/30)


    [Holocaust]: 'Nazi guard' Demjanjuk to face Holocaust survivors (22:46 11/30)

    [China-U.S.]: US and China to reduce emissions, but not enough (22:24 11/27)


    [2009 Dubai Debt Crisis]: Stocks slide on concerns about Dubai debt fallout (16:24 11/27)

    [U.S. Markets]: Stocks slide on concerns about Dubai debt fallout (16:24 11/27)


    [Black Friday]: Shoppers pack stores as holiday season revs up (08:58 11/27)


    [European Markets]: Dubai debt fears remain focus in world markets (08:58 11/27)



    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.