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)

 Vitamins  
  Profile News67GalleryLinks  
  Many 'Natural' Products Make Dubious Claims (2009-02-19)
  Huge study boosts disappointment on multivitamins (2009-02-09)
  Study finds one-third of US kids take vitamins (2009-02-02)
  Millions of older Americans use risky drug combos (2008-12-24)
  Scientists find nutty risk reducer: Eat more nuts (2008-12-10)
  About 1 in 9 US kids use alternative medicine (2008-12-10)
  Men Are Red-Faced, Women Greenish (2008-12-08)
  AP IMPACT: Govt pays millions for unapproved drugs (2008-11-23)
  Studies: Vitamin pills don't prevent heart disease (2008-11-09)
  Pediatricians double vitamin D recommendations (2008-10-13)
  Vitamin C reduces benefits of cancer drugs: study (2008-10-01)
  Vitamin C injections slow cancer in mice: study (2008-08-04)
  Lack of sunshine vitamin may cloud survival odds (2008-06-23)
  Vitamin D helps colorectal cancer patients: study (2008-06-18)
  Health Tip: Getting Calcium If You're Lactose Intolerant (2008-06-11)
  Probiotics weight loss after bypass surgery (2008-05-23)
  Vitamin D may help curb breast cancer, study finds (2008-05-15)
  B vitamins fail to cut heart risk in study (2008-05-06)
  Vitamin D found to guard against artery disease (2008-04-16)
  Medicine mix-ups harm hospitalized kids (2008-04-07)
  Vitamin pills don't cut lung cancer risk: Study (2008-02-29)
  Men as well as women need bone tests (2008-02-25)
  Premature births lower in women taking folic acid (2008-01-31)
  Scientists find way to increase corn's vitamin A (2008-01-18)
  More sun is healthy, despite skin cancer risk, study says (2008-01-07)


Stories Coverages

NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
 ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 


[2009 Tiger Woods Accident]: Police: Woods at fault in crash, will get citation (17:28 12/1)


[2009 US Health Reform]: Tempers rise as Senate moves toward health vote (17:28 12/1)


[111th Congress]: Tempers rise as Senate moves toward health vote (17:28 12/1)

[Afghan Terror War]: Obama: 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan by summer (17:28 12/1)


[2009 GM Bankruptcy]: GM CEO Henderson resigns after 8 turbulent months (17:28 12/1)


[2009 White House Party-crasher]: Salahi denies being White House party-crasher (08:48 12/1)


[Iran-U.K.]: Iran warns of tough action against British sailors (08:48 12/1)


[2009 Dubai Debt Crisis]: Dubai: World lacks understanding of debt crisis (03:48 12/1)

[2008 U.S. Recession]: Economic reports signal modest growth ahead (17:28 12/1)

[Iran Nuclear Crisis]: Russia shifts stance on Iran, Ahmadinejad defiant (17:28 12/1)



Muzi.com

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