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Scientists Create Genetically Modified ‘Super Banana’ That Could Save Thousands of Children’s Lives
Evening Standard ^ | 7/10 | Liz Connor

Posted on 07/10/2017 3:11:16 PM PDT by nickcarraway

Vitamin A deficiency is one of the leading causes of children's deaths in Uganda - but scientists hope that a new superfruit could significantly lower the statistics

It is also the leading cause of preventable blindness - and can significantly increase the risk of disease from severe infections.

Now scientists in Australia have developed a revolutionary ‘super’ banana, rich in pro-vitamin A, which could save the lives of the hundreds of thousands of children who die from this deficiency every year.

The golden-fleshed fruit was created by researchers from Queensland University of Technology, who have been growing the biofortified bananas for over the last 10 years - thanks to $7.6 million in funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The bananas were created by taking genes from a species of provitamin A-rich banana found in Papa New Guinea, which only grows in small bunches.

Scientists then fused it with the ‘household’ Cavendish banana - the bunches which are produced in mass which most people are familiar with seeing in the supermarket.

The result is an unusual orange-coloured banana that could significantly increase the vitamin intake of the consumer.

Writing in Wiley’s Plant Biotechnology journal, Professor James Dale, who led the research, said: “Over the years, we’ve been able to develop a banana that has achieved excellent provitamin A levels, hence the golden-orange rather than cream-coloured flesh.”

The team have already trialled growing the bananas in Australia, where the fruit exceeded expectations by producing double the level of provitamin A than expected.

“Achieving these scientific results along with their publication, is a major milestone in our quest to deliver a more nutritional diet to some of the poorest subsistence communities in Africa,” Prof Dale said. “Our science works. We tried and tested hundreds of different genetic variations here in our lab and in field trials in Queensland until we got the best results.

"These elite genes have been sent to Uganda in test tubes where they have been inserted into Ugandan bananas for field trials there.”

Scientists are now keen to test the results of growing the bananas in East Africa, where cooked bananas are already a staple part of of the country’s diet.

Despite scientists making significant in roads in reducing vitamin A deficiency worldwide, research has found that the deficiency in children aged between six months and five years in Uganda has increased from 20 percent in 2006 to 38 per cent in 2011.

If initial field trials are successful, the researchers hope that their bananas will be self-sufficiently grown by Ugandan farmers by as early as 2021.


TOPICS: Food; Health/Medicine; Science
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To: goodnesswins

It says that the information on “Dr. Jonathan V Wright and foot neuropathy” is a hoax.


41 posted on 07/10/2017 9:31:18 PM PDT by 353FMG
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To: nickcarraway

“Banana Man”, champion for all children?


42 posted on 07/10/2017 9:32:08 PM PDT by GingisK
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To: tbw2
So I've heard.

Also read that the higher IQs for Asians is for SE Asians that have emigrated to the west though I think Japan and S Korea have a highly educated population.

India, quite a bit of China and SW Asia not so much.

43 posted on 07/10/2017 10:42:13 PM PDT by Eagles6 (My weapons are lubricated by liberal tears.)
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To: Pelham
Some more music to go with the banana theme...
"Chiquita Banana"

"Yes, We Have No Bananas"

44 posted on 07/10/2017 11:09:13 PM PDT by Songcraft
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To: tbw2

> Hence the average IQ for blacks around 85 versus 100 for whites and 105 for Asians.

Black IQ in Africa is about 70. Black IQ in America is 85. The 105 IQ for east Asians doesn’t factor in Chinese peasants which are pretty stupid by most accounts. So we don’t have an accurate measurement for east Asia, but it’s clearly pretty high. Highest IQ group in the world is Ashkenazi Jews with an average IQ 112. White IQ has been dropping and is sitting around 97-98 right now white some countries like Germany at 99 and some like Portugal and the Ukraine at 93.


45 posted on 07/10/2017 11:11:51 PM PDT by JohnyBoy
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To: nickcarraway

What a marketing ploy - bet it would be a lot cheaper and convenient to just ensure those in danger got Vitamin A supplements....


46 posted on 07/11/2017 2:56:35 AM PDT by trebb (Where in the the hell has my country gone?)
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To: BlueDragon

Coulda been worse.

Think: braunschweiger.


47 posted on 07/11/2017 5:00:34 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Stone cold sober, as a matter of fact.)
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To: Veto!

Right. Can’t have wild young banana trees coming up all over the place.


48 posted on 07/11/2017 5:04:59 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Stone cold sober, as a matter of fact.)
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To: Mrs. Don-o

I make a point of never buying any when passing through Arkansas.

49 posted on 07/11/2017 6:12:40 AM PDT by BlueDragon (whattya' mean you don't believe in Climate Change? the weather always seems to be changing...)
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To: BlueDragon

My braunschweiger comes from some bucolic Lutherans in Iowa. Nothing but the best.


50 posted on 07/11/2017 6:51:00 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Stone cold sober, as a matter of fact.)
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To: 353FMG

Haha...and Mayo Clinic is a hoax...hahaha


51 posted on 07/11/2017 7:02:43 AM PDT by goodnesswins (Say hello to President Trump)
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To: Mrs. Don-o

Now you're talking.

It may not have been one of those fugitive flashes ---but it was solid.

In other news, according to this; http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/iron-deficiency-anemia/manage/ptc-20266647

I didn't know that either.

Now you can have watermelon with your spinach.

Sounds strange, but after a spinach salad (with hard boiled egg?) a nice fat slice of watermelon could be nice...

If you like fish, and whitefish would do, Arctic and Icelandic cod is waay better than cheaper tilapia (which is fresh water, farm raised, often imported from China)

Whether the cod would those have more iron - I don't know, but would guess it's likely they would. The point of this jabbering is grilled fish crumbled up in a nice salad can be good. Everyone has heard about Crab Louis (salad). Substitute whitefish, and there ya' go.

One recipe --- in normal iron skillet --- hot oil (not too hot) add one teaspoon of soy, and one tablespoon of vinegar. Quickly ---add fish fillets. I say quickly because when the oil is hot, it will begin bubbling and steaming the vinegar and soy. Heat for 3 minutes on one side (for a one inch thick fillet, possible less for thinner pieces), turn the fillet over in the pan and heat for 2 minutes more. Remove and drain on paper, and paper towels -- whatever. The fish should easily break apart, allowing one to crumble it into salad (spinach, maybe some red lettuce). I would go ahead and put the fish right into the salad and use a fork to gently break it up, instead of dirtying up yet another bowl, or plate.

Before you know it, you'll be good as new. And just think of all the fun you could have -- if you use enough hard boiled eggs, a while later you could hold your hand out to Mr. Don-o, and say "pull my finger". Take care with that last, however. Ask oneself -- "dry trumpet?" -- or if not, well, then don't try it.

52 posted on 07/11/2017 7:54:30 AM PDT by BlueDragon (whattya' mean you don't believe in Climate Change? the weather always seems to be changing...)
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To: BlueDragon

Need your expert advice on the fish: can you put the fillets in the pan frozen, and just cook them, say, a minute more? Or should you thaw them first, and if so, how to best do that quickly without turning everything into mush.

After the fugitive ferritin.

Thankew.

Not iron-y challenged, but (Tagline)


53 posted on 07/11/2017 8:41:22 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Stone cold sober, as a matter of fact.)
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To: Mrs. Don-o
I don't think trying to cook frozen fillets would work, not unless a slow cook, and not in a pan where there was direct heat, more on one side.

Thawing fish in a plastic bag can work. Put the bag in a large bowl, add water. Or even not, but water, being denser than air conducts heat better. Tap water temps are best. Some warmth to the water when first beginning thawing is ok, if there's more than say -- a pound of fish to thaw? The water will get cold to the touch fairly quickly. Normal 'cold' tap water can suffice. With the pacaged frozen tilapia I have bought recently (each fillet in it's own sealed plastic, many of those to one larger bag) I thaw them in water when quick-thawing, even though the package says don't do that.

If the fish is too mushy -- try some other kind of fish next time around? I dunno... too many variables...

Salmon may be high in iron? I do favor the Pacific kind over the farm raised Atlantic.

Pacific King salmon (chinook) especially...but info I'm reading now indicates spinach to have 1.7X iron content than most tuna and salmon.

In descending order of favoritism from Kings; Red salmon (sockeye, often canned, but costs a lot more than pink salmon), Silver salmon (coho) sometimes seen in fish markets and grocery stores, but relatively seldom, Dog salmon (chum) no often marketed nationwide, and of course there's the ubiquitous pink salmon (humpies) in the can. The kings are $ure high in co$t though. But fresh king salmon on a smokey barbecue -- oh, yeah.

I don't know if swordfish steaks are high in iron (they might be) but they can be high in mercury. Some of that heavy metal stuff, you know? I hear big tunas can be high in mercury (it varies from fish to fish, depending on where they've been all their lives, I think).

Just now I went looking for nutritional info for tuna. That would vary depending on type, but then still be somewhat comparable to one another at the same time.

I'm not recommending Starkist as some kind of "better" canned tuna. It's not, really -- I used to favor Bumble Bee because West Coast fisherman sold albacore to Bumble Bee for decades after Starkist pretty much went away, and didn't transship from the West Coast to wherever they had canneries. BUT Starkist has a web page on 'solid white' albacore. Iron levels, expressed as percentage (of daily recommended allowance I assume) are low at 2% for about half a five ounce can, but are high for Selenium -- 70% -- which you may be a bit low in also?

For albacore in the can, if not satisfied with the normal Starkist/ Bumble Bee / whatever brand X import, I can recommend the canned albacore at Whole Foods. Last I bought it I could get a 5 ounce can (in water) for about $2 --=maybe $2.50. The tuna packed in oil would be about $4. Why that much difference, I do not know? High quality olive oil maybe? BUT -- the fish come from American hook-and-line tuna fisherman -- most all the tuna was bled and blast frozen at sea (instead of brine frozen -- which can add salt) and each can is labeled on the bottom for what boat it supposedly came from.

Too much info. Sorry. Fetching iron content info for farmed tilapia, and catfish may have been a better use of my time, and yours.

I do wonder though, about trace minerals possibly associated with iron, and iron deficiency. In the back of my mind -- it seems I've run across mentions of something along those lines, sort-of comparable to how calcium uptake can be dependent upon presence of magnesium, and vitamin D.

Have your husband research it for you? You've got bucolic Lutherans in Ohio to go visit.

54 posted on 07/11/2017 9:48:15 AM PDT by BlueDragon (whattya' mean you don't believe in Climate Change? the weather always seems to be changing...)
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To: Mrs. Don-o
Did I say Ohio? what was I thinking? too much mercury -- it's made me crazy.

Iowa, I meant. Although there's maybe a Lutheran with the real deal braunschweiger in Ohio too? There's gotta' be, somewhere.

55 posted on 07/11/2017 10:01:07 AM PDT by BlueDragon (whattya' mean you don't believe in Climate Change? the weather always seems to be changing...)
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To: BlueDragon

Thanks for your fishy ideas. I’m gonna try with whatever kind of finnies we have in the freezer.

Vitamin C will definitely multiply (threefold) the (extremely low, 3%) normal availability of veggie non-heme iron, bumping it up to 9%. Adding a small amount of heme-iron source (like meat/fish/shellfish) will multiply the whole whole plateful another threefold, bumping it up to 27% availability, which is considered fah-ha-habulous.

If you’re normal.

I am, regrettably, not normal—

Duh, what was I talking about? Oh yeah, not normal -—

... and I can’t absorb non-heme iron AT ALL. So all that spinach, pumpkin seeds, and so forth, is wasted in my dubious duodenum.

Bye for now, I’m fryin’ some fish to combat my brain fog. I’m turning into a daggone radical in-iron-mentalist.


56 posted on 07/11/2017 10:40:59 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Stone cold sober, as a matter of fact.)
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To: nickcarraway
I thought bananas were supposed to be going extinct?


57 posted on 07/11/2017 1:57:07 PM PDT by Sans-Culotte (Time to get the US out of the UN and the UN out of the US!)
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