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Europe Deals A Blow To CRISPR Technology, U.S. Approves 'Bleeding' Veggie Burger
NPR ^ | August 4, 201811:14 AM ET | Jill Neimark

Posted on 08/04/2018 9:21:13 PM PDT by BenLurkin

Last week was a momentous one for the future of genetically engineered foods, both in the U.S. and in Europe. On July 24, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the Impossible Burger, an all-veggie burger that "bleeds" and sizzles just like meat. The burger's star ingredient — a protein called heme that renders blood red and helps make meat a carnivore's delight — was granted GRAS (generally recognized as safe) status. In 2015, the FDA had required that the $400 million Silicon Valley startup, Impossible Foods, demonstrate that their heme, made by genetically modified yeast, was safe.

But across the pond, two days later, Europe's highest court issued a very different decision: it ruled that in Europe, gene-edited crops should be subject to the same strict regulations the continent uses for genetically modified (GM) organisms. It was a major setback for advocates of genetically engineered crops.

Predictable reactions followed. While Impossible Foods celebrated its approval, an environmental advocacy organization Friends of the Earth (FOE) called the FDA ruling tremendously disappointing. Dana Perls, senior food and agriculture campaigner for FOE, says the ruling "is exactly why we need an overhaul of our regulations with the USDA [U.S. Department of Agriculture] and the FDA." Meanwhile, Nigel Halford, a crop geneticist at Rothamsted Research in Harpenden, UK, told Nature News that the European ruling was "a real hit to the head," noting that companies in Europe will not be willing to invest in a technology with no commercial application.

Gene editing can take many forms, in both medicine and agriculture. For Impossible Foods, the goal was to produce a lab-based vegetarian burger (it contains flecks of coconut fat, along with textured wheat and potato protein) that tasted and cooked just like meat, and help meet the global demand for beef without the carbon footprint. Company founder Patrick Brown, a biochemist at Stanford University, discovered that nodules on the roots of soy make small amounts of heme.

He took the soybean gene that encodes the heme protein and inserted it in yeast. The modified yeast is able to produce huge quantities of the blood-like molecule, in vats of frothy red liquid. Each vat produces enough heme to make 20,000 quarter-pound burgers.

But even though heme itself is a molecule found in all mammals, including in abundant quantities in our own bodies, the genetic editing of yeast as well as the soybean root source caused a fierce backlash. Perls worries the heme and other proteins in the food could be an allergen. However, these proteins are likely already in yeast we consume elsewhere, or in other products where yeast fermentation is used.

Molecular biologist Layla Katiraee, one of six Science Moms, mothers who advocate for science-based decisions in regard to children's nutrition and health, tried the

Impossible Burger and interviewed one of the firm's chief scientists. "I eat meat and love it, but last year our family made an effort to reduce our meat consumption. The Impossible Burger seemed like a really good option in terms of animal welfare and environmental sustainability."

Katiraee says she was "shocked at the 'frankenfood'-type backlash." Take the reaction of ETC Group, a nonprofit that looks at the socioeconomic and ecological issues surrounding new technologies. ETC was shrill in its condemnation of Impossible Burger last year: "The case of Impossible Burger raises concerns that surpass this one patty and implicates the extreme genetic engineering field of synthetic biology, particularly the new high-tech investor trend of "vat-itarian" foods (meat, dairy, and other animal proteins grown in a biotech vat instead of from an animal)," they wrote.

Yet the food industry already uses modified yeast and other microbes to produce key ingredients. Since the 1980s, rennet, the enzyme that turns milk into cheese, has been produced by genetically engineered microbes.

Traditionally, rennet had been extracted from the stomach lining of unweaned calves. And in the world of medicine, diabetics around the world inject genetically modified insulin daily.

"I think these advocacy groups worry that if a product like Impossible Burger is very successful, acceptance of genetically engineered food will grow," says Katiraee.

"It has always baffled me that the backlash to genetic engineering is in food but not medicine," wrote food and farm consultant Emanuel Farrow last week on a facebook group called Food and Farm Discussion Lab. "Genentech...[was] engineering medications already in the late 80s for market ... Monsanto releases GE tomatoes in the early 90s and people lose their minds."

Meanwhile, the European decision to regulate gene-edited crops as genetically modified crops directly impacts the use of a gene editing technique known as CRISPR for plants. The technique is currently being investigated for its medical value, including potential treatments for cancer or heritable diseases. CRISPR has been embroiled in its own scientific controversy, with researchers claiming it might cause new mutations, but correcting that finding in a follow-up study noting that no such mutations were seen in mice experiments. The European court's decision on CRISPR plants came in response to a lawsuit filed by FOE's branch in France. "People want real food grown by real farmers," says Perls.

Yet here, the USDA has no plans to regulate gene edited plants or crops. Their stance is that if no genetic material is added to a plant, it deserves no special regulation, and they have called the European ruling unfortunate.

Meanwhile, Impossible Burger is being served in several thousand restaurants around the U.S., and scientists like Katiraee approve: "I first tried it at a restaurant in Lansing, Michigan," she says. "It was prepared with white cheddar and crispy onions. Had I not been told that it was a plant based burger, I would never have known."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Food; Health/Medicine; Science
KEYWORDS: geneediting; gmo; gras; helixmakemineadouble; impossibleburger; monsanto; mysterymeat; no; soylentburger; tasteslikechicken; veganfrankenstein; veganmeataintmeat
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1 posted on 08/04/2018 9:21:13 PM PDT by BenLurkin
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To: BenLurkin

Very interesting


2 posted on 08/04/2018 9:26:08 PM PDT by gaijin
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To: BenLurkin

Soylent Green is...PEOPLE and this stuff is CRAP!


3 posted on 08/04/2018 9:32:26 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: BenLurkin

My biggest concern about artificial meat is what it will do to ranch lands which today feed cattle. For one, ranchers will go out of business, and two, grazing animals are actually critical to keeping grasslands healthy. If there is no one raising grazing animals, it could lead to more desertification of grasslands.


4 posted on 08/04/2018 9:32:44 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
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To: BenLurkin; gaijin

5 posted on 08/04/2018 9:33:18 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (You cannot invade the mainland US. There'd be a rifle behind every blade of grass.)
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To: BenLurkin

Democrats love aborted baby cells for genetic research. Democrats hate plant based genetic research. Frankenstein human body parts good for humans. Frankenstein plants parts not good for for plants. Western Europe is falling by the wayside of human history. Western Europe is for tourist and is a museum of long ago history and not much more.


6 posted on 08/04/2018 9:39:21 PM PDT by Trumpet 1 (US Constitution is my guide.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Humperdinks restaurants in DFW has been pushing the Impossible Burger for a few months now.

Now that I know what it is, I will have to try one some day.

7 posted on 08/04/2018 9:42:31 PM PDT by texas booster (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team # 36120) Cure Alzheimer's!)
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To: BenLurkin
Why do tree hugging organic earthy crunchy liberals need to eat fake meat? I thought veggies were "good" for you?

I can hardly imagine anything more unnatural than a chemically engineered, DNA modified slab of tofu. How do the "organic" au naturel granola types square this Frankenburger with their liberal philosophy?
 

8 posted on 08/04/2018 9:42:34 PM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie ("Nature, Mr. Allnut, is what we are put in this world to rise above.")
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To: BenLurkin

The burger contains wheat gluten and a big dose of sodium.

Maybe they can add peanut protein for people with nut allergies.


9 posted on 08/04/2018 9:44:32 PM PDT by Moonman62 (Give a man a fish and he'll be a Democrat. Teach a man to fish and he'll be a responsible citizen.)
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To: texas booster

I hope lots of people switch, leaving more real meat for me.


10 posted on 08/04/2018 9:46:06 PM PDT by Moonman62 (Give a man a fish and he'll be a Democrat. Teach a man to fish and he'll be a responsible citizen.)
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To: BenLurkin

Sounds like “GREENBEEFOS” from the old Si-Fi story THE ULTIMATE CATALYST.


11 posted on 08/04/2018 9:50:58 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar
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To: BenLurkin

Does anybody remember Olestra? It gave people violent, greasy flatulence. These days it’s being marketed as an industrial lubricant and paint additive.


12 posted on 08/04/2018 9:53:51 PM PDT by Moonman62 (Give a man a fish and he'll be a Democrat. Teach a man to fish and he'll be a responsible citizen.)
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To: Governor Dinwiddie

A few decades ago, I tried some soy-based ‘ham’.

It looked like a thin slice of ham. It had a ham taste and smell. But the texture was stringy.

I have never bought any since and don’t intend to. Veggies posing as meat products just do not appeal to me as long as I can still find stores selling real meat products.


13 posted on 08/04/2018 9:58:01 PM PDT by TomGuy
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To: Moonman62

Olestra a paint additive. I like that idea. The paint goes on smoothly and hopefully it sinks in for a long lasting bond with the wood. Seriously, look at all of the usefulness of whale blubber and of lard during previous centuries. One of these days they may make houses from reprocessed corn cobs and reconstituted sunflower shells. A little bit of enzyme action and super heat and instant building material.


14 posted on 08/04/2018 10:05:53 PM PDT by Trumpet 1 (US Constitution is my guide.)
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To: BenLurkin

I’ve had the “Impossible Burger” (against the recommendation of my server). It did indeed taste like beef, but the texture was like breaddy, mushy meatloaf.

Not very good. NOT the equivalent to a real burger.

I should of followed the server’s recommendation.


15 posted on 08/04/2018 10:23:30 PM PDT by AnalogReigns (Real life is ANALOG...)
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To: BenLurkin

If you want to add that "natural gristle" facet to this phony-burger, and eat it like a steak, maybe you can just add a big clump of hardened Vaseline...


       

16 posted on 08/04/2018 10:33:29 PM PDT by Songcraft
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To: Vince Ferrer

My biggest concern is it will open the door in the future for artificial meat which is ‘good enough’ for the plebs and a ban on meat since ‘nobody needs to eat it anymore.


17 posted on 08/04/2018 11:05:29 PM PDT by jarwulf
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To: BenLurkin

GRAS (generally recognized as safe)? A new one on me.


18 posted on 08/04/2018 11:12:40 PM PDT by BBell
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To: BenLurkin

Fake meat sounds OK.

Fake blood for the fake meat sounds repulsive.


19 posted on 08/05/2018 12:37:24 AM PDT by UnwashedPeasant (Trump is fixing the world's problems just to distract us from Russia.)
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To: BenLurkin

Serve it to liberals and illegals. See who leaves the country the fastest.

Why not put beet-juice on shit and call it “the new meat”?


20 posted on 08/05/2018 12:39:57 AM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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