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Golden (Beta Carotene) Rice Kui Tang
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Golden Rice

Nov 13, 2014

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Presentation about genetics and implications of Golden (vitamin A) Rice.
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Page 1: Golden Rice

Golden (Beta Carotene) Rice

Kui Tang

Page 2: Golden Rice

Vitamin A Crisis

● Rice, Oryza sativa, is vitamin A deficient.● 124 million suffer from vitamin A deficiency

annually (1). Many eat rice as a staple.● 500,000 cases of dry eyes and blindness (1).

Also major factor in disease and childhood death (3).

● Vitamin A rice is simple, inexpensive solution.

Page 3: Golden Rice

Prevalence of Vitamin A Deficiency

Page 4: Golden Rice

History● Created by Ingo

Potrykus, Swiss from 1992-2000 (right).

● Cross-bred to local rice strains in Philippines, Taiwan.

● Field trials at Louisiana State University reveal 3-4 times more β-carotene than greenhouse.

Page 5: Golden Rice

History● First generation proof of concept only; 1.6µg/g of

β-carotene insufficient (3).● Second generation used psy gene from maize and

rice genes. Produced 31 µg/g β-carotene. Exactly the required amount (3).

Page 6: Golden Rice

Overview

● Two steps of β-carotene pathway are missing in the endosperm.

● Recombining two genes completes the pathway.

● GGPP is precursor for many important pigments.

Page 7: Golden Rice

Genetics

● Rice can naturally produce β-carotene in leaves for photosynthesis, but not nutritionally significant amount.

● Golden rice produces it in endosperm (grain).

● Recombine two β-carotene synthesis genes under endosperm glutelin promoter (3):

– phytoene synthase (psy) from daffodil;

– crt1 from Erwinia uredovora.● Unique because researchers engineered entire biosynthesis

pathway from geranylgeranyl diphosphate to β-carotene (2).

Page 8: Golden Rice

Genome

Page 9: Golden Rice

Genetics● Geranylgeranyl

diphosphate produced naturally in plastids.

● Recombinant genes convert to lycopene.

● Native lycopene cyclase (lyc) gene converts lycopene to β-carotene.

● Excess lycopene creates yellow color.

The carotene synthesis biopathway, occurring in the endosperm.

Page 10: Golden Rice

Engineered Pathway

Page 11: Golden Rice

Criticism

● Genetic engineering is a fundamentally flawed approach to solving malnutrition.

● Promotes loss of biodiversity: corporate monoculture of rice destroys ability to plant a variety of foods, which is the best way to combat malnutrition (4), (5).

● World bank admits replanting local plants is more effective (4).

● Only a balanced diet can provide nutrition. Vegetables, not rice, should be the focus (5).

● Monsanto, Novartis, Astra-Zeneca own patents. They may extort money in the future.

Page 12: Golden Rice

Legal Issues● 4 patents, 70 patent

claims.● EEC funding required

giving rights to industry.● Licensed to farmers in

developing countries who earn < $10,000/yr

● Some claim main purpose of Golden Rice is to restore political respectability to GMO.

Page 13: Golden Rice

Conclusion● Golden Rice can save millions through Vitamin A provision

—the genetic engineering equivalent of iodized salt or fluorinated water (2).

● This would be one of the first GMO crops to help consumers instead of merely farmers—and help them to not die.

● Second generation produces requisite amounts of β-carotene. Old arguments about not providing enough are void.

● Alternate foods (fruits, vegetables) may not be available, hence consuming Golden Rice is essential.

● Genes breed well into local rice varieties.

● Intellectual property issues may still need to be worked out, but free licenses are available now and the corporations have pledged humanitarian efforts (4).

Page 14: Golden Rice

Bibliography(1) Humphrey, J.H., West, K.P. Jr, and A. Sommer. “Vitamin A deficiency and attributable

mortality in under-5-year-olds.” WHO Bulletin. 70 (1992): 225-232.

(2) “Golden Rice.” Wikipedia. 23 Jan 2008. 24 Jan. 2008 <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_rice>.

(3) “Golden Rice.” Golden Rice Humanitarian Board. 2007. 23 Jan. 2008 <http://www.goldenrice.org/>.

(4) Shiva, Vandana. “The Golden Rice Hoax—When Public Relations Replaces Science.” 23 Jan. 2008 <http://online.sfsu.edu/~rone/GEessays/goldenricehoax.html>.

(5) “‘Golden Rice’ and Vitamin A Deficiency.” 23 Jan. 2008 <http://www.foe.org/safefood/rice.html>.

(6) Nash/Zurich, Madeline J. “Grains of Hope.” Time 31 Jul. 2000: (Internet, n.pag.).

(7) Beyer, Peter, et al. “Golden Rice: Introducing the ß-Carotene Biosynthesis Pathway into Rice Endosperm by Genetic Engineering to Defeat Vitamin A Deficiency.” The Journal of Nutrition. 132 (2002): 506S-510S.