Science & Technology - Posted by Carl Blesch-Rutgers on Friday, July 9, 2010 16:09 - 2 Comments    
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (3 votes, average: 2.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Growing hard corn to better feed the world

Development of a hard corn kernel will help ease world hunger because hard kernels can be more efficiently harvested, stored, and shipped to societies in South America and Africa, where people often rely on the staple as their sole source of nutrition. (Credit: iStockphoto)

RUTGERS (US)—Scientists have discovered the basis for hard corn kernels which could lead to better hybrids and increase the food supply for people in developing countries who rely on corn as a nutritional staple.





When kernels are hard, researchers say, they can be more easily harvested, stored, and transported.

The discovery explains how a breed of corn known as “quality protein maize,” or QPM, incorporates two qualities essential for an economical and nutritious food crop: a source of key protein ingredients and a hard-shelled kernel.

Until the arrival of QPM a decade ago, corn did not provide a balanced protein mix when used as a sole food source.

A hybrid developed in 1960 increased protein levels with essential amino acids but was commercially unsuccessful, because its soft kernels subjected the harvest to spoilage.

“While QPM was developed in the late 1990s, scientists have not had a thorough knowledge of how kernel strength could be achieved in a rational way,” says Joachim Messing, professor of molecular genetics at Rutgers.

“Our work contributes knowledge that will help other scientists develop better hybrids going forward, either through traditional breeding techniques or genetic engineering.”

The study is reported in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Corn is naturally low in lysine and tryptophan, amino acids that are essential to make corn an adequate source of protein.

Some societies supplement corn with soybeans or other sources of protein in human food and livestock feed. Yet there are societies, generally in South America and Africa, where people rely on corn as their sole source of nutrition.

“QPM has made strides in overcoming malnutrition in these populations, but to make it more available to people who need it, modern approaches to breeding called ‘marker-assisted breeding’ will be superior in adapting local corn varieties for these people,” Messing says.

As part of the investigation, Rutgers postdoctoral researcher Yongrui Wu used a technique to eliminate, or “knock out,” the expression of the genes that geneticists suspected were involved in QPM kernel hardness.
After knocking out these two genes, responsible for producing proteins known as gamma zeins, Wu observed softer kernels in the offspring.

Detailed investigation of original and knockout kernels using electron microscopy revealed that soft kernels lacked a proteinaceous matrix interconnecting starchy components while providing structural integrity.

Such structures were not present in the knockout offspring. The researchers therefore pegged the gamma zeins regulated by these two genes, labeled 16- and 27-kDa gamma zein, as key components of this molecular structure and, as a result, QPM’s hardness.

The softer, commercially unsuccessful hybrid from 1960 had higher levels of lysine and tryptophan because it had reduced levels of several categories of zein proteins, which conferred kernel hardness but crowded out other proteins that carried lysine and tryptophan.

QPM has the gamma zeins responsible for the hardness-preserving structure while still lacking other zeins that crowded out nutritional proteins.

Researchers from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln contributed to the study.

More news from Rutgers: http://news.rutgers.edu/medrel/

Please wait

2 Comments

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

Roger Hanson
Jul 15, 2010 17:45

The J curve relative to population growth and food production says it all. At some point unchecked population growth will outpace the ability of agriculture to feed world masses. Survival of the brightest says, ‘Don’t feed the entire world for this will only lead to population Growth”.

Prem
Jul 21, 2010 3:25

Interesting insight, Roger, but I imagine habits of these people (and their governments) has a worse impact on “utility” overall than simply having a large population.

I wonder when it is that population growth will outpace food production/capability.

Leave a Comment

Comment

Research news from leading universities

Daily E-News


Browse By School

Follow Futurity

RSS feedsFacebookTwitter

Week's Most Discussed

  • Loading...

Media Partners

Alltop logo Pulse logo Flipboard logo Visual News logo The Conversation logo