| Published: July 7, 2005
Scientists propose growing artificial meat
Cultured tissue could be made to order: more
nutrients, less mess
Reuters (and 30 news organizations, including MSNBC and
LA Times)
WASHINGTON - Laboratories using new tissue engineering technology
might be able to produce meat that is healthier for consumers
and cut down on pollution produced by factory farming, researchers
say.
While NASA engineers have grown fish tissue in lab dishes,
no one has seriously proposed a way to grow meat on commercial
levels.
But a new study conducted by University of Maryland doctoral
student Jason Matheny and his colleagues describe two possible
ways to do it.
Writing in the journal Tissue Engineering, Matheny said scientists
could grow cells from the muscle tissue of cattle, pigs, poultry
or fish in large flat sheets on thin membranes. These sheets
of cells would be grown and stretched, then removed from the
membranes and stacked to increase thickness and resemble meat.
Using another method, scientists could grow muscle cells
on small three-dimensional beads that stretch with small changes
in temperature. The resulting tissue could be used to make
processed meat such as chicken nuggets or hamburgers.
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"There would be a lot of benefits from cultured meat,"
Matheny said in a statement. "For one thing, you could
control the nutrients."
Meat is high in omega-6 fatty acid, which is desirable, but
not in large amounts. Healthful omega-3 fatty acids, such
as those found in walnuts and fish oils, could be substituted.
"Cultured meat could also reduce the pollution that
results from raising livestock, and you wouldn't need the
drugs that are used on animals raised for meat," Matheny
said.
Raising livestock requires million of gallons of water and
hundreds of acres of land. Meat grown from tissue would bypass
those requirements.
The demand for meat is increasing worldwide, Matheny said.
"China's meat demand is doubling every ten years,"
he said. "Poultry consumption in India has doubled in
the last five years."
Writing in this month's Physics World, British physicist
Alan Calvert calculated that the animals eaten by people produce
21 percent of the carbon dioxide that can be attributed to
human activity. He recommends that people switch to a vegetarian
diet as a way to battle global warming.
"Worldwide reduction of meat production in the pursuit
of the targets set in the Kyoto treaty seems to carry fewer
political unknowns than cutting our consumption of fossil
fuels," he said in a statement.
The Kyoto treaty is a global agreement aimed at reducing
production of so-called greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide
that help fuel global warming.
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