Wednesday, September 26, 2012

If GM Apples Don't Brown, How Can You Tell If They're Rotten?

Soon after slicing a conventional Granny Smith apple (left) starts to brown, while a newly-developed GM Granny Smith stays fresher looking.

Soon after slicing a conventional Granny Smith apple (left) starts to brown, while a newly-developed GM Granny Smith stays fresher looking.

Soon after slicing a conventional Granny Smith apple (left) starts to brown, while a newly-developed GM Granny Smith stays fresher looking.

In the fairytale world, a shiny red apple can lead to a poisonous end. But some see two genetically engineered green apple varieties, poised to become the first to gain U.S. Department of Agriculture approval, as similar harbingers of doom.

Okaganan Specialty Fruits, Inc., the company that has developed Granny Smith and Golden Delicious varieties that don't go brown when you slice them, says the fears are overblown and the apples are safe to eat.

Now, we've reported extensively on the heated debate over labeling genetically engineered food, and there's no denying that genetically-modified (GM) foods are a polarizing issue. But, would an apple that doesn't turn brown prevent us from telling whether it's rotten? The short answer is no. For the long answer, read on.

The non-browning trait aims to please consumers who don't like brown apples or the off taste from the preservatives frequently used to maintain color and fresh appearance in packages of pre-sliced apples, says Neal Carter, Okanagan's president. "Ultimately, we just want people to eat more apples," he says. Carter also argues the innovation would help apple slice producers, who can lose up to half of their product due to browning during production.

Nevertheless, as the public comment period on a petition to approve these apples closed last month, many consumers worry are they safe to eat?

First let's look at the physical properties of apples. No matter how you slice it, every apple turns brown eventually. "When their flesh is cut, the oxygen in the air interacts with chemicals in the flesh of the apple," says Susan Brown, a plant scientist at Cornell University in Geneva, N.Y. An enzyme called polyphenol oxidase (PPO) makes melanin, an iron-containing compound that gives apple cells a brown tinge. The same type of "oxidative" browning happens in the browning of tea, coffee, or mushrooms, explains Brown.

Within five minutes of slicing, browning can alter the taste and might not be as aesthetically pleasing, but it doesn't mean the apple is old or rotten.

To prevent oxidative browning, the GM apples developed by Okanagan stop PPO production with a man-made gene containing pieces of four natural PPO genes. An insertion with gene fragments is an automatic red flag for the apple cell usually the first step of viral attack so it chops up every sequence of DNA that looks like the suspicious fragment, and the apple flesh stays light.

"The beauty of this [process] is it's a natural plant defense mechanism," says Carter. Even when sliced, these apples stay clear of browning for about two weeks that's roughly the same extended lifespan as apple slices from McDonald's and Burger King, which use lemon juice and calcium ascorbate to prevent browning.

But if the apple doesn't go brown, then how do you tell if it's rotten? An apple with just oxidative browning isn't automatically rotten. Rotting comes from a fungal or bacterial infection - which causes the apple to go either mushy or dry. Infecting spores, not melanin, also give the flesh a dark brown hue. So, taking PPO out of the equation won't make a rotten apple appear pristine. "'Bad' apples will still be evident," says Brown. Rotting GM apples look rotten and turn brown from a bacterial or fungal infection the same as a conventional apple.

But, Bill Freese, a science policy analyst at the Center for Food Safety, notes that some studies in tomatoes have shown that silencing PPO impacts a plant's susceptibility to diseases and invasive insects because the enzyme may play a role in plant defense reactions.

Since we already have hybrid "low-browning" varieties and successful preservative treatments, some people wonder if we really need an apple that doesn't go brown. "We fully support genetic and genomics research," says Mark Gedris, the US Apple Association's director of communications. "But we haven't heard customers calling for a non-browning GE apple."

From nutrient value to taste, these apples are indistinguishable from a normal one, say Carter and Brown. If they do gain USDA approval, whether people will buy them is another story. "It's up to the consumer to decide," Brown says.

As we've reported before, much of our processed foods that contain soy or corn are genetically-modified, but fresh produce has been a tougher sell - anybody remember the Flavr Savr tomato?


Slate Magazine - Politics, Business, Technology, and the Arts ... Does Mitt Romney Want Your Vote? A Flowchart. How Many Americans Rely on Government Assistance, Exactly? Im Dreaming of a White President: Randy Newman Talks ... Business - Slate Magazine The Great Divergence. Inside the widening gap of America's income inequality. By Timothy Noah. Top Right Slate's list of the 25 Americans who combine ... Business News, Personal Finance and Money News - ABC News Find the latest business news on Wall Street, jobs and the economy, the housing market, personal finance and money investments and much more on ABC News Comment: editorials, opinion and columns - Telegraph Find the latest editorial comment, opinion and columns from the Telegraph Ye Olde Journalist The pen is my sword in which to fight yellow Journalism. The truth is out there, and I am determined to report on it and tell it like it is, even if those claiming to ... Video - Breaking News Videos from CNN.com 'If you don't take your top off ... there are no photos't take your top off... Technology and Science News - ABC News - ABCNews.com - Breaking ... Get the latest science news and technology news, read tech reviews and more at ABC News. Topic Galleries -- OrlandoSentinel.com - Orlando news, information ... Topic galleries provide easy access to stories and photos about people, places, organizations, events and subjects of interest to you. They bring together rich ... Green Women's Lifestyle - Yahoo! Shine By s.e. smith, NetworxSometimes it seems like greening your home requires a master's degree, More Simple steps to greening your home Welcome to the Future, Where Our Apples Never Brown Okanagan Specialty Fruits, a Canadian biotech company, has brought us the future... and it tastes like very fresh apples. Neal Carter, Okanagan's founder and grower ...

No comments:

Post a Comment