Science

CRISPR tomatoes genetically engineered to be richer in vitamin D

CRISPR tomatoes genetically engineered to be richer in vitamin D
A researcher compares the new tomato genetically engineered to be higher in vitamin D (left) with a regular wild tomato (right)
A researcher compares the new tomato genetically engineered to be higher in vitamin D (left) with a regular wild tomato (right)
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A researcher compares the new tomato genetically engineered to be higher in vitamin D (left) with a regular wild tomato (right)
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A researcher compares the new tomato genetically engineered to be higher in vitamin D (left) with a regular wild tomato (right)

Vitamin D deficiency is a growing health issue, but very few foods are rich in the nutrient. To help combat the problem, scientists have now used CRISPR gene editing to fortify tomatoes with vitamin D.

By helping the body absorb and retain calcium and phosphorus, vitamin D is especially crucial for good bone health and strengthening the immune system. However, it’s tricky to get enough of it through food alone, with the majority of it produced in the skin in response to UV light from the Sun.

Unfortunately, many people still don’t get enough of it, with an estimated one billion people worldwide affected by vitamin D deficiency. This seems to increase a person’s risk of heart disease, some cancers, autoimmune diseases, and weaker bones and muscles, among other conditions.

For the new study, researchers at the John Innes Centre set out to provide a new source of vitamin D by genetically engineering tomatoes. The fruit is already known to naturally contain a vitamin D precursor known as 7-DHC, albeit at very low levels and only in the leaves, which aren’t usually eaten.

To change that, the researchers used the CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing system to switch off a specific enzyme in the tomato genome that normally converts 7-DHC into other molecules. Without that enzyme, 7-DHC accumulates in the flesh, peel and leaves of the tomato at much higher levels. Importantly, blocking this enzyme didn’t affect the growth, development or yield of the tomato plants.

Just like in human skin, the 7-DHC could be converted into vitamin D3 by exposing the tomato to UVB light. Afterwards, one tomato was found to contain as much vitamin D as two eggs or 28 g (1 oz) of tuna, and this could be increased in, for example, sun-dried tomatoes.

In addition to making the fruit of a tomato more nutritious, the team says that the vitamin-D-rich leaves could also be used to make supplements, rather than going to waste. Other plants, like aubergine and potatoes, have the same biochemical pathways, meaning the same kind of gene-editing could be used to make them more nutritious too.

The research was published in the journal Nature Plants.

Source: John Innes Centre

6 comments
6 comments
michael_dowling
D3 tablets are dirt cheap. Pop a few with breakfast,and you are covered for vitamin D.
FB36
Our world is full of people/families who are able to eat very few basic kinds of food crops & so, ALL basic kinds of food crops (like wheat, rice, potato, corn etc) better be modified/enhanced to produce ALL kinds of vitamins (IMHO)!
Robert Kowalski
Wouldn't it be easier to eat something that already have vitamin D, rather than modify complex system risking unforeseen side effects?
Stephen Wyman
Seems like excess when, as suggested in another comment, vitamin supplements are cheap and easy. Also, indoor lighting can be adapted by using light bulbs that produce appropriate frequencies of light to trigger vitamin D production, that already exists, in human bodies.

If one decides to go for GMOs then make certain that tests are run for multiple generations to determine what intended and unintended consequences were produced... Results published in proper, peer reviewed, scientific publications.
Aross
Now if they could just reverse engineer tomatoes to put back the taste!
Anechidna
Vitamin D3 is known as the sunshine vitamin for a good reason. The human body produces it in our skin via a photosynthesis process and very efficiently. Those with darker skin tones require more prolonged exposure to sunlight so such an advance would benefit them. One key reason why we have so many deficient in D3 is that they spend so much time indoors in artificial light rather than time outdoors which has been shown to have significant health benefits beyond just getting our D3. So while this may help reduce one health problem it could well simply exacerbate others.