Ultra-low asparagine wheat developed using precision gene editing
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Why This Matters
Scientific discoveries like this expand human knowledge and open new possibilities for addressing global challenges.
Scientists at Rothamsted Research have successfully developed wheat with dramatically reduced levels of asparagine, without affecting yield, using gene editing techniques, offering a promising route to safer food production and improved regulatory compliance. Results from two years of field trials demonstrate that wheat produced using CRISPR genome editing can significantly lower concentrations of free asparagine—an amino acid that converts into acrylamide, a toxic and probably carcinogenic compound formed during everyday baking, frying, and toasting.
Read Full Article at phys.org
Original story published by phys.org.
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