Fusarium venenatum.
Photo credit: Xiao Liu

Researchers have engineered a meat-like fungus that grows 88 per cent faster and is significantly easier for humans to digest, offering a scalable solution to global protein demand without adding foreign DNA.

The breakthrough, published in Trends in Biotechnology, used CRISPR technology to tweak Fusarium venenatum, a mould already approved for food use in the UK, US and China. By removing specific genes, the team reduced the environmental impact of production by up to 61 per cent while increasing nutritional availability.

“We successfully made a fungus not only more nutritious but also more environmentally friendly by tweaking its genes,” said corresponding author Xiao Liu of Jiangnan University.

Boosting digestibility and speed

The researchers modified the fungus by removing the gene associated with chitin synthase, which thinned the cell walls and made the protein inside easier for humans to digest. Simultaneously, removing the pyruvate decarboxylase gene fine-tuned the organism’s metabolism.

The resulting strain, dubbed FCPD, requires 44 per cent less sugar input to produce the same amount of protein as the original strain and achieves this production 88 per cent faster.

Simulations of FCPD production at an industrial scale across six countries showed a dramatically lower environmental footprint. When compared to chicken production in China, the genetically edited mycoprotein requires 70 per cent less land and reduces the risk of freshwater pollution by 78 per cent.

“Gene-edited foods like this can meet growing food demands without the environmental costs of conventional farming,” said Liu.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Granular algorithmic pricing models fail due to consumer psychology

Big data and artificial intelligence have made it easier than ever for…

Shape-shifting liquid robots from science fiction are officially a reality

For decades, shape-shifting liquid-metal robots that can morph into new forms and…

Breakthrough tetanus therapy helps flat-faced dogs breathe easily

Australian scientists have successfully tested a new injectable therapy that clears blocked…

Alien comet’s heavy water reveals its freezing cosmic birthplace

A recently discovered interstellar comet is carrying an unprecedented amount of “heavy…

High-tech home hospital healthcare could cure chronic overcrowding

Global health systems are facing a crisis of chronic overcrowding and severe…

Africa is tearing apart to reveal the truth of human evolution

Deep beneath the Turkana Rift in Eastern Africa, the Earth’s crust is…