Read Safe Food: The Politics of Food Safety Online
Authors: Marion Nestle
Tags: #Cooking & Food, #food, #Nonfiction, #Politics
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2000;289:843-845. The scientists describe the patent and legal issues in: Beyer P, Al-Babili S, Ye S, et al. Golden Rice: introducing the β-carotene biosynthesis pathway into rice endosperm by genetic engineering to defeat vitamin A deficiency.
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. Potrykus I. Nutritionally enhanced rice to compete [
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. Potrykus I. Golden Rice and beyond.
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. Greenpeace. Background information: the false promise of genetically engineered rice, February 2001. Haerlin B. GE rice is fool’s gold, February 9, 2001. Khoo M. Greenpeace demands false biotech advertising be removed from TV, February 9, 2001, at
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26
. The Potrykus group said the rice contained 1.6 micrograms (µg) beta-carotene per gram (g), but thought 2 µg/g realistic. The U.S. standard for vitamin A is 300 µg per day for children aged one to three years, 700 µg for adult women, and 900 µg for adult men. At a conversion rate of 12 µg beta-carotene to 1 µg vitamin A, the beta-carotene standard is 3,600 (12 × 300) µg for young children; 8,400 (12 × 700) µg for women; and 10,800 (12 × 900) µg for men. If Golden Rice contains 2 µg per g beta-carotene, the amounts are halved. Children would need to eat 1,800 g rice (4 lb); women 4,200 g (9 lb); and men 5,400 g (12 lb) a day to meet the U.S. standard for vitamin A. Rice is cooked in twice its volume of added water (example: 1 cup raw rice plus 2 cups water to yield 3 cups cooked rice). Therefore, the amounts of
cooked
rice are 12, 27, and 36 lb per day, respectively. Lower conversion ratios reduce these amounts.
27
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. Potrykus I. “Genetically engineered ‘Golden Rice’ is fool’s gold”: response from Prof. Ingo Potrykus. Ag BioTech InfoNet, February 10, 1001. Online:
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. Nestle M. Genetically engineered “golden” rice unlikely to overcome vitamin A deficiency (letter).
J Am Dietetic Association
2001;101:289–290. This letter points out that beta-carotene itself raises questions. Food sources of beta-carotene protect against cancer and heart disease, but supplements do not and may be harmful or beneficial depending on circumstances. The health effects of adding this single nutrient to rice endosperm are uncertain.
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