Imagine a banana loaded with a vaccine for hepatitis B. Or
rice enriched with vitamin A. Perhaps, mangoes that ripen in
two months, or maybe corn that is resistant to insects without
needing insecticides. Farfetched? Not really.
Biotechnology has made man’s musings a century ago a
reality today.
Modern biotechnology is any biology-based technology that uses
organisms or heir parents to make or modify products or improve
plants, animals and microorganisms. It applies scientific advances
as plant tissue and cell culture, genetic engineering or gene
transfer to modify gene fragments of the same, related, or unrelated
species to produce new traits in an organism.
In the Philippines, scientists at the Institute of Plant Breeding
(IPB) at the University of the Philippines Los Baños
have long been doing researches on some of the country’s
major crops for export to improve the plants’ breed and
enhance their breeding procedures. These crops include mango,
banana, papaya, abaca and coconut.
Dr. Evelyn Mae Tecson Mendoza, IPB program leader, said the
researches are aimed at increasing the crops’ yield ceilings,
making them more resistant to pests and diseases and enhancing
the crop‘s nutritional, processing and storage qualities,
using tissue and cell culture, market technologies and transgenics
or genetic engineering.
Tissue and cell culture techniques are used for micropropagation,
in vitro gene banking, disease-elimination and genetic engineering
process, among others.
IPB is also into marker technologies or diagnostics. Using
DNA or proteins, this technology is used to tag important traits
to improve the selection efficiency in plant breeding by marker
assisted selection (MAS); identify markers and develop diagnostics
for varietal/pathogen/pest identification; and determine genetic
diversity of plants, pathogens and pests.
The third area that IPB focuses on is transgenics or genetic
engineering, which allows the specific transfer of important
genes.
Through marker technologies, IPB was able to identify protein
markers for varieties of rambutan through a technique using
protein isozymes on the young seedling stage of the plants.
"May supsupin at tuklapin varieties. Some people like
tuklapin more than supsupin, so there is a premium for the tuklapin
seedling. The technique allows us to accredit nurseries and
to say definitively that this is tuklapin or this is supsupin
using these markers," Mendoza said.
Using the marker technology, IPB was also able to differentiate
the cultivars of coconut seed nuts.
"The advantage of identifying the coconut seed nut is
that the farmer would be able to determine the type of coconut
he wants. Since coconut seeds are also costly, this would save
the planter money, time and effort," Mendoza said.
IPB was also able to develop an immunological test kit that
screens the presence of the ratoon-stunting disease of sugarcane.
"Even before the seed pieces of sugar cane are planted,
they can already determine if it’s diseased or free from
disease. That saves the sugar planter a lot of effort,"
Mendoza said.
These researches, however, are yet to be field-yielded.
Using genetic engineering, IPB is now developing a variety
of papaya and mango with delayed ripening trait, papaya with
papaya ring spot virus resistance, banana with resistance to
bunchy top virus, coconut with modified fatty acid composition
and corn with resistance to corn borer.
Mendoza explained that IPB’s initial projects were to
develop papayas and mangoes with delayed ripening trait so as
to prolong their shelf life, "to export papaya and mango
to more distant places." This trait would also lessen food
wastage.
Coconut, one of the country‘s major exports, is likewise
being enhanced. A coconut variety that can produce more C12
or lauric acid, a component of the oil. This is used for many
purposes, among them, as ingredients for detergents, shampoo
and soap.
"Lauric acid now has a competitor, the transgenically-derived
canola oil, lauricole," Mendoza said.
While studies have shown GM crops have contributed to reduced
usage of pesticides, reduced soil erosion, higher and more stable
yields and better quality crops, the issue over the safety of
GM crops for human intake and for the environment persists.
Mendoza however, allayed such fears.
"Before a GM crop becomes commercially available, it goes
through a series of testing. It is heavily regulated from R&D
to commercialization. Safety aspects are addressed in the laboratory:
the safety aspects in and outside the laboratory are taken care
of. All GM crops like Bt com, herbicide-tolerant soybean, herbicide-tolerant
corn, herbicide-tolerant potato, these all went through every
rigid regulation for biosafety to environment and safety to
man," Mendoza said.
The IPB program leader said the potentials of plant biotechnology
in the Philippines can be further explored with the help of
the private sector, especially the food industry.
Mendoza is one of the presentors at the Mindlink II: Industry-Academe
Conference on Biotechnology, on Sept. 7, at the APEC Center
at UP Los Baños. For particulars, visit the conference
website at http://www.upd.edu.ph/biotech.