Adelaide, South Australia
June 13, 2008A
University of Adelaide
researcher will lead an Australian project to help address the
world's biggest nutritional deficiency - lack of iron.
Dr Alex Johnson has been
awarded nearly $300,000 to work with the Bill Gates-funded
HarvestPlus
Challenge Program to increase iron content in rice and other
cereal grains.
More than two billion people -
or 30% of the world's population - suffer from iron deficiency,
which can cause anaemia, poor mental development, fertility
problems and a depressed immune system.
Dr Johnson, who is based at the
Australian Centre for Plant
Functional Genomics at the
Waite
Campus, will work on increasing iron content in cereal foods
by improving the delivery of iron from the leaf to the seed.
"Iron content is quite low in
cereal grains because although iron is present in a plant's
leaves, very little of that iron is transported to the seed,
which is the part that is consumed by humans.
"We know of several proteins
that move iron around in a plant so it is a matter of increasing
the flow of iron into a seed tissue called endosperm, which
survives the milling and polishing process."
If this can be achieved, the
benefits to developing countries in particular will be enormous,
Dr Johnson says.
Rice and wheat, the two most
widely consumed cereals in developing countries, transport only
a small fraction of iron to the developing grain - 5% for rice
and 20% for wheat. Furthermore, the small amount of iron that is
retained accumulates almost exclusively in the outer layers,
which are removed during the milling process so that grain can
be stored for long periods.
"In the western world we can
get around this problem by adding various compounds to flour to
make it rich in iron. But iron fortification of flour is only
economical for developed countries. Poor nations can't afford
this so we have to find a sustainable way of increasing iron in
the milled seed."
Higher iron content could also
lower the production costs of many Australian farmers by
reducing or eliminating the need for iron fortification of wheat
flour.
Dr Johnson has been awarded
$85,000 by the Australian
Research Council for the two-year project and an additional
$200,000 by HarvestPlus, an international non-profit
organisation which is working towards alleviating nutritional
deficiencies in the developing world.
The other team members working
on the Australian project are
Professor Mark Tester from the University of Adelaide and
Associate Professor James Stangoulis from
Flinders University. |