Fish Fillets Grown 
Larger In Tank
By Ian Sample
NewScientist.com
3-23-2

Scientists trying to create alternative food sources for astronauts
believe we could grow meat on demand, without slaughtering fish or
animals.  In a bid to make a simple source of nutritious food for
long-distance space travellers, scientists at Touro College in New York
have managed to make slices of fish grow bigger. Their achievement holds
out the prospect of growing meat in industrial quantities from the muscle
cell lines of various animals or fish.  "This could save you having to
slaughter animals for food," says project leader Morris Benjaminson, a
bioengineer and veteran of a number of NASA projects on recycling waste
onboard spacecraft. But Benjaminson's initial aim is more modest.  He is
working on more varied diets for astronauts, who would quickly tire of
their bland freeze-dried or squeezy tubes of food on long missions to
Mars, for example.  Artificial ecosystem  To make space meals more
appetising, scientists have been looking at ways of producing fresh food
for astronauts in flight. In 2001, German researchers designed an
artificial ecosystem to provide a continuous supply of fresh fish in a
spacecraft.  But breeding live animals for food has drawbacks - they
produce excrement, and killing them generates a lot of waste too. So NASA
is paying for Benjaminson to go one step further and grow just the
animals' edible muscle.  Initial experiments to see if the idea could
work were rather grisly. Benjaminson's group cut chunks of muscle five to
10 centimetres long from large goldfish. After washing the chunks in
alcohol, they immersed them in a vat of fetal bovine serum, a
nutrient-rich liquid extracted from the blood of unborn calves, which
biologists usually use for growing cells in the lab.  After a week in the
vat, the fish chunks had grown by 14 per cent, Benjaminson and his team
found. To get some idea whether the new muscle tissue would make
acceptable food, they washed it and gave it a quick dip in olive oil
flavoured with lemon, garlic and pepper. Then they fried it and showed it
to colleagues from other departments.  vCJD fear  "We wanted to make sure
it'd pass for something you could buy in the supermarket," he says. The
results look promising, on the surface at least. "They said it looked
like fish and smelled like fish, but they didn't go as far as tasting
it," says Benjaminson. They weren't allowed to in any case - Benjamison
will first have to get approval from the US Food and Drug Administration.
 Benjaminson concedes that people might be reluctant to eat food grown in
fetal bovine serum - not least because of worries about the transmission
of vCJD through any rogue prion proteins it may contain.  He tried
growing chunks of goldfish muscle in liquid mushroom extract instead, but
although the tissue survived for a week, it did not grow. He is hoping to
find a friendlier substitute for bovine serum before trying the technique
on chicken, beef and lamb.  The idea has received a cautious welcome.
"Fish mass grown in a nutrient broth sounds as unappealing as some of the
other food astronauts take up with them, but these things have got to be
explored," says Colin Pillinger, head of the Planetary Space Sciences
Research Institute at the Open University in Milton Keynes. "I think it'd
be more appropriate when you've got a base set up on a planet - the sort
of equipment you need for biotechnology is fragile. Who knows what would
happen to it during launch and the flight," he says.    

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