Yorkshire Post

‘Edible scaffold’ to help grow product like meat

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SCIENTISTS HAVE created a new method for producing an edible scaffold for growing cultured meat.

The scaffold, which is made from textured soy protein, enables cultured cells to grow into a beef-like product for human consumptio­n. The study, published in Nature Food, found the product performed well in preliminar­y taste tests.

Cultured, or cell-based, meat is an evolving technology that could generate meat without the need for animal agricultur­e.

Its creation requires a 3D scaffold to support the engineered cells and mimic the environmen­t in which animal muscles grow.

The scaffold also needs to be edible and have a suitable nutritiona­l value and texture.

Shulamit Levenberg, from the Israel Institute of Technology, and colleagues describe a new method to create a 3D scaffold out of textured soy protein.

They say it is a cost-effective, edible and porous protein-based material.

Researcher­s found that bovine satellite cells, which are “seeded” within the textured soy protein scaffolds where they multiply and create tissue, covered a large portion of the scaffolds.

According to volunteers, its taste, aroma and texture were typical of real meat.

The authors conclude that their results may provide the tools for cultured meat to be scaled up to generate new protein sources for human consumptio­n and help reduce reliance on animal agricultur­e. They write: “The results presented here represent the potential for cell-based meat to be scaled up, forming new protein sources for human consumptio­n.”

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