Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Companies hope use of gene-editing on strawberri­es will reduce waste

- KEITH RIDLER

BOISE, Idaho — An Idaho company that successful­ly brought geneticall­y modified potatoes to the market announced an agreement Thursday to help a California­based plant breeding company grow strawberri­es they say will stay fresh longer and have a longer growing season.

J.R. Simplot Co. and Plant Sciences Inc., both privately held companies, said they expect to launch the first commercial­ly available, geneedited strawberri­es within a few years.

U. S. growers produced $2.2 billion in strawberri­es in 2020, mostly in California, according to the U. S. Department of Agricultur­e. But consumers discarded an estimated 35% of the crop due to spoilage. Simplot and Plant Sciences officials said geneticall­y modified strawberri­es will help reduce waste, and make them available to consumers much of the year.

The strawberri­es will contain genes from only strawberri­es, selecting desirable traits that have been cultivated over decades to combine them through gene editing.

“It’s the same technology we’re working on with potatoes,” said Doug Cole, director of Marketing and Biotech Affairs at Simplot. “We have the opportunit­y to do that with this technology.”

There is no evidence that geneticall­y modified organisms are unsafe to eat, but changing the genetic code of foods presents an ethical issue for some. The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency and U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion signed off on Simplot’s geneticall­y modified potatoes as safe to eat, with over 1.1 billion pounds now sold in some 40 states and 4,000 supermarke­ts and 9,000 restaurant­s.

Cole said the company submitted informatio­n to the Agricultur­e Department that determined gene editing replicates a natural process and doesn’t need regulatory approval before the strawberri­es are brought to the market.

Steve Nelson, president and chief executive officer of Plant Sciences Inc., said the company over the past 35 years has developed five distinct breeding population­s of strawberri­es that do best in various growing areas and climate types.

“They possess complex genomes that contribute to long and complex breeding cycles,” Nelson said. “You’ve got to look at large population­s of seedlings on an annual basis to make progress with traditiona­l plant breeding.”

Gene editing could speed that up. Nelson said the goal of the partnershi­p with Simplot is to improve the horticultu­ral performanc­e of strawberri­es, enhance pest and disease tolerance and re

sistance.

He said for growers, who can spend $35,000 an acre to plant strawberri­es and another $35,000 per acre to harvest them, gene-edited strawberri­es could reduce the risk of a crop failure.

Simplot, a multinatio­nal agribusine­ss company with headquarte­rs in Boise, Idaho, in 2018 acquired gene editing licensing rights in an agreement with Corteva Agriscienc­e and the Broad Institute of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, developers of a gene-editing technology called CRISPR-Cas9. Simplot was the first agricultur­al company to receive such a license.

The technology allows scientists to make precise changes to the genome of living organisms and has wide-ranging applicatio­ns for improving plant food production and quality. It’s been likened to using a search-and-replace function while editing a written document.

The gene editing technology speeds up the traditiona­l process of breeding generation after generation of plants to get a certain desirable trait, saving years in developing new varieties that are as safe as traditiona­lly developed varieties, scientists say.

Craig Richael, director of research and developmen­t at Simplot, said the strawberry genetic code has been mapped, but it’s not clear what traits are associated with all the various parts of the code. He said the company is working with parts of the code that are known, raising geneticall­y modified strawberri­es at a Simplot greenhouse.

Plant Sciences Inc., based in Watsonvill­e, Calif., and its affiliates have proprietar­y rights for more than 50 strawberry and raspberry varieties. The company supplies plants to growers in more than 50 countries.

Simplot and Plant Sciences will make money by selling the geneticall­y modified strawberry plants to growers, who pay a royalty for the rights to grow and sell the strawberri­es. Terms of the deal weren’t released.

 ?? (AP/Keith Ridler) ?? Gene-edited strawberry plants grow in a J.R. Simplot Co. greenhouse in Boise, Idaho. On Thursday, the company announced a deal with California-based Plant Sciences Inc. to grow geneticall­y modified strawberri­es.
(AP/Keith Ridler) Gene-edited strawberry plants grow in a J.R. Simplot Co. greenhouse in Boise, Idaho. On Thursday, the company announced a deal with California-based Plant Sciences Inc. to grow geneticall­y modified strawberri­es.

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