The Hindu (Thiruvananthapuram)

CTCRI to use genome editing to make industry-friendly tapioca

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The ICAR-Central Tuber Crops Research Institute (CTCRI) in Thiruvanan­thapuram has embarked on a ₹4 crore research project for developing tapioca varieties with waxy or high-amylose starches that are useful in industry with the help of CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing technology.

In food products

Waxy starch has uses in food products, adhesives, textile and pharmaceut­icals, the CTCRI said.

Tapioca (cassava) varieties available in India have limited scope in industry owing to their starch compositio­n, which, on an average, is 20% amylose and 80% amylopecti­n.

“If we can develop varieties wherein the starch compositio­n is altered as 010% amylose and 90-100% amylopecti­n, it becomes waxy starch. When the starch compositio­n is altered as 70% amylose and 30% amylopecti­n, it becomes high amylose starch. High amylose starch has applicatio­ns in the functional food industry, has low glycemic index and also acts as a prebiotic, improving colon health,” the CTCRI said. It is also used in low-calorie food products textiles and paper.

This is where CRISPRCas9 comes in.The technology hinges on the inherent ability of DNA to repair itself after a double-stranded break in it. The gene is altered during the repair, with loss or gain of function. CTCRI plans to release tapioca varieties with waxy starch by silencing granule-bound starch synthase gene (GBSS) and high amylose starch by silencing starch branching enzyme (sbe) I and IIb, according to Krishna Radhika N., senior scientist.

The developmen­t of waxy and resistant starch tapioca varieties will serve to address the lack of industry-suited tapioca varieties in India, CTCRI director G. Byju said. This shortage had resulted in a need to import modi€ed tapioca starch into the country.

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