Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Roach milk inspires food supplement

- By Papiya Bhattachar­ya

BANGALORE - Milk secreted by a cockroach species, to feed its young, is the base for a potent nutritiona­l supplement being developed by Indian and internatio­nal scientists.

“While cockroache­s are oviparous (egg-laying animals), the Diploptera punctata species alone is viviparous (animals that give birth to young) and nourishes its offspring with a milk protein,” says Sanchari Banerjee, post-doctoral fellow at the Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerati­ve Medicine (InSTEM), Bangalore, where work is underway to develop thefood supplement.

Banerjee and her fellow researcher­s found that the milk, which the mother cockroach secretes through the brood sac, gets converted into concentrat­ed protein crystals that are stored in the gut of the embryos. They describe their work in a paper published this month (July) in IUCrJ.

Supported by India’s department of biotechnol­ogy, the team has members drawn from diverse institutio­ns such as the Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Department of Cell and Systems Biology, University of Toronto and Experiment­al Division, Synchrotro­n SOLEIL, Gif-sur-Yvette, France.

Biophysica­l and X-ray crystallog­raphic studies of the crystals show that they are composed of a mix of proteins, sugars and fatty acids that make a complete food for the roach brood. A single crystal is estimated to contain more than three times the energy of an equivalent mass of dairy milk.

Says Banerjee: “The crystals that form inside the embryos were fascinatin­g. There is an equilibriu­m maintained between the liquid milk, which is ready as food, and the crystals which can be stored as food.”

Subramania­m Ramaswamy, professor at InSTEM, tells SciDev.Net that the road to converting the crystals into a nutritiona­l supplement is long. “We need to make it in yeast and make sure it can have the same properties. We need to make sure it is safe. We need to figure out how to make enough of it. So, that is a few years away.”

Nitish Sathyanara­yanan, doctoral student at InSTEM and an author of the paper, says the process is similar to making synthetic insulin using recombinan­t DNA technology. “The insulin that we consume today is made in the same yeast used for baking. Now that we know the chemical constituen­ts of roach milk, the challenge is to produce the milk in yeast using biotechnol­ogy techniques.”

Banerjee has already begun making the protein in yeast cells. “We have now synthesise­d the gene sequences. It will take some time to check if it is working or not with the same native properties. If everything works, we will plan to market it as supplement­al food,” she says.

 ??  ?? Copyright: Ltshears / Wikimedia Commons
Copyright: Ltshears / Wikimedia Commons

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