¿Podría la edición genética ser la clave para la seguridad alimentaria mundial?

De un global pandemia to a changing climate, today’s current events are shining a light on the fragile nature of our global food supply. Innovation in food and agriculture is critical to ensuring people around the globe have continuing access to safe and affordable nutrition — despite new and evolving threats to our global food security.

Una amenaza que enfrenta un cultivo de alimentos básicos en muchos países en desarrollo es el cianuro. Esta neurotoxina, que se encuentra naturalmente en la yuca, especialmente cuando se combina con una dieta baja en proteínas, puede provocar Konzo, una enfermedad neurológica debilitante e irreversible.

But modern plant breeding could offer hope for the future. Plant scientists at UC Berkeley are using innovative tools like gene editing to remove the cyanide from cassava – helping ensure this staple crop can remain a safe and widely accessible source of nutrition for the hundreds of millions of people who depend upon it in their daily diets. The Asociación Estadounidense de Comercio de Semillas (ASTA) y CropLife International (CLI), in collaboration with UC Berkeley, explore the issue in a new video, “Repairing the Root of the Problem.”

This is the fourth video in the ASTA-CLI series examining the potential of gene editing in solving some of today’s biggest threats to food and agriculture. Watch the other videos aquí.