It's not the death of a salesman but rather the death of the diary farmer.
The world's first test-tube hamburger has already been synthesized and cooked at a cost of more than $300,000. Now a pair of young bioengineers in Silicon Valley are trying to produce the first glass of artificial milk, without a cow and with the help of genetically engineered yeast.
Source: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/10/141022-lab-grown-milk-biotechnology-gmo-food-climate/
Milk Grown in a Lab Is Humane and Sustainable. But Can It Catch On?
Would consumers rather get milk from cows or from genetically engineered yeast?

Will dairy cows be replaced by vats full of cultured yeast?
Photograph by Ringo Chiu, ZUMAPRESS.com/Corbis
Published October 22, 2014
The world's first test-tube hamburger has already been synthesized and cooked at a cost of more than $300,000. Now a pair of young bioengineers in Silicon Valley are trying to produce the first glass of artificial milk, without a cow and with the help of genetically engineered yeast.
Like the creators of in vitro burgers, the scientists
behind yeast-culture dairy are concerned about animal welfare and
agricultural sustainability—but also about creating a food that will
find a mass market. (Read: "Test-Tube Meat: Have Your Pig and Eat It Too.")
Because
their petri dish milk will mirror the formula of the real thing—the
yeast cultures will be churning out real milk proteins—it will retain
the taste and nutritional benefits of cow milk, says Perumal Gandhi, a
co-founder of the synthetic dairy start-up Muufri (pronounced Moo-free) in San Francisco, California. That will distinguish it from soy- and almond-based alternatives.
"If
we want the world to change its diet from a product that isn't
sustainable to something that is, it has to be identical [to], or better
than, the original product," Gandhi says. "The world will not switch
from milk from a cow to the plant-based milks. But if our cow-less milk
is identical and priced right, they just might."
The Hard Life of Cows
Gandhi
and Muufri co-founder Ryan Pandya are both vegans who view the
livestock industry's practices as inhumane. The cows in a modern dairy,
they argue, live in crowded barns. Their horns are removed to keep them
from injuring themselves or farmworkers, their tails are often docked so
that workers won't get a feces-laden smack in the face, and they're
given growth hormones and antibiotics.
What's more, the
cows are artificially inseminated every year so they'll keep producing
milk—and then, as soon as they give birth, their calves are taken away,
to make the milk available for humans.
"Fundamentally,
you're controlling the reproductive system of an animal. It's incredibly
invasive," Pandya says. "A lot of people are motivated by the
environmental factors, but imagine that happening to an animal. Really,
if you consider yourself an environmentalist and then you consume dairy,
it's all for naught."
The industry's environmental
impact is also substantial. Dairy production is responsible for roughly 3
percent of global greenhouse gas emissions each year, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations,
mostly because cows belch methane. And although dairy is already a more
efficient way than meat of converting plant feed into animal protein,
bioengineers can do even better than nature, Gandhi says.
"Making
an entire cow to make just the milk is inefficient," he says. "You're
giving it all this feed and water, and most of it goes towards growing
legs, growing a head, growing a liver and lungs—just living."
In contrast, Muufri's system can be likened to "an out-of-body udder" that only churns out milk.
Let's Make Milk
Making milk, while complicated in its own way, is nonetheless much simpler than growing meat.
"If you look at all the components, less than 20 make milk milk—give it the taste, structure, color you expect when you drink milk," Pandya says.
Muufri
will contain only those essential proteins, fats, minerals, and sugars.
Pandya and Gandhi's plan is to insert DNA sequences from cattle into
yeast cells, grow the cultures at a controlled temperature and the right
concentrations, and harvest milk proteins after a few days. The process
is extremely safe, says Gandhi: It's the same one used to manufacture
insulin and other medicines.
Although the proteins in
Muufri milk come from yeast, the fats come from vegetables and are
tweaked at the molecular level to mirror the structure and flavor of
milk fats. Minerals, like calcium and potassium, and sugars are
purchased separately and added to the mix. Once the composition is
fine-tuned, the ingredients emulse naturally into milk.
By
controlling the ingredients, however, Pandya and Gandhi hope to make
milk more healthful. The team is experimenting, for instance, with
sugars other than lactose, which 65 percent of adults have trouble digesting.
And it has engineered a more healthful, unsaturated fat that retains
the distinct flavor of dairy. Reproducing that flavor is a prime goal
for Gandhi and Pandya, who were not always vegan—and who say they miss
the taste of cheese, butter, and ice cream.
The Dairy Race
Last month Muufri, which began lab trials in May, received two million dollars in seed money from Horizons Ventures,
a Hong Kong-based investment firm (no relation to Horizon Farms organic
milk) whose portfolio of "disruptive start-ups" includes Siri, Spotify,
and Facebook. Muufri hopes to perfect its concoction by next spring and
to deliver it to store shelves as early as 2017, says Gandhi.
A carton
of Muufri is projected to cost twice as much as a carton of cow's milk,
at least initially.
Muufri is not the only team
attempting to create cow-less dairy products. Impossible Foods, started
by a former Stanford University professor, focuses on animal-free meat
business, but it's working on cow-less American cheese to accompany its
burgers. It has $75 million
in financial backing. Another outfit, Real Vegan Cheese, is run on
crowdsourced funding by volunteer bioengineers in Oakland, California.
Meanwhile, worldwide dairy consumption continues to grow every year.
Will consumers go for milk that's made in a lab by genetically modified
organisms (GMOs)? The proteins made by Muufri yeast will be
indistinguishable from natural ones, Pandya says, and the yeast itself
is harmless.
"People who are anti-GMO who have
legitimate concerns usually worry about supercrops taking over the
natural world," he says. "We've essentially crippled the yeast, so if it
does go out in the world, it'll produce only milk proteins and die
within hours."
Some dairy scientists are skeptical that
artificial milk will ever supplant the natural stuff. The 20 or so
components of Muufri barely scratch the surface of milk's complex
chemistry, says Philip Tong, director of the Dairy Products Technology
Center at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo, California.
"We've
been milking [cows] for seven or eight thousand years," Tong says. "I
doubt biotechnology could fully reproduce what Mother Nature intended."
(Watch: "I Didn't Know That: Milking a Cow.")
"Milk
production using a cow worked, until a few decades back, when the human
population was small, but that's no longer the case," Gandhi replies.
"We need to innovate to allow everyone to be able to enjoy a glass of
milk or their favorite dairy product 50 years from today."Source: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/10/141022-lab-grown-milk-biotechnology-gmo-food-climate/
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