Cellular agriculture is an interdisciplinary scientific field drawing from synthetic biology, genetic engineering, molecular biology, tissue engineering, biochemistry, and food science to design organisms capable of producing a wide variety of agricultural products.
Cellular agriculture is an interdisciplinary scientific field drawing from several disciplines such as synthetic biology, genetic engineering, molecular biology, tissue engineering, biochemistry, and food science to design organisms capable of producing a wide variety of agricultural products.
Cellular agriculture is an interdisciplinary scientific field drawing from several disciplines such as synthetic biology, genetic engineering, molecular biology, tissue engineering, biochemistry, and food science to design organisms capable of producing a wide variety ofvarious agricultural products. Cellular agriculturesagriculture's primary focus is designingdeveloping organisms capablethat ofcan buildingbuild relevant proteins, fats, and other tissues for the production of animal products. For example, animalAnimal products made through cellular agriculture include: beef, poultry, fish, dairy, egg, collagen, and gelatin. There are two categories of cellular agricultural products: cellular and acellular. Cellular products are made from whole cells — living or dead — and include products like beef, poultry and fish. Acellular products are made from products that are made by cells and do not include any living or once living cells. Examples of acellular products include: omega-3 fatty acids, gelatin, casein, and ovalbumin. Cellular agriculture is a technology that provides opportunities to improve upon trade-offs of traditional agricultural practices and methods for meat production such as animal welfare, environmental impact, and nutritional value.
According to Dr. Mark Post of Maastricht University, who created the first cultured beef burger in 2013, it takes 440,000 cows to produce 1,750,000 burgers; the same amount of burgers could be cultured from the cells of one cow using cellular agriculture techniques. Proponents of cellular agriculture highlight this potential for reduction in animal suffering as compared to traditional livestock practices. Erin Kim, communication director of New Harvest, believes "There is simply no more room left to pack more animals onto land, or meat onto the breast of a boiler chicken".
There are two categories of cellular agricultural products: cellular and acellular. Cellular products are made from whole cells—living or dead— and include products like beef, poultry, and fish. Acellular products are made from products that are made by cells and do not include any living or once-living cells. Examples of acellular products include omega-3 fatty acids, gelatin, casein, and ovalbumin. Cellular agriculture is a technology that provides opportunities to improve upon trade-offs of traditional agricultural practices and methods for meat production, such as animal welfare, environmental impact, and nutritional value.
According to Dr. Mark Post of Maastricht University, who in 2013 created the first cultured beef burger, it takes 440,000 cows to produce 1,750,000 burgers; the same number of burgers could be cultured from the cells of one cow using cellular agriculture techniques. Proponents of cellular agriculture highlight this potential for reduction in animal suffering compared to traditional livestock practices. Erin Kim, communication director of New Harvest, believes "There is simply no more room left to pack more animals onto land, or meat onto the breast of a boiler chicken."
In 2017, the US National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine recognized that the cellular agriculture industry, especially brewery-based in-vitro animal products, is set for high growth in the future due to recent technological advancements. The process of culturing products through cellular agriculture involves extracting and isolating self-renewing cells, such as embryonic or induced pluripotent stem cells, and/or introducing genes into organisms capable of producing the desired product, such as milk proteins, collagen, or muscle tissues, and letting these cells grow in a bioreactor.
In 1912, one of the first scientists developing what would later become cellular agriculture Ross Harrison wrote in his paper titled, The cultivation of tissues in extraneous media as a method of morphogenetic study, that "The fact that tissues of the higher animals may be cultivated outside the body has been heralded in the news papers and magazines as a notable, if not revolutionary, scientific discovery".
Ross Harrison was one of the first scientists to develop what would later become cellular agriculture. In 1912, he wrote in his paper titled "The cultivation of tissues in extraneous media as a method of morphogenetic study"
The fact that tissues of the higher animals may be cultivated outside the body has been heralded in the newspapers and magazines as a notable, if not revolutionary, scientific discovery."
Harrison pioneered the first methods for the in vitro cultivation of cellular tissues grown outside of animal organisms. Harrison's methods were originally developed to study the conditions promoting differentiation of nerve fibers, and his techniques were later were modified to study the effects of salts and various animal extracts on animal tissue growth independentindependently and separateseparately from the animal organism. Harrison continued his research, trying to keep tissues alive and growgrowing, before coming to the conclusion that optimal survival and growth could be achieved by continuously supplying the tissues with a growth medium while constantly removing waste products;. With andthis, the first concept of a bioreactor was born.
In 1939, Dr. Raymond C. Parker and the laboratories ofat the Rockefeller Institute for medical research produced the second major technological breakthrough for cultivating tissues independent of animalsanimals—a single flask culturing technique. Researchers in the labs of the Rockefeller Institute, most notably Dr.Raymond C. Parker, designed and described many new systems for culturing large numbers of tissue fragments. Pioneering and pioneered the single flask culturingtechnique by making two separate chambers within the a single flask;. aA reservoir chamber that holds the culture medium, and a culture chamber thatcontains holdsthe tissue fragments. The researchers were able to control the oxygenation of chambers within the flask by connecting a gas line to the flask. TheseBy techniquesgrowing tissues on a thin layer of nutritional medium with sufficient and culturingconstantly systemscirculating developed byoxygen, scientists atwere the Rockefeller Institute for medical research allowed scientistsable to begin culturing tissue fragments in large quantities for the first time using a single flask system that grows tissues on a thin layer of nutritional medium with sufficient and constantly circulating oxygen.
According to a study published in the Environmental Science and Environmental Science and technologyTechnology journal analyzing the environmental impact of cultured meat compared to traditional livestock meat production, cultured meat has a significantly lower environmental impact. The 2011 study shows how cultured meat can improve upon traditional European livestock agriculture by reducing energy consumption by 7-45%, using 99% less land, and 82-96% less water, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions by up to 78-96%.
A later 2015 study titled "Anticipatory Life Cycle Analysis of in In Vitro Biomass Cultivation for Cultured Meat Production in the United States" further examined cellular agriculture for meat production, with less hopeful results for the environment. They found cellular agriculture uses more energy than previously thought, due to the industrial nature of cultured meat production. Using cellular agricultural techniques in 2015 theThe study found that culturing beef and poultry products was usingused approximately up to 35% more energy than traditional agricultural techniques. Researchers made their energy use (approximately 43% natural gas, 33% coal, and 16% from the electricity grid) and green housegreenhouse gas emission estimates based on the average energy requirements and green housegreenhouse gas emissions of breweries across the US in 2003, as reported by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
The same study found differing greenhouse gas emissions between cultured meat varieties. Beef was shown to result in about 76% less greenfewer housegreenhouse gas emissions due to no methane production as a by-product of cow digestion, while pork and poultry had higher energy requirements and more green housegreenhouse gas emissions when compared to traditional livestock agriculture production.
The study demonstrated significantly less land use — roughlyuse—roughly half the amount of traditional European livestock agriculture — neededagriculture—needed for production, due to not requiring animal feed to produce cultured meat products.
This reduction in land requirements is due to the improvements in the biological efficiency of cultured meat made possible through cellular agriculture. Traditional livestock requirerequires food and energy to grow biological parts that are not the primary desire of livestock farmers. For example, animals have to make things such as skin, internal organs, and hair, while meat grown in-vitroin vitro only grows what everwhatever product is desired; usuallydesired—usually skeletal muscle tissue, in the case of cultured meat.
By growing meat in-vitro,in vitro and not having the need to grow skin, hair, organs, circulatory system, etc..etc., comes at the cost of having to regulate temperature, disperse and introduce nutrients and oxygen into the tissue evenly, and control for any pathogens that can infect the tissue. This is all done inside of the bioreactors used to grow cultured meat products, which requires high amounts of industrial energy, as detailed in Carolyn Mattick's paper "Cellular agriculture: The coming revolution in food production," published in the Bulletin of the Atomic ScientistsBulletin of the Atomic Scientists on January 8th, 2018.
Some scientists believe as the technology supporting cellular agriculturalagriculture progresses, the industry will require fewer inputs and less maintenance of the bioreactors that makes products like cultured meat possible, and the full extent of environmental implications of cellular agriculture will be realized.
There is no need for the use of pesticides and herbicides to make animal products using cellular agriculture. Less pesticide and herbicide use made possible by cellular agriculture will help to reduce ocean eutrophication—when a body of water becomes enriched in dissolved nutrients from agricultural runoff stimulates the growth of aquatic plant life, usually resulting in the depletion of dissolved oxygen. The reduction in eutrophication due to excessive amounts of nutrients flowing into the worlds oceans through agricultural run off, andcan play a significant rollrole in the restoration of the oceanic dead zones (low oxygen areas) back to productive marine ecosystems.
August 5, 2013
Dr. Mark Post of Maastricht University, made the worldsworld's first cultured beef burger, thatwhich sold for $330,000 at Couch's Great House Restaurant in Polperro, England.
April 25, 2008
December 18, 1997
December 1, 1931
Winston Churchill publishes an article in Strand Magazine titled 'Fifty Years Hence' and writes: "Microbes, which at present convert the nitrogen of the air into the proteins by which animals live, will be fostered and made to work under controlled conditions, just as yeast is now. New strains of microbes will be developed and made to do a great deal of our chemistry for us. With a greater knowledge of what are called hormones, i.e. the chemical messengers in our blood, it will be possible to control growth. We shall escape the absurdity of growing a whole chicken in order to eat the breast or wing, by growing these parts separately under a suitable medium. Synthetic food will, of course, also be used in the future. Nor need the pleasures of the table be banished. That gloomy Utopia of tabloid meals need never be invaded. The new foods will from the outset be practically indistinguishable from the natural products, and any changes will be so gradual as to escape observation."
May 1, 1912
Ross Harrison pioneered the first methods for the in vitro cultivation of cellular tissues grown outside of animal organisms.
December 5, 1911
There is no need for the use of pesticides and herbicides to make animal products using cellular agriculture. Less pesticide and herbicide use made possible by cellular agriculture will help to reduce ocean eutrophication due to excessive amounts of nutritionistnutrients flowing into the worlds oceans through agricultural run off, and play a significant toleroll in the restoration of the oceanic dead zones (low oxygen areas) back to productive marine ecosystems.
AsideThere fromis energyno need for the use of pesticides and use requiresherbicides to producemake animal products using cellular agriculture, there is also no need for the use of pesticides and herbicides. Less pesticide and herbicide use made possible by cellular agriculture will help to reduce ocean eutrophication due to excessive amounts of nutritionist flowing into the worlds oceans through agricultural run off, and play a significant tole in the restoration oceanic dead zones (low oxygen areas) back to productive marine ecosystems.