Growing Rice and a Cholera Vaccine at the Same Time (1/2)
Someday, rice plants might not only provide food but also a way to prevent cholera" class="hjdict" word="cholera" target=_blank>cholera and other diseases.
Cholera is a bacterialinfection of the intestines. Today it is found mostly in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Current vaccines to protect against cholera must be kept in cold storage. The need for refrigeration limits use in poor countries.
But research in Japan may lead to rice plants that contain a cholera vaccine that does not need to be kept cold. So far, the research has been carried out only on mice. The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in the United States published the study earlier this month. Hiroshi Kiyono of the University of Tokyo and his team experimented with genetic material from the bacterium responsible for cholera. They placed it into the Kitaake rice plant.
Mice ate the genetically changed rice seeds as a powder. The report says the vaccine was not destroyed by stomach acid; instead, the animals developed antibodies against the choleratoxin. The scientists say the vaccine remained active even after being stored at room temperature for more than a year and a half.