Biotech Promises Future Chances
Biotech Promises Future Chances
Biotechnology is a new field of research with many involved subjects and applications. Some its subjects can be named as Molecular genetics, Biochemistry, Mircobiology, Immunology, Genetic engineering and some of Health and Medicine, Agriculture and Animal Husbandary. Its research results serve the developing of medicine, vaccines and diagnostics, productivity, energy production and conservation, quality of seeds, insecticides and fertilizers, pollution control and waste management. All these advantages make this fields become the most promising one for your carreer.
The scope of biotechnology has grown up very fast as that of information technology or human resource development sector, the employment has shown great scope and future in this field they can find careers with pharmaceutical companies, chemical, agriculture and allied industries like of research centers.
They can be employed in the areas of planning, production and management of bio-processing industries. All the developed and developing country is putting a lot of investment on the research laboratories and the development of entrepreneurship development. Job in the biotech companies or related to life sciences with wide range from equipment, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, diagnostics and development of vaccines or antibiotics. If a candidate with sufficient knowledge and degree of molecular biology and applied science in plant, animal or microbial biotechnology laboratories or in horticulture, food science can easily get a job with no time.
Career options has been remarkably opened increasing popularity and explosive growth, there is plenty of opportunities available in Biotechnology field i.e., research Scientist, teacher, science writer, Bioinformists, Quality Control Officer, analyst or Production in-charge in the Food, Chemical and Pharmaceutical industry.
As soon as the Human Genome Project (HGP) has been finished every country is investing more on the biotech field as it has lot potential to stabilize the economy of a country and with time it has given the answer to many hereditary diseases also. So, the field is still wide open the best part of opportunities has not came it has to come in the future.
shiju mathew
Question by anonymous89: Jobs for masters in plant biology or plant biotechnology graduates?
Hey all
What do u know about career options for graduates with a masters degree in plant biology or plant biotech ? Do u know anything about how much they earn ?
Best answer:
Answer by Walama
In industry, more than $ 50K. In academia, $ 35K at most, and you spend most of your day begging for funding. Unless you’re best friends with or related to someone who works for a drug company deriving plant-based pharmaceuticals, it’s a very risky career path.
Add your own answer in the comments!
Categories: Plant Biotech Jobs Tags: Biotech, Chances, Future, Promises
Genetically Modified Foods ? Risks and Benefits to the Individual and the World
Genetically Modified Foods ? Risks and Benefits to the Individual and the World
The topic of genetically modified organisms (GMO) has been a contentious one for almost two decades. In many parts of the world, fears abound over potential health problems and the prospect of environmental catastrophe, all stemming from the production and consumption of GM foods. While the paranoia is gradually decreasing, lots of misinformation is still thrown about regarding genetic engineering and GM foods. What exactly are GM foods and what are the risks and benefits they confer to both the individual consumer and to the ecosystems in which they are grown?
The first major intersection of genetic engineering and foodstuffs occurred in 1987 with the first tests of a modified version of the bacteria Pseudomonas syringae on strawberry fields in California. The bacteria, which commonly lives on the surface of crops, normally produces a protein that allows ice to more easily begin crystallizing, causing damage to the host plant. However, the strain of P. syringae used in the experiment had been engineered without the gene needed to produce the protein in hopes of reducing frost-induced crop loss. Though the data looked positive following the trial, they couldn’t be fully trusted due to environmental activists destroying some of the test crops in protest of the experiment.
The first genetically engineered food product hit the shelves in the early 1990s in the form of the “Flavr Savr” tomato. Calgene, a Californian company later acquired by biotech giant Monsanto, had engineered the plant to have a slower softening process, though its other ripening attributes like sweetness would develop normally. Tomatoes are often harvested while still green and hard in order to better survive the rigors of transport. Soft, ripe fruit often get smashed or otherwise degraded as trucks bump along rough roads. The Flavr Savr was designed to be both tasty and durable. Unfortunately, due to competition from conventionally bred cultivars (plant varieties), problems with production rates, and troublesome harvesting technology, the Flavr Savr never made a big move on the tomato market. However, it did pave the way for future growth in the GM food market.
Today, there are many genetically modified food crops available, including soybeans, corn, cotton, alfalfa, sugar cane and beets, rice, squash, and others. Their engineering bestows benefits including herbicide, pest, and virus resistance, as well as higher nutritional content by way of increased endogenous production of vitamins and essential fatty acids. In fact, a large majority of soybeans, cotton, and corn grown in the US is now genetically modified organisms, most engineered for herbicide and/or pest resistance. Believe it or not, if you live in the US and many other parts of the world, you almost certainly consume GM foods on a regular basis.
Despite the widespread and longstanding consumption of GM foods by millions if not billions of people, controversy persists over the safety of GM foods in regards to both human health and environmental integrity. While most concerns over GM crops are generally unfounded, it is worth taking the time to understand how GM foods are assessed and approved.
To assess any potential dangers a GM food may present to human health, the product is first analyzed by the manufacturer to determine if it is “substantially equivalent” to its corresponding natural version, if one exists. Substantial equivalence is evaluated by comparing the biochemical profiles of the two foods, including their various carbohydrates, fatty acids, metabolite compounds, and proteins. If the values of the GM food’s components fall within the range of variation of the natural products, then they are deemed to be substantially equivalent. While the standard of substantial equivalence has proven robust enough to prevent any major adverse reactions in the public to GM foods, critics argue that the standard of equivalence is not defined clearly enough nor has a specific procedure for testing been established. In addition, processed or purified products (e.g. oils, sugars, etc.) can be assessed for substantial equivalence independent of their source plants. GMO opponents have claimed that this “loophole” may allow harmful compounds into the human food supply due to the laxity (in their eyes) of the substantial equivalence standard.
If a novel GM product has no natural counterpart, it is evaluated using a seven-part standard safety test. The test begins with an analysis of any new DNA in the product and the proteins or metabolites it may eventually produce. It also includes analysis of the chemical composition of the product, including nutrients, allergens, and toxins. Then, the risk of gene transfer to microorganisms present in the human gut is evaluated. Any new compounds in the product are assessed for possible human allergenicity. Finally, an estimate is calculated to determine how much of the product might be consumed in a normal diet, whether the data indicate any possible nutritional or toxicological risks and, if so, further animal testing is performed to investigate any potentially harmful characteristics of the product.
While opposition groups to GM foods have long claimed that these novel products aren’t tested sufficiently before public release, there has yet to be a documented adverse reaction to any GM food. In addition, these pre-market testing procedures have proven their effectiveness by actually finding allergens in GMO products before release and have allowed the safe removal of the offending foods from the development pathway.
The evidence amassed to date tells us that GM foods pose little to no risk to human health. While there can always be more stringent testing, a balance must be struck between corporate and public interests. If testing is too lengthy or expensive, companies will simply stop developing new products, much like what has happened to the pharmaceutical industry. The current safety testing procedures for GM foods do a fantastic job at both protecting the public and encouraging continued development of needed agricultural technologies.
One of the most commonly cited, real-world instances of “potentially harmful” compounds entering the food supply by way of GM crops was the contamination of corn used to produce Taco Bell hard taco shells with a small amount of a GM variety known as StarLink, which was approved only for use in animal feed. Twenty-eight individuals reported symptoms of allergic reaction resulting from the consumption of the taco shells. It was postulated that “Cry9C,” a protein in the StarLink corn, was the culprit.
Then as now, however, those claims of allergenicity are beset with credibility issues.
First, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention performed analyses of the blood of those reporting allergic reactions and found no evidence that the corn had caused their symptoms. Second, allergens are proteins, like the suspected Cry9C protein. The production of a hard taco shell requires frying the corn tortilla in oil at around 365 degrees F. At that temperature, essentially all proteins in the tortilla are denatured, which means that their shape is altered fundamentally, even fragmented. That the tiny amount of Cry9C present in the StarLink material also was denatured at the time of consumption further reduced whatever risk of allergenicity the protein posed in the taco shell. Accordingly, although the recall of the contaminated corn arguably was warranted on regulatory grounds, the fear-mongering and paranoia that followed were unfounded and irrational.
There’s also the argument against GM crops based on potential hazards they might pose to their surrounding ecosystems and the global environment. On the positive side, pest-resistant cultivars have significantly lowered the need for pesticides in many areas. In addition, GM crops also allow for a reduction in farming-related greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions due to more limited use of pesticide spraying equipment and a shift from conventional tillage to reduced/no till practices. Compared to 1996 levels of GHG emissions, GM crops provided global savings of approximately 32.5 billion pounds of carbon dioxide in 2006 alone. That’s the equivalent of taking over 6.5 million cars off of the roads for a year. In addition, GM crops have provided substantial farm-level income increases by way of increased yields, better quality produce, and increased replanting efficiency.
On the negative side, opponents of GM crops have raised concerns about the novel cultivars’ impact on biodiversity, weed resistance, and gene transfer to non-GM crops. On the issue of biodiversity, both sides of the issue agree that it is an important subject to watch. Theories have suggested that, were GM traits passed onto wild relatives, then other native species could be out-competed into extinction. In addition, the release of a particular crop variety with a major advantage over all others could lead to the use of only one cultivar, significantly decreasing crop biodiversity. Yet, while gene transfer between species has been recorded in GM crop locations, no significant negative effects have been noted. As well, seed companies work to prevent the use of a single cultivar by introducing the same trait into many different varieties of a crop. Therefore, the chance of one cultivar becoming overwhelmingly dominant is quite low.
Finally, the issue of weed resistance is worthy of attention and study. Gene transfer from GM crops to wild plants has been shown to occur. However, the occurrence of such an event is extremely rare and the resulting hybrids are often sterile, much like mules and the familiar yellow bananas we find in grocery stores. Despite the low risk of problems with weed resistance, issues have arisen in some areas of the southern US with crop field infestations of herbicide-resistant plants, particularly pigweed. In most cases, the problem was managed by crop and herbicide rotation. In some rare cases, the fields had to be abandoned. Fortunately, the benefits of GM crops grossly outweigh the rare problems they may cause with the development of resistant weeds.
The conclusion here is that GM foods pose little risk to human health. They are studied quite extensively before being put on the market, and the screening procedures have been so successful that no significant health issues related to GM foods have ever been reported. The fact is that GM crops are eaten every day by millions of people in the US alone with no ill effects. On the environmental side, GM crops pose a very small threat to their natural environments. While the concern over gene transfer to non-GM plant species is real, it has never been shown to cause a problem with ecosystem biodiversity. Unfortunately, there is a small risk of resistant traits to undesirable weed plants that can then infest crop fields. However, with diligent farming practices the detriments of such species can be all but avoided in most cases. GM foods offer the farmer and society at large a way to produce healthier, more bountiful produce in a way that is less harmful to the environment. We need higher yields and lower environmental impact to deal with our fast growing human population. Let’s embrace the technologies that we have and get over the irrational fears surrounding GMOs.
Rob Bent is the founder of Nutrition Perfected in Brooklyn, NY. We provide performance nutrition counseling to athletes as well as regular Joes and Janes. We specialize in maximizing fat loss, muscle gain, and athletic performance using efficient and pragmatic nutritional strategies and techniques. Let us help you perform to your highest potential!
Contact Nutrition Perfected or visit http://www.NutritionPerfected.com!
Categories: Plant Biotech Jobs Tags: Benefits, Foods, Genetically, individual, Modified, Risks, World
History Of Genetically Modified Crops
History Of Genetically Modified Crops
The Real History Of Genetically Modified Crops
If you are aware of GMO’s and what they are, then you might have heard the FDA claim that Genetically Modified Foods are properly tested, safe to eat, and necessary to feed the world. But unfortunately their idea of testing either doesnt include the long term effects of these GMO’s, or they simply refuse to aknowledge that pesticide genes combining with our gut bacteria to create the BT pesticide is a problem.
Either way, Genetically Modified seed’s and food’s are something that we must avoid altogether.
The problem’s surrounding GMO’s (Genetically Modified Organism) vary- from the way the FDA regulate’s testing to the long term effects these food products have on those that consume them. Its not just the fact that there are major problems with GMO’s , the fact that a huge percentage of people in our country and others, have absolutely no idea of the harm involved or even worse , have been lead to believe that GMO’s are approved by stringent testing performed by the FDA.
The brutal reality is that the FDA has absolutely no guidelines for GMO research and testing. The worst part , is that the FDA leaves all testing up to companies like Monsanto. Who’s Monsanto, you ask?
Monsanto is the company that GROWS Genetically Modified FOODS!
Do you see the problem with this? Since when does the FDA operate like this?
Trusting the FDA becomes even harder after we see real test results performed by 3rd party researchers.
What Are GMO’s?
1st of all, GMO’s are simply food’s grown from altered seed’s. The seed’s in question here are seed’s that have had the BT pesticide inserted into their gene’s. Growers do this as a lazy way to keep crop’s from being eaten by bug’s. Thus ensuring larger crop yields. Make sense?
But how could no-one think that injecting pesticides in our food supply might be dangerous?
Isnt that why we trust the mighty FDA? Honestly, GMO’s are just one of many problems that we are finding in our food supplies these days. But we’ll stick to the GMO’s for now.
Now, genetically modified ‘technology’ made its way through the door when Bush senior was in office way back when. When the White House mandated to the FDA to promote biotechnology. So who was in charge of developing the biotech policy?
A former Monsanto ATTORNEY!
Who eventually returned to Monsanto after his job in the White House was done. After the damage was done there would be nothing to stop companies like Monsanto from injecting pesticides and other chemicals into our food supplies. Obviously the lawyer created the policy that would leave it up to the same companies that created these biotechnologies, to test them as well.
The FDA has claimed it was not aware of any information showing that GM crops were different “in any meaningful or uniform way,” from non-GMO crops and therefore didn’t require testing. But 44,000 internal FDA documents made public by a lawsuit show that this was a complete lie. The overwhelming consensus among the FDA’s own scientists was that GM foods were quite different and could lead to unpredictable and hard-to-detect allergens, toxins, new diseases and nutritional problems. It turns out that FDA scientists, who had urged superiors to require long-term studies, were ignored.
The Effects Of GMO’s To Our Health
I will use corn and a field of genetically modified cotton as an examples. Both of which are very real.
Now , when these companies decided to create the self preserving crops by injecting the BT pesticides into the gene’s of seeds, their intentions were mostly good. Aside from a bit of laziness, and/or trying to make more money. The basic idea was to create crops that would create their own pesticides in order to ward off bugs and critters. That would mean more crops and less waste.
But without proper testing by the companies, we wouldnt find out that these BT pesticides would actually combine with our own Gut bacteria gene’s – thus creating this awful pesticide inside our own bodies! Even in small doses this has been proven to cause many different illnesses and other health risks.
This next part of my article was taken directly from a ‘Seeds Of Deception’ article. It reads as follows:
“In 1999, Dr. Arpad Pusztai, the world’s top GMO safety researcher at the prestigious Rowett Institute in Scotland was working on a UK government grant to design long-term testing protocols intended to become part of the official European GM food safety assessment process. When Pusztai fed supposedly harmless GMOs to rats, they developed potentially pre-cancerous cell growth, smaller brains, livers and testicles, partially atrophied livers, and showed signs of a damaged immune system.
In other words, his study suggested that the GM foods already on the market, which were created from the same process, might also create such effects.
When Dr Pusztai expressed his concern he was fired from his job of 35 years and silenced with threats of a lawsuit. His 20-member research team was disbanded, all testing protocols were abandoned, and the pro-GM establishment embarked on an extensive disinformation campaign to discredit the study’s results to protect the reputation of GM foods already in the marketplace.
When an invitation to testify before Parliament allowed Pusztai to finally tell his alarming story, all hell broke loose. The outpouring of news coverage, said to one columnist, “divided society into two warring blocs” over the GM food issue. An industry wide rejection of GMOs was reached quickly thanks to the buying power of consumers who convinced manufacturers to keep GMOs out of the European Union, in spite of official approvals by the pro-GM European Commission.”
Amazing, right? Thats not all, read on.
But whats more amazing is the fact that you probably never even heard of this – and it happened in 1999, not too long ago. It was barely mentioned at all by our own United States media. Our media also failed to mention what happened in the only human GM test ever done. In this test it was discovered that the foreign genes inserted into the GM food crops can transfer into the DNA of our Gut bacteria. this means that long after we eat the GM cornchips , our intestinal flora might continue to manufacture the BT pesticide that the GM corn plants are engineered to produce.
American media also failed to mention that 10,000 sheep died within 5-7 days of grazing GM cotton plants- that were also designed to create the BT-toxin.
I know it sounds unthinkable that we live in a society that either doesnt care to inform us, or even worse could be controlled by someone or something that would actually prevent this information from being seriously exposed.
Are only options as consumers is to avoid these GM foods. But the problem with that is that over 65% of all foods have been created with these GM technologies. eating completely Organic foods are our only way to safely avoid the toxic GMO’s that have invaded all major food supplies.
personally , I have found that buying Organic seed’s is a cheaper way to produce completely healthy organic food supplies. You can find these seed packs online. They usually range from -0, depending on how big of a garden you wish to plant.
Its much cheaper than buying all your food from the organic stores, and you will know for sure that you are eating 100% organic foods. For more information on how you can start your own orgainc garden or atleast find out which foods are not genetically modified, simply follow tis link:
Organic Survival Seeds – Stay safe and avoid harmful GMO’s!
Categories: Plant Biotech Jobs Tags: brutal reality, crop yields, Crops, FDA, food products, food supply, genes, Genetically, GMO, gut bacteria, History, Modified, monsanto, organism, pesticide, pesticides, test results