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Contents
Forum—A Need for More and Better Nutrients From
Plants
The typical American diet today contains more plant-based foods and less
meat and dairy products. But red meat and dairy products are the principal
dietary sources of the essential minerals iron, zinc, and calcium.
We must find ways to increase the amount and bioavailability of these
mineral nutrients in edible seeds, fruits, and other plant organs and tissues.
We must also find ways to exploit the array of organic compoundsoften
called phytonutrientsthat are synthesized by plants. We know too little
about them and their potential to promote health.
The Agricultural Research Service is
ideally suited to be a world leader in this research that is at the interface
of food crops and human nutrition. The ARS mission addresses both areas, and
the agency already has a model for interdisciplinary research linking the two.
For 60 years, the U.S. Plant, Soil, and Nutrition Laboratory located at
Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, has brought together soil scientists,
plant biologists, and human nutritionists to investigate plant and soil factors
that affect human nutrition and health.
The case for boosting the nutrient content of plant-based foods is already
compelling.
For example, iron, zinc, and calcium are particularly important for certain
population groups in the United States. Yet only 21 percent of teenage girls
consume a diet that meets the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) for iron,
while just 16 percent meet the RDA for calcium. Many do not meet the RDAs for
zinc, magnesium, and vitamins A and E.
Furthermore, up to 20 percent of premenopausal women have low hemoglobin
levels because they do not get enough iron. The figure is worse40
percentfor pregnant, low-income African-American women. This could have
important long-term implications, because recent research indicates that iron
deficiency in pregnancy may retard a young child's cognitive development.
Iron deficiency, the world's most common mineral deficiency, affects 2
billion people and is especially severe in developing countries. Research to
enhance the content and bioavailability of iron in food staples such as cereal
grainswhich typically are low in ironshould have a high priority
everywhere.
But plant-based foods are not only important as sources of essential
minerals, vitamins, protein, lipids, and carbohydrates. They also synthesize
and accumulate an astonishing array of organic secondary compounds. Data
increasingly show that several of these compounds have health-promoting
properties.
About 100,000 secondary compounds are synthesized by different plant
species. While they appear to play no direct role in plant growth and
development, many of these compounds are known to act in processes critical to
a plant's survival. For example, some help defend against attack by herbivores
and disease-causing organismsor against stresses such as damage by
ultraviolet radiation.
These secondary plant compounds include a spectrum of complex organic
molecules that include phytoestrogens, isoflavonoids, anthocyanins,
polyphenols, and glucosinolates. They have not been shown to be dietarily
essentialin contrast to many minerals and vitamins. But they may help
improve or maintain human health by reducing the likelihoodor slowing the
onsetof chronic diseases, such as heart disease and cancer, as well as
the effects of aging.
Our challenge is to find ways to take greater advantage of these
phytonutrient compounds through diet.
Thanks to advances in plant genomics and biotechnology, plant scientists
have an array of powerful new tools to complement traditional and
molecular-assisted methods of plant breeding. These tools better equip us to
understand the mechanisms and regulation of plant compounds' complex transport
and biosynthetic pathways. With this kind of knowledge, we can speed the design
of strategies to alter a plant's amount, distribution, and forms of both
essential nutrients and phytonutrients.
But for these efforts to succeed, we need stronger interdisciplinary
linkages between plant biologists, human nutritionists, and food scientists.
Plant biologists must continuously seek the newest evidence on biological
roles of plant foods in the human body. Nutritionists need to become
increasingly well informed about possibilities for the biochemical and
molecular manipulation of phytonutrientsas well as possible obstacles to
accomplishing this. And food scientists should see new opportunities for
products that will capitalize on these functional enhancements of plant-based
ingredients.
I foresee a time when human nutritionists will identify specific compounds
for plant biologists to target. Plant scientists will then alter the compounds'
quantity or formor both. The modified plant food will be tested with
animal or in vitro models or through clinical trials. Findings will feed back
to plant biologists, who will make additional modifications to the plants.
Currently, scientists at our laboratory in Ithaca are taking advantage of
recent advances in plant molecular biology, functional genomics, and
biochemistry to enhance their ability to modify and improve the nutritional
quality and health-promoting properties of plant foods.
This new field, named "nutritional genomics," holds considerable
promise for providing Americans with a more nutritious and healthier food
supply in the near future.
Leon V. Kochian
Research Leader
U.S. Plant, Soil, and
Nutrition Laboratory
Ithaca, New York
"Forum" was published in the
August 1999 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
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