WSU first university to produce gene-edited meat for human consumption

Apr. 30—PULLMAN — Savory sausages sizzled on the grill at a spring cookout last week outside Washington State University's meat lab. The fruition of over a decade of research, these special links were produced from gene-edited pigs.

WSU is the first university to seek or to receive approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to produce gene-edited meat for human consumption.

Head researcher Jon Oatley called it a landmark for introducing biotechnologies into animal agriculture, which is essential for producing more resilient protein sources in the face of climate change and a growing human population.

"For me it's exciting because all of the work we do in the lab is for naught if we cannot work through a regulatory process to get it out of the lab into the public domain," Oatley said.

His team of researchers celebrated last week by barbecuing the pork as German sausage, prepared by WSU Meats Lab.

Meat scientist Blake Foraker made some of the pork into sausages, which will be used in catering services that raise travel funds for the student members of the WSU meat judging team.

Oatley, a professor in the School of Molecular Biosciences in WSU's College of Veterinary Medicine, said the pork tasted outstanding.

"I went back for seconds," he said. "If I was still hungry, I probably would have gone back for thirds."

The team uses the gene-editing tool CRISPR-Cas9 to select desirable genetic traits in food animals including cattle, sheep and goats.

The tool could be used to improve meat quality and to make animals more resistant to heat and parasites.

Gene editing works by making changes to an organism's DNA that could occur in nature or through selective breeding, but would take much longer without a tool like CRISPR.

The process uses sterile males, known as surrogate sires, to sire offspring with traits from another male pig.

The sires are produced by turning off a gene in males called NANOS2 that is specific to fertility. The surrogates are then implanted with another male's stem cells that create sperm with that male's desired traits to be passed on to the next generation through natural reproduction.

Once introduced, the genes are inheritable throughout the population.

The sausage meat came from five surrogate sires that were two years old.

The project spent two years collecting data to show that the animals, other than the specific change they made, were otherwise completely normal and safe for humans to eat.

"As best we can tell, there is no inherent risk to the welfare of the animal or risks to humans for consumption," Oatley said.