New technology can detect as little as 0.1 percent GMO contamination in crops, food
(NaturalNews) Identifying the presence of genetically-modified (GM)  contaminants in food and food crops could soon become a whole lot easier  and more accurate. Researchers from Lumora, a molecular diagnostics specialist company originating out of Cambridge University,  have developed a unique method of illuminating and analyzing DNA  strands that allows them to detect GM contaminants at levels as low as  0.1 percent, which is an astoundingly accurate rate.
Published in the journal BMC Biotechnology,  a breakthrough new study explains how a combination of bioluminescence  and isothermal amplification technology allows analysts to amplify DNA  strands at a constant temperature, and generate real-time readouts of GM  contamination levels in food and food crops. And the best part is that  mobile devices equipped with the technology can essentially perform  these scans and analyses on the fly.
The company's bioluminescent  real time reporter (BART) component utilizes luciferase, the same  enzyme in fireflies that allows them to light up. This system, which won  Lumora an award from the U.K. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council  (BBSRC), produces light at variant levels in the presence of DNR or RNA  sequences that contain GM contamination, and it does this in  combination with a system known as loop mediated isothermal  amplification (LAMP).
"This method requires only basic equipment  for DNA extraction and a constant temperature for DNA amplification and  detection," said Dr. Guy Kiddle, lead author of the study, about the  technology. "Consequently LAMP-BART provides a 'field-ready' solution  for monitoring GM crops and their interaction with wild plants or non-GM  crops."
What this all means for the general public is that,  should mandatory GM labeling laws eventually be passed in your state or,  in a best-case scenario nationwide, scanning food and crops for GM  contaminants will be simple and and highly-effective. The technology  will also allow farmers to detect the presence of GM contamination in  their fields, which could make it a lot easier for farmers to sue  Monsanto and other GMO giants for trespassing.
"(LAMP-BART is) an  effective and sensitive technique for GM detection with significant  potential for quantification even at low levels of contamination and in  samples derived from crops such as maize with a large genome size,"  added the researchers.
Meanwhile, efforts continue to move forward in California (http://www.labelgmos.org/), Washington State (http://www.naturalnews.com), Vermont (http://www.naturalnews.com/035628_Monsanto_Vermont_GMO_labeling.html),  and a number of other states to require mandatory labeling of all GMOs  and products that contain traces of GMOs. And nationally, the Just Label It campaign is pushing for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to mandate the labeling of GMOs (http://justlabelit.org/).
Sources for this article include:
http://www.foodnavigator.com
http://www.foodsafetynews.com
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