Lab-grown insect meat

Researchers have outlined proposals for lab-grown insect meat as an alternative to harmful livestock farming.

Writing in Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, a team at Turfs University in Massachusetts suggest insect cell culture as an advance over lab-grown animal cells in developing substitute meat.

Lead author Natalie Rubio said: โ€œIn most mammalian muscle cell culture systems, the cells have to be fixed in a single layer to a growth surface โ€“ which is complex to scale up for mass food production.

โ€œMany insect cells, however, can be grown free-floating in a suspension of growth media to allow cost-effective, high-density cell generation.โ€

The process would also involve animal-free growth media for insect cells, including soy and yeast-based formulas. The lab-grown insect meat would be fed on plants and genetically modified for maximum growth, nutrition and flavour.

Cultivating animal cells for lab-grown meat has in recent years been proposed as a greener method of producing meat than livestock farming, which causes land and water degradation, biodiversity loss and climate change. But a separate study cited by the Turfs team suggests energy requirements to cultivate animal cells in the lab could be higher than livestock farming โ€“ making insect cell culture a better option.

โ€œCompared to cultured mammalian, avian and other vertebrate cells, insect cell cultures require fewer resources and less energy-intensive environmental control, as they have lower glucose requirements and can thrive in a wider range of temperature, pH, oxygen and osmolarity conditions,โ€ reports Rubio.

Culturing insect cells involves lower water and space requirement than animal cells. The alterations that would be necessary for large-scale meat production are also simpler to achieve with insect cells, which are already used to manufacture insecticides, drugs and vaccines.

Research is still on-going to control development of insect cells into muscle and fat that would represent a physical edible object, and having them obtain a meat-like texture, which could involve techniques that are currently being used in biorobotics.

Related Content

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This