Advances in cultured meat technology (Burleigh Dodds in Agricultural Science, 145, Band 145) - Hardcover

 
9781801463768: Advances in cultured meat technology (Burleigh Dodds in Agricultural Science, 145, Band 145)

Inhaltsangabe

Considers the potential benefits and challenges of cultured meat production, including the need to scale the current technology up at an affordable cost to produce nutritious and affordable products Addresses the key quality and sustainability issues of cultured meat production, highlighting consumer attitudes and how further education is required to increase consumer acceptance of cultured meat products Reviews the major technologies used in cultured meat product development, such as cell line sourcing, cell growth media and tissue engineering using scaffolds

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Über die Autorinnen und Autoren

Dr Mark Post is Professor of Sustainable Industrial Tissue Engineering in the Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences at Maastricht University, The Netherlands. He is also widely regarded as a pioneer in cultured meat technology, producing the world's first cultured meat hamburger in 2013. He co-founded the company MosaMeat to develop cultured meat products on a commercial scale.



Dr Che Connon is Professor of Tissue Engineering and FMS Director of Business Development at Newcastle University, UK. Professor Connon is widely recognised for his pioneering research in tissue engineering in such areas as the use of peptide/polymer gels in regenerative medicine and 'super tissue engineering' to develop biomaterials with a range of functions, including use in developing lab-grown meat. To this end he has spun out two companies (3D Bio-Tissues Ltd and CellRev Ltd) that look to solve critical issues in the production and texture of scaffold-free cultivated meat.



Dr Chris Bryant is an Honorary Research Associate at the University of Bath, UK and Director of Bryant Research, which works with alternative protein companies and others to advance the protein transition. With a background in psychology, he is particularly known for his research on understanding consumer attitudes to and acceptance of cultured meat products as well as broader attitudes to animal farming, welfare, vegetarianism and veganism.



Dr Mariana Petronela (Petra) Hanga BEng, PhD, FHEA, AMIChemE is a Lecturer in Biochemical Engineering at University College London, UK. Dr Hanga holds a BEng in Biochemical Engineering and a PhD in Regenerative Medicine from Loughborough University, UK. After graduating her PhD, Dr Hanga took on a postdoctoral position at Loughborough University on a project funded by the Bioprocessing Research Industry Club (BRIC) BBSRC. After that, she joined Aston University (Birmingham, UK) as a Lecturer in Biological Engineering. Her research addresses one grand challenge: food and nutrition for health, by advancing cultivated meat technologies that ultimately will enable a radical shift away from factory farmed animal products. Dr Hanga's multidisciplinary strengths and expertise include an understanding of the whole cell culture bioprocess from inoculation to cell harvest, including engineering characterisation of bioreactors and biological characterisation of cells. Dr Hanga's research has been funded to date by the Good Food Institute, the UK Research Councils (BBSRC and EPSRC), and the European Commission. Additionally, Dr Hanga is a committee member and the travel bursary secretary for the Biochemical Engineering Subject Interest Group (BESIG) in the Institution of Chemical Engineers (IChemE), a member of the European Society of Animal Cell Culture - UK (ESACT-UK) and of the Industrial Biotechnology Leadership Forum (IBLF). She also sits on the Editorial Board for the journal Biotechnology Letters and she is a regular reviewer for journals such as Biotechnology Journal, Processes and Foods and for funding bodies such as The Good Food Institute (US), Singapore Food Agency and A*STAR, Israeli Ministry of Innovation, Science and Technology - Israel, Mitacs Accelerator Programme Canada. Dr Hanga is also a co-founder and the Chief Scientific Officer of a cultivated meat start-up based in Birmingham, UK - Quest Meat Ltd.

Jette Feveile Young is associate professor at the Institute of Food Science, Aarhus University where she has been leading a science group on Differentiated and Biofunctional Food since 2009. She has more than 20 years of research experience within meat science and in vitro cell based techniques including primary muscle cells has led to her interest in several aspects of cultured meat. She is involved in and leads several projects including a CellFood hub at Aarhus University.

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With the global population estimated to reach 9 billion by 2050, agricultural production must align with this growth to alleviate any further burden on our current food systems. More sustainable and alternative modes of production are required to ensure that this overburden doesn’t occur and that the food security of millions isn’t compromised in the process.

Advances in cultured meat technology reviews the growing interest and emergence in the field of cellular agriculture as one possible solution to achieving this. The book reviews the major technologies used in cultured meat product development, including cell line sourcing, cell growth media, bioreactors for cell multiplication and tissue engineering using scaffolds. The need to establish regulatory frameworks to permit the creation and trade of this new type of product is also highlighted, as is the key issue of consumer acceptance of this new technology.

In its comprehensive exploration of the recent advances in cultured meat, the book showcases the potential of cultured meat production in alleviating the burden on our food systems, as well as some of the welfare and sustainability issues that arise during traditional livestock production.

Edited by a world-renowned team of experts in the field, including the pioneer of cultured meat, Advances in cultured meat technology will be a standard reference for researchers in agricultural, environmental and social science, government and other private sector agencies responsible for the establishment of regulatory frameworks that permit the production and trade of food items, as well as pharmacologists involved in the study of cells and animal tissues.

Dr Mark Post is Professor of Sustainable Industrial Tissue Engineering in the Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences at Maastricht University, The Netherlands. Professor Post is internationally renowned for his research in developing biomaterials for arterial grafting and the diagnosis of neovascularization. He is also widely regarded as a pioneer in cultured meat technology, producing the world’s first cultured meat hamburger in 2013. He co-founded the company MosaMeat to develop cultured meat products on a commercial scale.

Dr Che Connon is Professor of Tissue Engineering and FMS Director of Business Development at Newcastle University, UK. Professor Connon is widely recognised for his pioneering research in tissue engineering in such areas as the use of peptide/polymer gels in regenerative medicine and ‘super tissue engineering’ to develop biomaterials with a range of functions, including use in developing lab-grown meat. He has also won a number of awards for the successful commercialisation of his research.

Dr Chris Bryant is an Honorary Research Associate at the University of Bath, UK. With a background in psychology, he is particularly known for his research on understanding consumer attitudes to and acceptance of cultured meat products as well as broader attitudes to animal farming, welfare, vegetarianism and veganism. He has presented widely at conferences and given interviews to the BBC, national newspapers and other media outlets.

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