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		<title>Nanotechnology may improve &#8216;diet food&#8217;</title>
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		<description><![CDATA[LONDON &#8211; In a taste of things to come, food scientists say they have cooked up a way of using nanotechnology to make low-fat or fat-free foods just as appetizing and satisfying as their full-fat fellows. The implications could be significant in combating the spread of health problems such as obesity, diabetes and heart disease. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>LONDON &#8211; In a taste of things to come, food scientists say they have  cooked up a way of using nanotechnology to make low-fat or fat-free  foods just as appetizing and satisfying as their full-fat fellows.</p>
<p>The implications could be significant in combating the spread of health problems such as obesity, diabetes and heart disease.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft" style="margin-left: 3px; margin-right: 3px;" src="http://lifewise.canoe.ca/FoodDrink/2010/09/15/250_foodshutterstock_53831347.jpg" alt="" width="250" height="185" /><span style="color: #999999;"></p>
<div id="xsmtext"><img src="http://lifewise.canoe.ca/Images/invisible.gif" alt="" width="4" height="5" /><br />
<strong>Food  scientists say they have cooked up a way of using nanotechnology to  make low-fat or fat-free foods appetizing and satisfying. (Shutterstock)</strong></div>
<p></span></p>
<p>However, experts say nanotechnology’s future in food could be  thwarted before it gets started by a reluctance among food manufacturers  fearful of the kind of European consumer backlash that greeted  genetically modified (GM) food to be open about what they are doing.</p>
<p>They say this refusal to communicate could foster the same mistrust  that led GM to be branded “Frankenstein food” in many parts of Europe  and could mean some of nano food’s potential remains unfulfilled for  years.</p>
<p>“What the food industry is doing in research labs is looking at new  possibilities of creating new products, and they’re using the toolbox of  nanotechnology to do that,” said Frans Kampers, who coordinates  research on food nanotechnology at Wageningen University and Research  Centre in the Netherlands.</p>
<p>“But I think the industry should be more open. It should show what  &#8230; could come onto the market within the next two or three years,  because if we don’t prepare society for these products &#8230;we may be  throwing away all these opportunities.”</p>
<p><strong>RELUCTANCE</strong></p>
<p>Nanotechnology is the science of manipulating matter at the nano  scale — one thousand millionth of a metre — which, among other things,  may be used to alter when, how and where in our bodies food is digested.</p>
<p>According a British parliamentary report, the global market for  nanotechnology in food was $140 million in 2006 and is expected to  balloon to $5.6 billion in 2012.</p>
<p>Like Kampers, British lawmakers expressed concern that not enough  research is being done into potential nano food risks, and frustration  about the food sector’s lack of communication.</p>
<p>Reuters contacted Unilever, Kraft and Nestle, three of the world’s  biggest food firms, but only one wanted to talk at length about  nanotechnology.</p>
<p>Nestle said in an emailed statement it “does not do research in the  field of nanotechnology.” Kraft said it did not use nanotechnology now,  but its research and development teams “always keep their eyes on the  scientific research.”</p>
<p>A Unilever research director, Charles-Francois Gaudefroy, was more  forthcoming, saying that while the firm did not use nanotechnology in  any of its foods at the moment, it was looking seriously at potential  applications for the future.</p>
<p>“We need to go further into understanding how matter works, and then  bring that knowledge into how we prepare food for our products,” he told  Reuters. “We’re at the very beginning.”</p>
<p>One thing they might look into is work by scientists at Britain’s  Institute of Food Research (IFR), who said last month they had found an  unexpected synergy that helped break down fat and might lead to new ways  of slowing digestion, and ultimately to creating foods that made  consumers feel fuller.</p>
<p>“Much of the fat in processed foods is eaten in the form of emulsions  such as soups, yogurt, ice cream and mayonnaise,” said the IFR’s Peter  Wilde. “We are unpicking the mechanisms of digestion used to break them  down so we can design fats in a rational way that are digested more  slowly.”</p>
<p>The idea is that if digestion is slower, the final section of the  intestine called the ileum will be put on its “ileal brake,” sending a  signal to the consumer that means they feel full even though they have  eaten less fat.</p>
<p>Experts see promise in another nano technique which involves  encapsulating nutrients in bubble-like structures known as vesicles that  can be engineered to break down and release their contents at specific  stages in the digestive system.</p>
<p>According to Vic Morris, a nano expert at the IFR, this technique in a  larger form, micro-encapsulation, was well established in the food  industry. The major difference with nano-encapsulation was that the  smaller size might be able to take nutrients further or deliver them to  more appropriate places.</p>
<p><strong>MORE ACTIVE</strong></p>
<p>Morris and Kampers appeared relatively unperturbed about the  potential risks of nanotechnology when used in these ways, but when it  came to nanoparticles, their concern grew.</p>
<p>Nano particles measure between one and about 100 nanometres with a  high surface-to-volume ratio, which essentially allows them to be more  active than their larger cousins.</p>
<p>Saltier tasting salt, or iron that could be better absorbed by the  body to tackle iron-deficiency anaemia are two forms of nanoparticles  touted as possibilities for improving food.</p>
<p>In an effort to find a way of being able to label or regulate the use  of nanoparticles in future, the European Commission has set up a  research project called NanoLyse aimed at devising ways of detecting and  measuring nano technology in foods.</p>
<p>The project’s website says that, as yet, “very limited knowledge is  available on the potential impact of engineered nanoparticles on  consumers’ health.”</p>
<p>Concerned experts cite some research that has found that “persistent”  nanoparticles that do not dissolve or biodegrade, such as nanosilver  which can be used in food packaging as a way of extending shelf life,  may penetrate certain barriers within the body that mean they pose a  danger.</p>
<p>“These particles could be hazardous and we need to know more about  their effects both in the body and in the environment,” said Kampers.  “Since these particles are very small, they can&#8230;enter cells or even  the nucleus of a cell if they have the right characteristics.”</p>
<p><strong>By Kate Kelland, REUTERS</strong></p>
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