Unique science collaboration in agri-food research
MEDIA RELEASE
10 August 2009
Unique science collaboration for ground breaking agri-food research
In a collaboration of unparalleled scientific expertise in New Zealand, AgResearch and the University of Auckland’s Liggins Institute are seeking to discover how nutrients in food affect animals and humans to improve body composition.
“We aim to investigate how nutrients in foods are released during digestion and how those nutrients then affect our metabolism. The interaction between the digestion and absorption of nutrients i.e. the energy absorbed by the body from our diet, and how nutrients affect our metabolism is a key focus of the research. This could have direct benefits for people as two factors important in checking obesity are the absorption of energy from the diet, and how we metabolise that energy,” said AgResearch Chief Executive Dr Andrew West.
“This research could also be used to achieve beneficial outcomes in productive animals - changing nutrient absorption and metabolism so that the animal's body composition, like the meat they produce for example, is more appealing and healthy for consumers. This would produce significant new market opportunities for New Zealand farmers.”
The Liggins Institute collaboration with AgResearch has resulted in the formation of the Pastoral Foods For Human Health Research Centre. The Liggins Institute was the first large-scale research Institute established by The University of Auckland. It is committed to world-class biomedical and clinical research in areas of major health importance. Professor Sir Peter Gluckman heads the Centre’s research effort.
“The Centre aims to optimise the nutritional and health-giving qualities of foods from pastoral-based sources for human consumption,” said The University of Auckland Vice-Chancellor Professor Stuart McCutcheon.
“A major research target is novel agri-food ingredients with human health benefits. This focus includes animal feeds, animal welfare products, ethical animal manipulation methods, and enhanced handling and processing of food products.”
“AgResearch and the Liggins Institute are jointly developing two key Foundation for Research Science and Technology programmes on nutritional epigenetics and agri-foods – one centred on animal productivity and the other on food for human health, but both sharing core methodology and key research staff from both organisations.”
“This endeavour is an
excellent example of the fields of research we created the
Liggins Institute to investigate. Better understanding of
the interrelationship between genetics and nutrition is
vitally important and any insights we uncover will be
significant in dealing with a range of health and mortality
issues which currently concern governments and medical
professionals,” said Professor Wayne Cutfield, the newly
appointed Director of the Liggins Institute.
AgResearch’s General Manager of Applied Biotechnologies, Dr Jimmy Suttie, said the collaborative nutritional epigenetics research is a ground breaking partnership in agri-food research for human health and animal productivity.
“AgResearch is the most integrated pastoral research organisation in the world. Our scientific expertise, together with that of the Liggins Institute, provides an unparalleled combination of capability in pastoral agriculture, agri-foods, human nutrition, growth and health. Our work together is part of the exciting new era in agri-food research for New Zealanders and the agricultural sector.”
ENDS