We in the rich societies of the world don’t hear a lot
about aflatoxin. It is probably one of the single largest causes of cancer
in the developing world – particularly in Africa. Around a half a billion
people are at risk from this toxin in their diet. At high doses it can cause
acute poisoning and death. It also causes cognitive stunting in
children exposed to it. Aflatoxin is a natural chemical that is made by a
fungus called Aspergillus that can infect crops like corn, peanuts
and tree nuts particularly when there is damage by insects and/or stress from
drought. People like Americans are well protected from this threat by farmers
who exercise control measures for the insects and disease, by an advanced food
system that monitors for the issue in the harvested crops, uses proper storage
conditions, and excludes it from what is sold to us. For instance the EU
standard for maize is that it must have less than five parts per billion of
aflatoxin. Unfortunately only 20% of the normal maize supply in Kenya
meets that standard.For high value crops like almonds and peanuts, there are
not only concerted efforts to prevent this sort of contamination, there are
also mechanisms to literally check each individual nut for the presence of the
fungus and reject those that are suspect. That kind of detailed scrutiny has
never been feasible for a lower value crop like corn (or Maize). But recently,
a Swiss, family-owned grain handling equipment company called
BĆ¼hler has cooperated with Microsoft to develop a system which can process
corn at a rate of 15 metric tons per hour and reject any of the kernels that
are contaminated with the nasty chemical aflatoxin. That is both amazing and
very cool.
This remarkable system
relies on very high speed imaging technology using LED lights to look for the
florescence that suggests the presence of the fungus. It is applied to every
single corn kernel even at that high rate of grain flow. The system uses
Microsoft technology to pass all relevant data to the Azure cloud, where
visualization of the data, tracking, and reporting are possible in real time.
BĆ¼hler can also tap into Azure’s massive cloud infrastructure, available in 140
countries, to scale the solution globally. A puff of air is used to knock
the suspect grain out of the main flow and can achieve a 90% or better degree
of contamination reduction with something like a 5% level of grain rejection.
This technology will
have immediate applications in the feed grain industry in the developed world
because instead of rejecting entire loads that have some contaminated grain, it
will be possible to protect the animals that eat the grain while still using as
much of the yield as possible – a food waste reduction success. Also, since
aflatoxin can come through to milk, dairy product consumers will also get an
even higher level of protection.
Moving this sort of
technology into key areas like Africa will require some creative public/private
partnership approaches particularly in areas where there are not really any
sort of commercial grain handling systems at, say, a village level. The grain
equipment company behind this, BĆ¼hler has been doing business in Africa for 100
years and runs a milling school in Nairobi, so they are positioned to find
creative solutions to the implementation of this advance.
As revolutionary as
this technology promises to be, it is a good thing that it isn’t the sole
solution. One way to reduce the infection/contamination issue is to
intentionally spread a strain of the culprit fungus that does not happen to
make aflatoxin. It’s a biological control strategy that was first developed by
USDA researchers and commercialized in the U.S., but which has since
been re-developed in Africa. Insect resistant, “GMO” maize also
significantly reduces the incidence of the problematic infections. There is
also a “gene silencing” strategy proven by an Arizona State
researchers that would prevent the fungus from making its toxin even if it
was able to infect the plant.
There has also been a
very creative, to design an enzyme that breaks down aflatoxin into
harmless bits that was actually facilitated by an on-line, crowdsourced
game effort led by a researcher at UC Davis with support from Mars, Inc.
Such an enzyme might be able to turn the rejected, contaminated grain from this
new sorting mechanism into more food/feed or feedstock for bio-based
materials. The most robust and resilient anti-cancer strategy would be to
combine all of these methods and finish off with the high speed sorting
technology.
So there is new hope
for the mental development status of African children and for a lower incidence
of cancer there and elsewhere. I guess I just have to say that technology can
achieve some really cool results and I hope that non-profits and governmental
entities will join BĆ¼hler in extending this to the poorest and most vulnerable
populations.
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