Lab-grown meat comes to Memphis
http://www.foodbusinessnews.net/articles/news_home/Business_News/2016/02/Lab-grown_meat_comes_to_Memphi.aspx
Test-tube beef is moving beyond the lab. Memphis Meats, a company founded by three scientists, is working to become the first company to sell meat grown from animal stem cells. The company will debut Feb. 4 when the founders present to investors at Indie Bio, a biotech accelerator created by venture capital firm SOS Ventures.
Memphis Meats says it is already growing meat in small quantities using cells from cows, pigs and chickens. The companys founders expect to have products ready to market including hot dogs, sausages, burgers and meatballs in less than five years. Memphis Meats said the company is closing in on a $2 million seed round of venture capital funds in addition to initial accelerator funding from SOS Ventures.
Memphis Meats plans to produce a calorie of meat from just 3 calories in inputs, instead of the typical 23 calories in feed it takes to generate 1 calorie from beef. The companys products also will be free of antibiotics, fecal matter, pathogens, and other contaminants found in conventional meat.
This is absolutely the future of meat, said Uma Valeti, M.D., co-founder and chief executive officer of Memphis Meats. We plan to do to the meat industry what the car did to the horse and buggy. Cultured meat will completely replace the status quo and make raising animals to eat them simply unthinkable.
Mr. Valeti is a Mayo Clinic-trained cardiologist, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota, and the president of the Twin Cities American Heart Association. He founded Memphis Meats with Nicholas Genovese, Ph.D., a stem cell biologist, and Will Clem, Ph.D., a biomedical engineer who owns a chain of barbecue restaurants in Memphis.