The Turkey Genome Sequencing Consortium -- made up of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University researchers working with the University of Minnesota, the University of Maryland and the U.S. Department of Agriculture -- received a $908,000 USDA grant to complete the last 10 percent of the turkey genome decoding, the researchers said.
A benefit of the decoding will be that turkeys could lead healthier lives if breeders know how their immune systems work and how to fight off such pathogens as bird flu, the consortium scientists say.
Another goal is to identify genes that might produce larger breasts or plumper legs, the researchers told The Washington Post.
"You can start addressing flavor traits, texture traits," said Otto Folkerts, associate director of technology development at Virginia Tech's Virginia Bioinformatics Institute.
"Sometimes people might want a turkey to taste more like a wild turkey," he said.
The pieces of the genome's last tenth are the hardest to find, scientists said, with researchers scouring the entire genome time and again.
"Every time, you will find pieces that were not there before," Rami Dalloul, an assistant professor of poultry immunology, told the Post.
It will take a year to complete the map, then another to find genetic variances from one breed of turkey to another, the scientists said.
It might be several more Thanksgivings before genomic science reaches the dinner table, the Post said.
Turkeys are the fourth-leading source of meat in the United States, after cows, chickens and pigs. Those three animals have already been genetically cataloged.
Copyright 2009 by United Press International.
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