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Genetic
manipulation: Do ya feel lucky?
The
development of recombinant DNA technology gave biologists a more
powerful and selective tool.
By John Russo/Vicus.com
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VICUS.COM
(15 March 2000) -- The
practice of mixing genes to improve crop quality and yield is not new.
Prior to the development of recombinant DNA technology, success in this field was achieved with very
little understanding of the biochemical mechanisms that determined the
selected traits.
Every time a cross was
made, tens of thousands of genes were mixed and reorganized, largely
at random. Breeders then kept the preferred offspring, while
discarding the descendents that lacked desirable traits or exhibited
undesirable properties.
The advent of recombinant
DNA technology for genetic manipulation provides biologists with a
more powerful and selective tool. It extends the range of biological
materials from which genes can be accessed. It also permits scientists
to be very specific in altering the genetic makeup of new crop
varieties. If done correctly, the promise of greater crop yields and
an end to world hunger is possible. If it is done incorrectly, it
could be the incarnation of your worst science fiction movie.
Seven desirable
outcomes from altering the genetic makeup of new crop varieties
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Altered plant fats and
oils to improve health
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Environmentally benign
herbicides
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Longer shelf life for
foods at full ripeness
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Methionine- and
lysine-enhanced grain and legume proteins
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Plant foods that
deliver immunizing antigens
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Reduced world hunger
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Resistance to pests
and diseases
Health Risk
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Concerns
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Scientific
Support?
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Toxicity
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Genetic
manipulation could enhance natural plant toxins by switching
on a gene with toxic effects.
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No scientifically
valid study.
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Allergies
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People with
allergies could be exposed to proteins they react to without
knowing it (e.g., if a peanut, wheat, or shellfish gene was
transplanted into corn).
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A few years ago,
a Brazil nut gene spliced into soybeans induced allergies in
people sensitive to the nuts.
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Bad nutrition
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Foreign genes
might alter the nutritional value of food in unpredictable
ways.
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The Journal of
Medicinal Food reported that concentrations of phytoestrogens (thought
to protect against heart disease and perhaps cancer) were
lower in genetically
modified soybeans vs. traditional strains.
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Antibiotic
resistance
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When a foreign
gene is spliced into a plant or microbe, a marker gene helps
determine if the first gene was successfully taken up. Most
markers code for resistance to antibiotics and might be passed
on to disease-causing microbes in the intestines of people who
eat altered food. This could contribute to the public health
problem of antibiotic resistance.
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No scientifically
valid study.
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Environmental
risks
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Losing a safe
natural pesticide
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Among genetically
modified products are crops with a gene from the soil
bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) that
produces a protein toxic to insects. Overexposure to Bt will
help insects become resistant.
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No scientifically
valid study.
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Harm to innocents
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In lab studies,
monarch butterfly caterpillars that ate milkweed dusted with
pollen from Bt corn died or developed abnormally. Ecologists
worry that other "nontarget species" could be
harmed.
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Letter to the
editor, Nature.
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Superweeds
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Insect resistance
and herbicide tolerance may be passed on to wild plants,
particularly weeds, which will then have an advantage over
competing plant species.
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One report of
herbicide-tolerant canola cross-pollinated with a related weed
species, which produced an herbicide-tolerant descendent.
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John
Russo, Jr. PharmD, is senior vice president of medical
communications at Vicus.com. He is a pharmacist and medical writer
with more than 20 years of experience in medical education.
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References:
Day
PR. Genetic modification of proteins in food. Crit
Rev Food Sci Nutr. 1996; 36 Suppl:S49- 67.
Losey
JE; Rayor LS; Carter ME. Transgenic pollen harms monarch larvae
[letter]. Nature, 1999; 399 (6733):214.
Tangley
L. How safe is genetically modified food? (transgenic foods could
trigger allergies, antibiotic resistance, and other health problems). U.S.
News & World Report, July 26, 1999 v127 i4 p40.
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