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Transgenic / Transgénico



A concretizar-se a aprovação final das autoridades de saúde norte-americanas, este será o primeiro animal transgénico a chegar legalmente às mesas dos EUA.


O salmão transgénico atinge o tamanho adulto duas vezes mais depressa do que o não transgénico (à frente) AQUABOUNTY

A Food and Drug Administration (FDA), a agência federal norte-americana responsável pela aprovação de novos alimentos e medicamentos, emitiu um parecer onde conclui que o consumo de um tipo de salmão geneticamente manipulado, produzido pela empresa AquaBounty Technologies, não apresenta “riscos nem perigos significativos para a segurança alimentar”.

A FDA considerou ainda que, dadas as características destes salmões e a forma como são criados (são fêmeas estéreis e crescem em condições de estrito isolamento), mesmo que alguns exemplares conseguissem escapar dos tanques isso não afectaria o ambiente.

O salmão transgénico em questão, criado em 1989 e baptizado AquAdvantage, é um salmão do Atlântico ao qual foi acrescentado o gene da hormona de crescimento do salmão-rei (Oncorhynchus tshawytsch), uma espécie muito comum do Pacífico. Esta manipulação genética faz com que cresça duas vezes mais depressa do que os seus congéneres naturais.

Segundo a imprensa internacional, o parecer da FDA já estava pronto em Abril, mas a sua publicação fora adiada pela Casa Branca, que receava eventuais reacções negativas dos seus eleitores (recorde-se que as presidenciais estavam mesmo à porta…).

À vitória eleitoral veio juntar-se a publicação, na segunda quinzena de Dezembro, de vários artigos no site slate.com que não deixaram outra alternativa ao Executivo norte-americano senão tornar público o parecer da FDA. Naqueles artigos, Jon Entine, director do Projecto de Literacia Genética (associação sem fins lucrativos dedicada a “separar a ideologia da ciência” e a desmistificar os mitos em torno da engenharia genética), denunciava o atraso na divulgação do documento e salientava que isso “levantava questões legais e éticas de interferência política na ciência e no trabalho independente das agências federais”. Dois dias mais tarde, o parecer da FDA era tornado público online, enquanto se aguardava pela sua versão impressa.

Contudo, lê-se na revista New Scientist, a aprovação final não será imediata. O parecer deve agora ser submetido a discussão pública e a FDA precisará de realizar, a seguir, uma derradeira avaliação, que pode ainda ser demorada – mas que, em princípio, não deverá apresentar surpresas.

O salmão transgénico também há-de chegar às mesas europeias? Segundo o diário britânico The Independent, quando o AquAdvantage passar a ser “legalmente comercializado e consumido nos EUA, os produtores de salmão britânicos e europeus vão sentir-se pressionados a seguir o exemplo”.

Autor: Ana Gerschenfeld
Fonte: Ecosfera – Público
Original: http://goo.gl/88HpH


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(Reuters) – A top Mexican government official said Thursday that the long-awaited but highly controversial approval of genetically modified (GM) corn fields on a commercial scale will drag into next year.

Mariano Ruiz, a deputy agriculture secretary, said in an interview that the regulatory approval process won’t be finalized under the outgoing government of President Felipe Calderon, but instead will fall to his successor to see through sometime next spring.

President-elect Enrique Pena Nieto of the Institutional Revolutionary Party is set to take office on December 1.

Ruiz said he does not expect permits to be approved for four to five months but that the new government led by Pena Nieto is likeminded in its support for the introduction of large-scale GMO corn cultivation in Mexico.

“I think we are in agreement generally over the importance of having this instrument, and that farmers have the tool of genetically modified organisms,” said Ruiz.

“But like they say, the devil is in the details,” he added.

Scientists recognize Mexico as the birthplace of corn, and opponents of GM corn have argued that genetically modified varieties pioneered by companies like Monsanto will contaminate native strains and irrevocably harm the grain’s biodiversity.

Ruiz said the government still had to designate so-called “centers of origin” where GM corn cultivation will be banned as well as set other safety regulations.

Mexico, Latin America’s second-biggest economy, plants 7.2 million hectares (17.8 million acres) of corn annually to grow mostly white corn which is used for human consumption, including the country’s staple tortillas.

Domestic corn production this year will total nearly 22 million tonnes, according to agriculture ministry data.

But the country relies on imports of yellow corn for animal feed, including about 9 million tonnes in 2012.

Backers of GM corn say it produces yields between 10 and 15 percent larger than conventional strains, which could boost production and curb Mexico’s dependence on imports.

The delay will leave five applications for commercial-scale GM corn fields totaling about 2.5 million hectares in limbo.

Agribusiness giant Monsanto has submitted two applications, both of which seek 700,000 hectares for GM corn in Mexico’s western Sinaloa state, the country’s largest corn producer.

The Mexican subsidiary of Pioneer Hi-Bred International, part of DuPont, has three applications each of which would cover about 350,000 hectares in northeastern Tamaulipas state.

Meanwhile, Dow Agrosciences de Mexico, part of Dow Chemical, has one application for 40,000 hectares also in Tamaulipas state.

(Editing by Ed Davies)

Author: David Alire Garcia and Adriana Barrera
Source: Reuters
Original: http://goo.gl/0CrGL


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An anti GM group in New Zealand wants the government to shut down research into an allergen free milk produced by a cloned cow.

In a world breakthrough, AgResearch (NZ) scientists have produced milk from ‘Daisy’ that’s free of the protein betalactoglobulin (BLG).

It’s estimated up to 3 per cent of humans are allergic to milk proteins and it’s hoped the BLG-free milk could be in the fridge within three to 10 years.

But lobby group GE Free New Zealand is horrified by the development.

President Claire Bleakely says the very premise of removing the BLG protein is wrong, and the milk could lead to further problems for those who drank it.

“Betalactoglobulin (BLG), what they’ve knocked out, is actually a very minor part of the milk, it’s actually part of whey and it’s essential for digestive health, immune system health, as well as the absorption of vitamins A, D and E,” she said.

“For people who can tolerate milk, BLG is an essential part for milk to be absorbed in its entirety.

“For the alleged 3.0 percent that can’t tolerate milk, it’s likely to be only 0.1 per cent of them who have the actual allergy to the betalactoglobulin.

“And one of the highest allergies is to casein, which is another milk protein, and they have doubled the casein in the milk.

“So they’ve reduced one protein but they’ve doubled another one, which actually has the highest allergenic potential in the people who are allergic to milk.”

Author: Jessica Strauss
Source: ABC Rural
Original: http://goo.gl/Tc7TP


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The vast majority of Americans want genetically modified food labelled. If California passes November’s ballot, they could get it


In the US, an estimated 70% of items on supermarket shelves contain GM ingredients, commonly corn, soy and canola oil products. Photograph: David Sillitoe/Guardian

Last month, nearly 1m signatures were delivered to county registrars throughout California calling for a referendum on the labeling of genetically engineered foods. If the measure, “The Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act”, which will be on the ballot in November, passes, California will become the first state in the nation to require that GM foods be labeled as such on the package.

This is not the first time that the issue has come up in California. Several labeling laws have been drafted there, but none has made it out of legislative committee. Lawmakers in states like Vermont and Connecticut have also proposed labeling legislation, which has gone nowhere in the face of stiff industry opposition. And the US Congress has likewise seen sporadic, unsuccessful attempts to mandate GM food labeling since 1999.

What makes the referendum in California different is that, for the first time, voters and not politicians will be the ones to decide. And this has the food industry worried. Understandably so, since only one in four Americans is convinced that GMOs are “basically safe”, according to a survey conducted by the Mellman Group, and a big majority wants food containing GMOs to be labeled.

This is one of the few issues in America today that enjoys broad bipartisan support: 89% of Republicans and 90% of Democrats want genetically altered foods to be labeled, as they already are in 40 nations in Europe, in Brazil, and even in China. In 2007, then candidate Obama latched onto this popular issue saying that he would push for labeling – a promise the president has yet to keep.

In Europe, only 5% of food sold contains GMOs, a figure that continues to shrink. In the US, by contrast, an estimated 70% of the products on supermarket shelves include at least traces of genetically engineered crops – mostly, corn and soy byproducts and canola oil, which are ingredients in many of America’s processed foods.

Given their unpopularity with consumers, labeling “Frankenfoods” would undoubtedly hurt sales, possibly even forcing supermarkets to take them off their shelves. In one survey, just over half of those polled said they would not buy food that they knew to be genetically modified.

This makes the financial stakes for November’s referendum vote huge. California is not just America’s leading agricultural state, but the most populous state in the nation. If companies are made to change their labels in California, they may well do so all over the country, rather than maintain a costly two-tier packaging and distribution system.

Several hurdles will have to be overcome, however, before this happens. The ballot initiative will face fierce opposition from the food and biotech industries, which are expected to spend an estimated $60-100m on an advertising blitz to convince Californians that labeling is unnecessary, will hurt farmers, increase their food prices, and even contribute to world hunger.

One lobbyist the corporations have hired to make this case is Tom Hiltachk, the head of the Coalition Against the Costly Food Labeling Proposition (CACFLP), whose members include the Grocery Manufacturers Association (GMA), Monsanto, BASF, Bayer, Dow and Syngenta, as well as several big food processors and supermarket chains. Hiltachk is no stranger to the shadowy world of industry front groups, according to Alexis Baden-Mayer, political director of the Organic Consumers Association. The food activist reported on Alternet that:

“With a little help from his friends at Philip Morris and RJ Reynolds, he helped organize the Californians for Smokers’ Rights group to fight anti-smoking initiatives in the 1980s and 1990s.”

Also working to defeat the labeling initiative, according to Baden-Mayer, is the California Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse (CALA), which likewise receives big bucks from the tobacco industry and assorted other corporations. The consumer watchdog group Public Citizen says that CALA aims “to incite public scorn for the civil justice system, juries and judges, and to pave the way for enactment of laws immunizing corporations from liability for actions that harm consumers.”

Whether lobbying groups like these will be able to convince famously independent Californians to reject the labeling initiative in November remains to be seen. But even if the referendum passes, the food industry can be expected to challenge in court the state’s right to mandate its own labeling requirements – a function usually reserved for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), at the federal level.

The FDA’s position on GMOs is that they are safe and essentially equivalent nutritionally to conventionally grown food varieties. But critics counter that the FDA has no way of knowing if this is true, since crucial testing of GM foods has never been required by the agency, and indeed, has not yet been conducted. Writes Dr Suzanne Wuerthele, a toxicologist with the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA):

“We are confronted with the most powerful technology the world has ever known, and it is being rapidly deployed with almost no thought whatsoever to its consequences.”

The concern is that genetic modification alters the proteins in foods in ways that researchers do not yet fully understand. Substances that have never existed before in nature are entering our food supply untested. While researchers have not yet found a “smoking gun”, which would prove that GM foods as a class are dangerous, there are troubling signs that they may be a factor in the recent epidemic of food allergies. Soon after GM soy was introduced to the UK, for example, soy allergies escalated by 50%.

Rosa Rashall, a nutritionist in Garberville, California, who took part in the petition campaign to get the labeling initiative on the ballot, told the Redwood Times:

“We are all worried for a variety of reasons, from health effects to skyrocketing food sensitivities that have started to come about in the last 20 years. There has been an incredible 400% increase in food sensitivities that coincides pretty well with the unlabeled introduction of GMO food into the marketplace.”

Critics also argue that agriculture’s increasing dependence on GMOs has coincided with a steep rise in toxic agrochemical use over the last decade. A variety of GM corn sold by Monsanto was developed specifically to withstand punishing doses of the company’s bestselling herbicide, Roundup.

Food scientists remain divided on the larger food safety issue. Some say that there is no cause for alarm, while others cite the allergy problem and also animal studies, like one published by the International Journal of Biological Sciences, which showed high levels of kidney and liver failures (the two organs of detoxification) in rats that were fed Monsanto GM corn. Monsanto’s biotech corn is designed to produce a pesticide in its cellular structure that wards off insect pests. Nobody knows what effect this toxin will have on the people who eat the flesh of livestock that are fed it.

The bottom line is that we can’t be sure what the physiological effects of consuming GM foods are until rigorous human trials are conducted – which is not likely to happen anytime soon.

Californians aren’t waiting until all of the scientific results are in. And what they decide at the polling station in November may change what the rest of us eat.

• Editor’s note: this article originally stated that California was the “third most populous state” in the US; in fact, it is the most populous (and third largest geographically); the article was amended at 12pm ET (5pm UK) on 13 June.

Author: Richard Schiffman
Source: The Guardian
Original: http://goo.gl/4oUv6


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Um novo milho desenvolvido pela DowAgroSciences pode fornecer a resposta às orações de agricultores norte-americanos para uma epidemia persistente de super ervas daninhas. Ou pode desencadear uma enxurrada de químicos perigosos que tornará as ervas ainda mais resistentes e prejudicará outros cultivos importantes.

Ou, pode ser ambos.

O “Enlist”, em estágio final de aprovação, se tornou o mais recente foco de debates sobre os riscos e recompensas da tecnologia agrícola. Com prazo para comentários públicos sobre a proposta finalizando nesta semana, mais de cinco mil pessoas e grupos já opinaram. A Dow Agrosciences, uma unidade da Dow ChemicalCo, espera ter aprovação do produto este ano para que siga para os cultivos em 2013.

O milho em si não é o que está em questão, e sim o potente herbicida composto 2,4-D.

A engenharia do milho foi concebida de forma a aguentar doses desse novo herbicida desenvolvido pela Dow, que contém um composto comumente usado no tratamento de gramados com ervas de folhas amplas e para a limpeza de campos antes do plantio de trigo e cevada.

O Enlist é o primeiro de uma série de novos cultivos tolerantes a herbicidas que visam lidar com o surgimento de ervas que sufocam as plantações. Elas desenvolveram resistência ao popular Roundup, herbicida da rival Monsanto. A série faz parte de um novo arsenal agrícola, que segundo os defensores, são essenciais para o cultivo suficiente de alimentos para uma população crescente.

Mas, enquanto o 2,4-D tem um longo histórico de uso, a natureza volátil do químico preocupa, pois o vento, altas temperaturas e umidade podem levar à migração de herbicidas tradicionais, desencadeando o caos em cultivos, jardins e árvores muito longe da sua aplicação original, desprotegidos do agente invisível.

Ambientalistas estão pressionando o governo a parar antes de abrir as portas para o que dizem poder ser uma decisão destrutiva.

Os oponentes incluem alguns agricultores especializados que temem que o herbicida 2,4-D possa causar danos generalizados a cultivos que não passaram por um processo de engenharia para serem tolerantes a ele. O componente é tão potente que o seu uso é rigidamente restrito em algumas áreas e em determinadas épocas em alguns estados.

“Esta é uma questão elementar para a agricultura”, comentou John Bode, advogado de uma coalizão de agricultores e empresas alimentícias que buscam restrições ou a rejeição dos planos da Dow.

“Quantidades massivas do 2,4-D podem causar grande mudanças, ameaçando especialmente cultivos a milhas de distância”, disse Bode, que foi assistente da Secretaria de Agricultura na administração Reagan.

Os interesses financeiros também são altos. A Dow prevê um valor de bilhões de dólares para esta linha de produtos que até agora é o maior competidor do Roundup e das sementes modificadas “Roudup Ready” da Monsanto. A Dow espera expandir o Enlist para cultivos de soja e algodão.

Onde, no passado, o Roundup matou as ervas daninhas facilmente, especialistas dizem que agora, mesmo o uso pesado do herbicida com glyphosato não consegue mais matar as “super ervas”.

Novo herbicida dribla a dispersão

Alguns cientistas apoiam o Enlist. No sul do Illinois, um dos principais cinturões produtores de milho, infestações da erva invasora chamada ‘waterhemp’ dobraram a cada ano ao longo dos últimos três anos, segundo Bryan Young, cientista da Universidade de Southern Illinois.

Oficiais da Dow dizem que estão cientes do problema da volatilidade e propagação do 2,4-D e que o novo herbicida foi formulado para reduzir estes fatores dramaticamente. Eles alegam que se os agricultores utilizarem a nova versão do 2,4-D adequadamente, a dispersão será reduzida em cerca de 90%, e que testes mostram que o novo produto tem “volatilidade muito baixa”.

Até mesmo muitos oponentes do novo herbicida dizem que é melhor do que os rivais genéricos que usam o 2,4-D. Mas eles ponderam que a versão da Dow será tão cara que muitos agricultores provavelmente comprarão genéricos mais baratos para usar no milho tolerante ao 2,4-D.

A Dow reconhece isto, mas diz que trabalhará para atrair os agricultores para sua marca.

“Acho que nunca será garantido, mas estamos fazendo o possível para tentar incentivar e educar as pessoas”, comentou Tom Wiltrout, líder de estratégias globais para sementes da Dow.

David Simmons, um agricultor de Indiana que cultiva soja e milho, mas também dirige um vinhedo, disse que as vinhas jovens sofreram danos significativos coma dispersão do 2,4-D aplicado em seus vizinhos, forçando-o pedir ressarcimento das suas seguradoras.

Devido aos notórios efeitos da dispersão, oponentes têm demandado que alguma forma de fundo de indenização seja estabelecida para pagar as perdas das fazendas prejudicadas. A Dow não defende esta salvaguarda.

Grandes interesses

Oponentes inundaram o Departamento de Agricultura dos Estados Unidos (USDA) com petições e demandas pela rejeição do novo milho da Dow ou por um regulamentação rígida antes que o uso do 2,4-D seja ampliado para milhões de acres no coração agrícola norte-americano. Mais de 90 milhões de acres de milho serão plantados apenas em 2012.

Na semana passada, a coalizão ‘Salve Nossos Cultivos’, representando mais de dois mil produtores norte-americanos, entrou com petições legais no USDA e na Agência de Proteção Ambiental demandando que o governo avalie os planos da Dow mais de perto. O grupo diz que poderá entrar com um processo judicial para barrar o novo milho.

Steve Smith, diretor de agricultura da Red Gold, maior processadora de tomates enlatados do mundo, chamou a questão do 2,4-D de uma “bomba relógio”.

“Somos todos produtores, e pessoas que não têm problemas com novas tecnologias. Mas prevemos que este novo produto terá efeitos colaterais nos quais acreditamos que as pessoas não tenham pensado adequadamente”, comentou Smith.

Outros temem que o Enlist e o 2,4-D serão apenas o começo de uma nova onda de químicos agrícolas perigosos. A gigante BASF e a Monsanto pretendem lançar até o meio da década cultivos tolerantes a um mix dos químicos dicamba e glyphosato.

Este crescente uso de químicos apenas trará mais resistência das ervas daninhas nos próximos anos, alertam cientistas e ambientalistas.

“É uma queda de braço química”, disse Andrew Kimbrell, um advogado do Centro para Segurança Alimentar contra os novos sistemas de plantio. “É um cenário assustador. Não poderemos fazer nada com estas ervas além de usar machados”.

Ao invés do uso de mais químicos para o plantio de milho no mesmo campo ano após ano, os agricultores norte-americanos deveriam estar fazendo mais rotação de culturas, uma técnica que comprovadamente desafia a resistência das ervas daninhas, defendem muitos cientistas.

A Dow diz que apesar do Enlist ser a melhor opção atualmente, não será a única em longo prazo para a resistência das ervas.

“Não existe saída mágica”, comentou Joe Vertin, chefe global da Dow para o Enlist.

Traduzido por Fernanda B. Muller, Instituto CarbonoBrasil

Fonte: Carbono Brasil
Original: http://bit.ly/IPGNGy


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A corn scientist holds an ear of biotech corn inside a greenhouse at Monsanto’s research facilities in Chesterfield, Mo. On Friday, a federal judge threw out a case by a large number of farmers who were suing Monsanto to stop lawsuits against farmers who inadvertently ended up with Monsanto genes in their crops. (Los Angeles Times)

U.S. Federal Dist. Judge Naomi Buchwald ruled Friday to dismiss the case brought by organic farmers to stop patent infringement lawsuits brought by seed giant Monsanto. The suit, called OSGATA et al. vs. Monsanto, was brought by the Organic Seed Growers and Trade Assn. (OSGATA), as well as 82 other plaintiffs representing as many as 300,000 farmers.

“We’re Americans. We believe in the system. But we’re disappointed in the judge,” said Jim Gerritsen, an organic seed farmer in Maine and OSGATA president.

The farmers had sought a declaratory judgment against Monsanto to stop the agribusiness giant from suing farmers who ended up with patented genes in their seed crops through cross-contamination via wind or other accidental methods. Monsanto has said for years that it would not sue farmers who inadvertently acquired their patented genes, yet there have been over a hundred such lawsuits, including several against farmers who proved they had no intention of using Monsanto genes, and an unknown number of settlements that have not been disclosed. The farmers contend that this amounts to harassment, and that many of them have stopped growing profitable crops such as corn because of fear of contamination by Monsanto crops.

The famers had hoped that one result of the law would be a reexamination of the patents held by Monsanto, which they claim are fraudulent. The judge’s ruling did not address those matters.

The plaintiff’s lead attorney, Dan Ravicher, executive director of the Public Patent Foundation at Cardozo Law School, said in a statement that he believes the judge made an error.

“Her failure to address the purpose of the Declaratory Judgment Act and her characterization of binding Supreme Court precedent that supports the farmers’ standing as ‘wholly inapposite’ constitute legal error. In sum, her opinion is flawed on both the facts and the law.”

Gerritsen says the farmers he represents will fight on.

“The situation that brought us to court is still there. Farmers need the protection of the court. We filed a completely legitimate lawsuit under the Declaratory Judgment Act. We do understand that we have the right to appeal.” He points out it’s a big group, and 83 different entities have to agree to go forward with the appeal. “This is already underway,” he says. “The discussions have already begun.”

Author: Dean Kuipers
Source: Los Angeles Times
Original: http://lat.ms/yrfkLi


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Some scientists say regulators should require companies to feed GM foods to rats for two years before approving them for humans (iStockphoto: Creativeye99)

The Australian food authority has again defended itself against criticisms that its testing of GM food is inadequate.

French molecular biologist Professor Gilles-Eric Seralini of the University of Caen made the criticisms during a recent lecture tour of Australia.

Seralini first raised concerns about genetically modified organisms early last decade when he was with the French government authority that was assessing them.

He has since founded the non-profit Committee for Research and Independent Information on Genetic Engineering (CRIIGEN) which has been investigating the safety of GM food.

For example, in 2007 his team published a scientific peer reviewed paper on the health effects of Monsanto’s Bt corn product, MON863.

The corn, which has been engineered to produce an insecticidal protein normally produced by the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is approved for sale internationally, including in Australia.

In the study, Seralini and colleagues reanalysed Monsanto’s raw data and concluded that rats fed the corn showed evidence of liver and kidney toxicity.

The MON863 data had originally been kept as a commercial secret by the company, says Seralini. It was only released under a court order in a case taken by the German government against Monsanto, using lawyers funded by Greenpeace.

Since the reanalysis of MON863 data, his team has also raised questions over other GM foods.

Speaking at a symposium at the University of Technology, Sydney last week, Seralini criticised the Australian food regulator’s protocols for assessing GM food safety as inadequate.

He says long-term animal feeding studies are necessary to determine whether any chronic disease including cancers develop.

“We would like to see two-year long studies in rats because they are the lab animals that are used for all kinds of drugs, chemicals and pesticides all over the world,” says Seralini.

Internationally-accepted protocols

Food Standards Australia and New Zealand (FSANZ) has approved more than 50 GM foods imported into Australia and says it uses internationally-accepted protocols to assess the foods. The authority does not agree with the usefulness of animal feeding studies.

Although not generally requiring GM companies to submit such studies, FSANZ says it has considered Seralini’s reanalysis of Monsanto’s raw data on MON863 and does not believe the issues he raises are valid.

Regulatory agencies in Europe, Canada, Japan, Mexico, US and Korea have all independently considered the safety data associated with the corn and have concluded there are no safety concerns, a FSANZ spokesperson says.

But scientists like Seralini say the tests used by regulatory authorities like FSANZ wouldn’t pick up the full range of possible impacts of GM food.

Seralini says genes from otherwise naturally-occurring proteins like the bacterial insecticidal Bt are altered when they are inserted into plants and this may produce unexpected effects.

A 2005 publication by Australian scientists doing research and development on a GM pea showed that when a bean gene was expressed in the pea, it produced a modified protein that produced an altered immune response when fed to mice.

Independence and funding

Seralini criticises FSANZ and other regulatory authorities for failing to obtain independent assessments of GM food, saying this was the case with MON863.

“All the tests were performed by the industry,” he says.

While FSANZ has published criticisms of Seralini’s work on its website, ABC Science Online could only find one rebuttal of Seralini’s work published in a peer reviewed journal, which was a study funded by Monsanto.

Seralini says his organisation accepts funding from anyone who is not involved with the biotech industry.

His Australian lecture tour was funded by Greenpeace and Seralini has provided expertise to the European Union, Ministry of Environment in Quebec, and the Supreme Court in India, among others.

CRIIGEN is now looking for donations of 3 million Euros to fund a two-year rat feeding study on three major GM foods, including MON863.

“It’s little money compared to the money that has been spent by governments to develop the biotech industry,” says Searlini. “It’s a lot more than has ever been given to one independent lab.”

Chemical effects

Seralini is also concerned about the effect of chemicals associated with GM crops.

One of the most widely used type of GM crops today is design to be tolerant to the herbicide Roundup.

Seralini’s team reports finding evidence that even low levels of Roundup residues can have toxic effects on human cells.

“We saw not only toxicity but endocrine-disrupting effects,” he says.

Seralini criticises regulators for only requiring the full range of toxicity tests on active ingredients of agricultural chemicals.

The actual formulation used in the field contains a mixture of chemicals and the toxicity of that mixture should be tested, says Seralini.

FSANZ says the toxicity of herbicides is a matter for Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority and the Office of Chemical Safety in the Department of Health, but defends the safety record of Roundup.

Author: Anna Salleh
Source: ABC – Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Original: http://bit.ly/xrSwMy


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Origin Agritech Ltd said it expects the Chinese government to approve its genetically modified organism (GMO) corn for production in 2013, China’s first GMO strain in commercial production, its chairman Han Gengchen said on Friday.

China gave the phytase corn biosafety approval in November 2009 and at the time scientists had expected large-scale production could happen as early as 2012, but a complicated approval process for use as seed has delayed the expectation.

“We have bred the gene on local hybrid seeds which are popularly used and generate high yields. The safety approval process (for seed use) would be faster and likely be this year and we will start production next year,” Han told Reuters.

Once approved, the U.S-listed firm expects the acreage for its phytase corn to account for 10 percent of the country’s total corn acreage within 10 years, said Han.

The Beijing-based company is working on the biosafety approval for the other two strains of GMO corn, the glyphosate tolerance and insect-resistant, and did not give any schedule as when these two can be approved by the government.

Phytase corn can help pigs digest more phosphorous, enhancing growth and reducing pollution from animal waste. China is the world’s largest pig breeder and also the top consumer of pork.

GMO CORN FIRST

China, the world’s second-largest corn consumer, planted about 33 million hectares of corn last year, but rising consumption from animal feed production in response to more meat demand as well as industrial use has exceeded the growth of its production.

China’s rising needs could lead Beijing to give priority to corn for commercial production first before Bt rice, which Beijing also offered biosafety approval for in 2009, said Clive James, founder and chair of the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA).

“What I hear is that they (the government) gives priority to corn… The government is very cognizant to the fact that corn imports increase yearly…if you want to antidote that, it must be commercialization,” he told Reuters.

China has turned into a net corn importer since 2010. The rise of imports of genetically-modified corn last year, all from the United States, for state reserves has sparked concerns that the country’s imports could surge in future as it did for soybeans.

The expected commercial approval of biotech Golden Rice in the Philippines in 2013/14 will be of significance to China in commercial production of its own GMO rice, he said.

“China’s agriculture trade deficit increased by 41 percent (last year)… which shows the need is increasing very fast, the speed of action in making decisions is crucial,” said James.

China ranks 6th worldwide in the area of biotech crops in 2011, with a record 3.9 million hectares of Bt cotton during the year at the highest adoption rate of 71.5 percent, according to ISAAA.

China is the world’s largest importer of GMO soybean, with annual imports accounting for about 60 percent of global traded soybean.

Author: Niu Shuping and Ken Wills
Editing: Jacqueline Wong
Source: REUTERS
Original: http://reut.rs/z8XE63


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The Controversial Release of Suicide Mosquitoes


A biotech labratory in Oxford has succeeded in creating genetically modified mosquitoes that only produce dead offspring. Mass releases of the creatures on Grand Cayman island and elsewhere, however, have some scientists worried. (Photo: AP)

A British biotech lab has released huge numbers of genetically modified mosquitoes in an effort to combat dengue fever. But locals, some say, were not adequately informed of the experiment — and now a debate has erupted over the potential dangers to humans.

They buzz very, very quietly. That infuriating high-pitched whirring that can rob you of your sleep on summer nights is not part of their repertoire. At this small laboratory near the English university town of Oxford, maintained at a steady 28 degrees Celsius (82 degrees Fahrenheit), the mosquitoes emit no more than a light purr. Their victims can’t hear them it until it’s almost too late.

Insectophiles might find these animals pretty because of the white markings on their dark bodies. Only the dried drops of blood — horse blood — on the gauze lining of their cages reveal how these animals feed.
The insects in question are female yellow-fever mosquitoes, some of the most dangerous animals on the planet. In addition to the illness after which they were named, they also transmit the dengue virus.

Dengue fever is on the rise worldwide and spreading faster than any other insect-borne viral disease. Every year, female mosquitoes infect at least 50 million people in tropical and subtropical regions (the males don’t bite). More than 20,000 of their victims — most of them children — succumb to their illness.

The mosquitoes at the lab near Oxford serve a rather different purpose: To save human lives. Scientists have implanted a gene they hope will wipe out these mosquitoes’ wild cousins. When males from the lab mate with wild females, their larval offspring die within a short space of time. The lab insects have been produced to commit infanticide.


Preventing mosquito bites remains one of the most sure-fire ways to avoid mosquito-borne illnesses, such as here in Thailand. But some have high hopes for genetic modification. (Photo: AP)

Not Exactly a Villain

Yet something of a scientific thriller has developed around these designer animals. Were anyone to turn it into a horror movie, the story would go something like this: At the heart of the tale there are the managers and scientists at a British biotech firm. These are the bad guys. Their crime: Secretly exposing the unsuspecting inhabitants of a faraway Caribbean island to mutant mosquitoes; a flying army of horrific creatures hungry for people to prey upon. The company — of course — is only interested in the huge profits it hopes to make. And then there are the good guys; upstanding researchers and idealistic activists determined to ruin the bad guys’ evil plans.

By this interpretation, Luke Alphey would be the head villain of the story, though his boyish looks and lean stature wouldn’t exactly typecast him for the role. At the most, his occasional braying laughter would fit the character. Alphey, 48, is the co-founder and chief scientific officer of Oxitec, an Oxford University spin-off. Oxitec headquarters is located in a brick building covered with wild grape in Milton Park, an industrial zone by the road leading to the famous university town.

It was Alphey, a genetic engineer, who dreamed up the idea of the novel insects while he was at Oxford. Today, standing next to the blood-spotted mosquito cages in a disposable lab coat, he defends himself, his company and his mosquitoes. “It was the right time to go out into the field,” he insists.

Alphey is referring to the fall of 2009, when he and his colleagues released their designer mosquitoes on Grand Cayman, an island in the Caribbean. The following year they released over three million more of these genetically-modified (GM) mosquitoes.

The experiment will go down in scientific history as the first release of GM insects that could bite humans. What’s scandalous about this field trial is that it was largely conducted in secret. Few people on Grand Cayman knew the mosquitoes were genetically modified. The local population was largely kept in the dark.

When the trials were made public a year after the first release of the insects, the locals wondered whether they’d been bitten by these potentially dangerous Frankenstein mosquitoes. Understandably, they felt taken advantage of. “I believe that we are the guinea pigs here,” wrote a disgruntled islander on the website of the Cayman News Service. Another asked: “Are we considered so dim-witted and unlearned that we cannot participate in our own environment? Were we considered to be a calculated risk?” Nongovernmental organizations like GeneWatch, a British NGO, have condemned the experiments with GM mosquitoes.


Luke Alphey, co-founder and chief scientist of Oxitec, believes that genetically modified mosquitoes could help eradicate mosquito-borne illnesses. His methods, however, are not uncontroversial. (Photo: Micha Theiner/ DER SPIEGEL)

Moths Too

The key question is about what scientists may and may not do. Can they simply release flying, human-biting laboratory-made creatures into the air? And who controls such activity if this is undertaken for a firm that seeks to profit from it?

Companies don’t like divulging their plans, preferring to keep their technology under wraps, particularly when it comes to potential dangers. As such, the work of biotech companies must necessarily be the exact opposite of what scientific research ought to be: transparent. That’s the crux of the matter.

Despite the Cayman PR debacle, Oxitec is moving forward undeterred. The yellow-fever mosquitoes from Milton Park have since been released in Malaysia. More trials are planned for inhabited areas there, because that’s where yellow-fever mosquitoes thrive. They specialize in feeding on humans.

The genetically-modified creatures are also currently buzzing around near the city of Juazeiro in eastern Brazil. Mosquitoes are due to be released in other dengue-plagued countries too, including Panama, India, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. They could also soon turn up in Key West, Florida as early as March; preparations there are underway.

And that’s just the mosquitoes.
Swarms of genetically modified pink bollworm moths, a plant pest in their natural state, have already been unleashed over the fields of Arizona. Oxitec’s latest plan involves another genetically engineered moth, the diamond-back or cabbage moth, which it wants to release in England. In the future, it is hoped, these agricultural pests will likewise mate with naturally-occurring animals to produce dead offspring.

“Oxitec wants to become the next Monsanto,” says Gerald Franz, the molecular geneticist at the International Atomic Energy Agency’s insect laboratory in the Austrian town of Seibersdorf, referring to the American biotech giant that dominates the business in GM agricultural plants. Indeed, Oxitec already has a monopoly on genetically-modified insects.


Guy Reeves, a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology in Plön, northern Germany, worries that GM mosquito releases could be dangerous — and give the entire branch a bad name. (Photo: Ronald Frommann / DER SPIEGEL)

Exploring the Potential Dangers

The findings of a study published in the renowned scientific journal PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases on Tuesday could well make life even more difficult for Oxitec. The paper was written by Guy Reeves and his colleagues. The 39-year-old Briton with curly blond locks is a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology in Plön, northern Germany.

The geneticist has searched through scientific journals, permit applications and regulations. His findings, reviewed and approved by his peers, primarily reveal one thing: The Grand Cayman experiment wasn’t an exception; a mere oversight by muddle-headed scientists that somehow forgot to inform the local population adequately on their way from the lab to the field.

“Whatever happened in the Caymans is quite likely to be used as a model for releases in your community, wherever you live in the world,” Reeves suggests.

Through the Back Door

In other words, the approach used in the Caymans was well thought out, as if a small group of ambitious biotech managers were trying to introduce a completely new technology through the back door. There are a number of factors that helped them in their endeavor:

– The novelty of the technology, which makes it harder for regulatory authorities to assess the risks associated with the field trials;

– The desperation of countries with a high prevalence of dengue, whose willingness to take risks is therefore all the greater;

– The fact that there are no drugs or approved vaccines yet, and conventional methods for combating mosquitoes — for instance insecticides — are insufficient in tackling the problem. Every new weapon is therefore welcome;

– Good contacts to decision-makers at US approval bodies, whose assessments of risk are valued by experts in other countries.
And it is quite possible that Luke Alphey’s lab-tweaked creatures will indeed prove to be a blessing for humanity, especially in countries plagued by dengue. The way these creatures precipitate their own demise is extremely ingenious.

Ever since the 1950s, male pests have typically been sterilized by exposing them to radioactivity, and then released to mate with females in the wild. Today a similar effect is created by inserting malevolent genes. Alphey has given his yellow-fever mosquitoes genetic material that the males pass onto their offspring when they mate with wild females. This genetic material could be called a “suicide gene” because the protein it produces poisons the larvae. As a result, the hosts gradually wipe themselves out.

According to Oxitec, this suicide system works not only in the lab, but also in the field, as the trials on Grand Cayman proved. Eighty mating waves with the lab-manipulated males over a period of 11 weeks allegedly reduced the local mosquito population by 80 percent.


For decades, humanity has tried to limit mosquito-borne illness, using all manner of insecticides and other techniques. Genetic modification is promising, but the potential risks have not yet been thoroughly explored. (Photo: M. A. Pushpa Kumara / DPA)

Unknown Consequences

And the potential risks? These are only now coming to light in full, partly thanks to the efforts of Guy Reeves.

The problem is that genetically-modified female mosquitoes can still bite humans. This means the protein which kills their own larvae might be injected into humans when the mosquitoes suck their prey’s blood, with unknown consequences for the human organism.

However Luke Alphey has a plausible-sounding set of arguments to allay such fears. “We only release males,” he says. What’s more, he claims the protein isn’t produced in the salivary glands, so it isn’t in the female mosquito’s saliva in the first place. Being bitten by Oxitec’s mosquitoes is therefore allegedly just like being bitten by “normal mosquitoes.”

It does indeed seem unlikely that the lab animals could cause damage. Nonetheless Alphey admits his technique isn’t perfect yet, and GM females may therefore also be released accidentally. And we have to take him at his word that the larva-killing protein definitely can’t be injected into the human blood stream. Unfortunately, like so much else, he can offer not peer-reviewed scientific proof.

Alphey says Oxitec spoke to people on Grand Cayman, and that the locals didn’t express concern about being bitten by GM mosquitoes. He claims the islanders hadn’t even asked him about it. “It’s not really for us to tell them what their concerns should be,” he says.


The British lab that developed the GM mosquitoes claims that the mosquito population on Grand Cayman island dropped by 80 percent following the release. (Photo: Oxitec/ Derric Nimmo)

Fundamental Questions

It is precisely this attitude — this lack of openness — that isn’t exactly making Oxitec many friends. Guy Reeves says: “One has to answer these fundamental questions that most people will have before releasing the animals.”

The geneticist doesn’t think Oxitec’s techniques are “particularly risky” either. He simply wants more transparency. “Companies shouldn’t keep scientifically important facts secret where human health and environmental safety are concerned,” he says.

Reeves himself is working on even riskier techniques, ones that could permanently change the genetic makeup of entire insect populations. That’s why he so vehemently opposes Oxitec’s rash field trials: He believes they could trigger a public backlash against this relatively promising new approach, thereby halting research into genetic modification of pests before it really gets off the ground.

He’s not alone in his concerns. “If the end result is that this technology isn’t accepted, then I’ve spent the last 20 years conducting research for nothing,” says Ernst Wimmer, a developmental biologist at Germany’s Göttingen University and one of the pioneers in this field. Nevertheless he says he understands Oxitec’s secrecy: “We know about the opponents to genetic engineering, who have destroyed entire experimental crops after they were announced. That, of course, doesn’t help us make progress either.”

Translated from the German by Jan Liebelt

Author: Rafaela von Bredow
Source: SPIEGEL Online International
Original: http://bit.ly/x9mHeo


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Brown seaweed holds sugars which can be converted into renewable fuels and chemicals. (Source: Bio Architecture Lab, Inc)

Scientists have genetically engineered microbes to process brown seaweed into biofuel.

The work by researchers including Dr Yasuo Yoshikuni from Seattle’s Bio-Architecture Lab could see large underwater farms become a source of renewable energy.

Scientists focused on brown seaweed because its high sugar content provides a good biomass, and the seaweed doesn’t compete with food crops for land and fresh water.

However Yoshikuni says, “The seaweed uses a different type of carbohydrate called an alginate which can’t be broken down by the land based E. coli bacteria normally used in industry”.

“This bottleneck means biofuel from seaweed is too expensive to compete with regular petroleum-based fuels,” says Yoshikuni.

To overcome the problem, Yoshikuni and colleagues examined a marine microbe called Vibrio splendidus, which naturally metabolises and consumes seaweed in the ocean.

“We don’t know if we can scale up these microbes so we genetically engineered terrestrial E. coli microbes instead,” says Yoshikuni.

Reporting in the journal Science, Yoshikuni and colleagues successfully isolated a 36,000 base pair DNA fragment from V. splendidus which encodes enzymes that metabolise alginate.

“Using synthetic biology and enzyme engineering, the DNA strand was spliced into the E. coli bacteria, which was then able to digest the sugar polymers in the seaweed converting them into ethanol,” says Yoshikuni

Sustainable
The researchers say if this process can be successfully scaled-up, seaweed could help meet the growing demand for sustainable fuel.

According to Yoshikuni there are already commercial processes for aqua farming of seaweed especially in Asia with 15 million tonnes produced annually.

“Using three per cent of the world’s coastlines we can replace five per cent of total oil consumption. That’s 60 billion gallons of fuel”

Yoshikuni says it would be grown on long submerged ropes.

“We seed the juvenile seaweed onto long ropes which are dangled into the sea and the seaweed grows on these ropes getting all its nutrients from the sea and Sun,” says Yoshikuni. “The harvested seaweed would be fed to the genetically engineered E. coli, with the ethanol refined in a similar way to existing processes.”

“We are currently looking into the environmental impact of the project on a commercial scale.”

Yoshikuni says seaweed also absorbs industrial waste such as phosphorus and nitrogen, which can help reduce the incidence of algal blooms.

“We believe seaweed is green energy and can become the most sustainable and upscaleable biomass for the next generation.”

Author: Stuart Gary
Source: ABC News
Original: http://bit.ly/wH1Z54


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