biopharming and beyond gmos on steroids

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Biopharming and Beyond GMOs on Steroids Martin Donohoe

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Biopharming and Beyond GMOs on Steroids. Martin Donohoe. Biopharming. The engineering of plants to produce pharmaceuticals such as enzymes, antibiotics, contraceptives, abortifacients , antibodies, chemotherapeutic agents, other medications, vaccines, and industrial and research chemicals. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Biopharming and Beyond

GMOs on SteroidsMartin Donohoe

Biopharming

The engineering of plants to produce pharmaceuticals such as enzymes, antibiotics, contraceptives, abortifacients, antibodies, chemotherapeutic agents, other medications, vaccines, and industrial and research chemicals

Biopharming

Rationale: Farmers/farms cheaper than

technicians/manufacturing plants Seeds/silos may be cheap storage system ?Cheaper drugs? – doubtful given history of

pharmaceutical industry pricing patterns; also, multiple externalized costs

Approximately 400 field tests worldwide since 1991 (over 100 in U.S.)

Top 12 Biopharm States

1 – Nebraska 7 – California

2 – Hawaii 8 – Texas

3 - Puerto Rico 9 – Florida

4 – Wisconsin 10 – Washington

5 – Iowa 11 – North Carolina

6 – Kentucky 12 - Maryland

Biopharming

More than 15 companies involved in US (75 companies worldwide)

USDA conceals crop locations from public and neighboring farmers, in most cases hides identity of drug or chemical being tested, citing trade secretsEven state agriculture regulators often unaware of info re drug or chemical involved

Major Biopharm Crops

Corn Soybeans Tobacco Rice

Examples of biopharmed crops

Drug/Chemical

Use Test Crop

Laccase Textiles, adhesives

Corn

Folic acid Vitamin Tomatoes

Erythropoeitin

Anemia Tobacco

Examples of biopharmed crops

Drug/Chemical

Use Test Crop

Essential fatty acids

Cell membrane production

Soybeans

SARS vaccine

Immunization

Tomato

Vaccine against pollen

allergies

Immunization

Rice

Examples of biopharmed crops

Drug/Chemical

Use Test Crop

Traveler’s and other Diarrheas

Immunization/

Drug

Rice, Potatoes and Corn

Insulin Treatment of Diabetes

Safflower

Insulin-like Growth Factors

Diabetes, Growth,

Carcinogen

Rice

Potentially Harmful Biopharmaceuticals

Substance Use Known or Potential Effects

Acanthocyanin in tomatoes

Antioxidant, anti-cancer

agent

Unknown

Aprotinin in corn

Blood clotting

Pancreatic disease, allergic reactions

Potentially Harmful Biopharmaceuticals

Substance Use Known or Potential Effects

Anti-sperm antibody in corn

Contraception

Adverse reproductive impacts

Trypsin in corn

Enzyme - research, industrial uses

Occupational asthma

Avidin in corn Research Vitamin B deficiency, allergic reactions

Potentially Harmful Biopharmaceuticals

Substance Use Known or Potential Effects

Ebola immune complex in Nicotiana benthamiana

Vaccine against highly pathogenic, dangerous virus

Immune system effects

Taliglucerase alfa in carrots

Gaucher’s Disease

Two similar drugs made in mammalian cells already available

Potentially Harmful Biopharmaceuticals

Substance Use Known or Potential Effects

Tricosanthin in tobacco

Failed anti-HIV drug

Highly toxic - allergic reactions, induced abortions

Alpha-amylase in corn

Digests starch to sugars (aids biofuel production)

unknown

Opposition to Biopharming

National Academy of SciencesUnion of Concerned ScientistsBritish Medical Association (favors

moratorium on all GM foods)Consumers Union

Opposition to Biopharming

Grocery Manufacturers of AmericaNational Food Processors AssociationOrganic Consumers AssociationFriends of the EarthOthers

Biopharm Proponents Claims Inflated/Unrealistic

Farmers are unlikely to be major beneficiaries:Market forces, including foreign competition, will drive down farmer compensation

Acreage required very small compared with commodity crop acreage, such that only a small number of growers will be needed

Genetic Modification of Algae and Trees

GE algae (for use as fuel): dangers include worldwide spread and possible weaponization to destroy fish stocks

Mercury-splicing bacteria for soil cleanup Removes Hg2+ ions from contaminated soil and

converts it into volatile elemental mercury, which is released into the atmosphere

Problem - converted by phytoplankton to organic mercury, dispersed widely, and then works its way up the food chain

Genetic Modification of Vertebrates

Aquabounty Technology’s GE salmon (contains growth hormone gene from chinook salmon and genetic on-switch from the ocean pout)Designed for more rapid growthAquabounty states it will only produce sterile females

Up to 15% may escape pens and interbreed with wild stocks, decreasing the species’ reproductive fitness

GE salmon have higher levels of IGF-1 (carcinogen)

WA, OR and MD have banned

Genetic Modification of Vertebrates

Tilapia/clotting factor VII “Ruppy” (Ruby Puppy)

Glows red under UV light Developed using red fluorescent gene from sea

anemones Artist Eduard Kac:

Glow-in-the-dark rabbit “Plantimal” (petunia-human hybrid)

Genetic Modification of Vertebrates

“Popeye Pig” – Pig GM with spinach gene, designed to have less saturated fat

Pigs modified with roundworm gene to make their own (heart healthy) omega-3 fatty acidsAccidentally turned up in poutry feed sold throughout Ontario(2004)

Goats GM to make anti-nerve gas agent

Biopharming of Vertebrates

“Enviropig” – GM modified with E. coli and mouse DNA to digest phytates, decrease phosphate in excrementPhytase (pig feed supplement) does same thing

Pig feed can already be supplemented with phytase

Idea shelved

Genetic Modification of Vertebrates

Cows modified to produce “human” milk

Proposal to genetically modify human embryos to make all humans intolerant to red meat (to combat global warming and overuse of water)

Genetic Modification of Vertebrates

USDA Office of the Inspector General has criticized USDA for lacking coordinated oversight of regulations behind R and D of GE animals and insects

Human-Animal Hybrids

Inter-species breedingApe-man, Ilya Ivanovich Ivanov, Guinea, 1927

Stalin attempted to create interspecies (half-men/half-apes) “super-warriors”

2011: Chimeric monkey created from 6 different parents

Human-Animal Hybrids and More

UK scientists have created over 150 human-animal hybrid embryos to develop embyronic stem cells

De-extincting Neanderthal using human womb

Cloning of extinct species, “Pleistocene rewilding”

Synthetic Biology (Synbio)

Creation of DNA and organisms from scratch

Applications:BiofuelsIndustrial chemicalsNatural product substitutes - Rubber, vanilla, palm oil

Biomedical applications - Vaccine production

Synthetic Biology (Synbio)

2002: Polio virus created at SUNY Stony Brook over two years

2005: Mt Sinai, CDC researchers resurrect lethal 1918 flu virus and publish details of complete genome sequence

2012: Nature published instructions on how to create plague virus

Risks of Synbio

Accidental release into wild Displacement of wild populations Ecosystem disruption Extinction

Synbio and Beyond

DARPA Project to create living, breathing creatures with possible military applications

Bio hackers (home and community laboratory creation of GM organisms)