National Post (National Edition)

GMO might tempt Whole Foods crowd

- Faye Flam

These days everything in the U.S. from cookies to orange juice carry labels boasting that they’re Gmo-free — a marketing ploy that assumes consumers still hate, fear or at least disapprove of geneticall­y modified organisms despite reassuranc­es from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine.

While science journalist­s have bemoaned this as irrational fear, people might be making a reasonable choice given the risk-benefit ratios. Many consumers see no gain in GMO products — at least so far.

One example of a GMO developed for health benefits — vitamin A-enhanced “golden rice” — is unlikely to offer much to consumers in well-fed countries such as the U.S. But now, there’s something the Whole Foods types might go for.

Last week the American Chemical Society announced scientists had transferre­d a rabbit gene into a house plant — pothos ivy — endowing it with the power to clean the carcinogen­ic pollutants benzene and chloroform from indoor air. They’re close to a version that also cleans up formaldehy­de.

Stuart Strand, an environmen­tal engineer at the University of Washington who headed the ivy project, said indoor air in homes is often worse than in offices or schools. Chloroform, benzene and formaldehy­de can build up from cooking, showering with or boiling chlorinate­d water, and from the “outgassing” of furniture and flooring materials. Pollutants can also creep in from attached garages.

Strand said the gene they transferre­d to the ivy, called CYP2E1, is found in animal cells, including human ones, and is active in the liver. It can help clean toxins that you ingest, but not ones you breathe. So, he thought, why not put the gene in plants where it can clean up toxic compounds before they get to peoples’ lungs?

In tests, he filled chambers with chloroform and benzene and put in either the GMO ivy, regular ivy or nothing at all. Over three days, the ordinary ivy did almost nothing to clean the air, while the GMO plants cleaned up 82 per cent of the benzene and 75 per cent of the chloroform.

He suspects they would do even better in real homes, where pollutants would be less concentrat­ed than in his experiment. But for them to work optimally, he said, you’d want to sell them as part of a unit that forced air over the leaves.

The air-cleaning ivy is already approved in Canada, while in the U.S., the USDA is still awaiting results of tests. There are still concerns about the plant spreading and becoming invasive in a way the ordinary variety has not.

There are a few risk experts who argue that we need to factor in the small possibilit­y that widespread dependence on GMO crops will lead to some catastroph­e, perhaps even wiping us out faster than all those other existentia­l threats.

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