Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Geneticall­y modified pigs OK’d for food, drugs

- By Candice Choi

NEW YORK » U. S. regulators have approved a geneticall­y modified pig for food and medical products, making it the second such animal to get the green light for human consumptio­n. But the company behind it says there are no imminent plans to sell it for meat.

The pig is geneticall­y engineered to eliminate the presence of alphagal, a type of sugar found in many mammals. The sugar makes its way into many products — including medication­s, cosmetics and food — and can cause allergic reactions in some people.

Goal: Helping people

The main goal of the company behind the pig, United Therapeuti­cs Corp., is to develop medical products, such as blood thinners, that won’t set off such reactions, said its spokesman Dewey Steadman. Eventually, the Silver Spring, Marylandba­sed firm hopes to develop a way for the pig’s organs to be transplant­ed into people.

The pig, called GalSafe, also has commercial potential as food, but Steadman said the company doesn’t know when it might be able to secure an agreement with a meat producer to process and sell it. He noted the meat allergy the pig addresses, called alpha-gal syndrome, isn’t yet considered a major issue.

“It’s known, but it’s not well known,” Steadman said.

Questions on allergy

Health researcher­s don’t fully understand how the allergy develops, but it has been tied to bites from certain ticks. In 2009, there were 24 reported cases, but more recent estimates exceed 5,000 cases, according to a report by a working group for the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Symptoms can include hives, itching, cramping and vomiting. Unlike other food allergies, alpha-gal reactions typically happen several hours after eating beef, pork or lamb, making it difficult to diagnose.

Some skepticism

Jaydee Hanson, policy director for the Center for Food Safety, noted that meat from the geneticall­y modified pigs wasn’t tested

in people with the allergies.

“You’re offering it up as something they can eat,

without knowing whether it addresses their allergy,” Hanson said.

The FDA said it didn’t evaluate allergy- specific food safety, since the company’s applicatio­n didn’t include data on the preventing such reactions.

The Center for Food Safety has sued the FDA over the first geneticall­y modified animal the agency approved for human food — salmon engineered to grow faster. The group said it’s reviewing the agency’s decision on the GalSafe pig posted Monday.

Greg Jaffe of the Center for Science in the Public Interest said the FDA’s approval of the GalSafe pig announced Monday is also concerning because it came without a chance for public comment.

“Nobody was given notice, and all of a sudden there’s an approved animal,” he said.

Some details murky

The company didn’t disclose exactly how it altered the animal’s DNA. Jaffe said the pig was produced by knocking out a gene responsibl­e for producing the sugar and adding another that serves as a marker for the silenced gene.

Jaffe said he’s not aware of any rules on how pork from geneticall­y modified pigs would need to be labeled to be sold in supermarke­ts. A representa­tive for the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, which oversees meat labeling, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Steadman said the United Therapeuti­cs pigs would be more difficult to produce than convention­al pigs for meat because of requiremen­ts governing how they must be kept and slaughtere­d. He said there are about 25 GalSafe pigs at an Iowa farm.

Long-term goal

Long term, he said the goal is to combine the genetic modificati­on with multiple other changes to make their organs acceptable for transplant­s in people. For years, researcher­s have been looking into the idea of transplant­ing pig organs as a way of eliminatin­g shortages of donated organs.

Though there aren’t any plans yet to sell meat from GalSafe pigs, the geneticall­y modified salmon could become available in the U. S. soon. AquaBounty, the company that produces the fish, says it is determinin­g the best time to harvest the salmon, which have been growing in indoor tanks at a plant in Indiana.

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REVIVICOR, INC. Shown is a geneticall­y modified pig.

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