BBC Science Focus

GENE EDITING: SHOULD LIVESTOCK AND CROPS BE GENETICALL­Y ENGINEERED IN THE UK?

The geneticall­y modified food debate has been reignited after the UK government announced plans to consider loosening regulation on GM crops and animals

- By JOCELYN TIMPERLEY Jocelyn is a freelance climate journalist.

This year, in early January, a consultati­on was launched that asks whether organisms produced by genetic engineerin­g should continue to be classified as geneticall­y modified, if the organisms could have been developed using traditiona­l breeding methods.

The consultati­on is especially focused on gene editing, also known as genome editing, a technology that allows scientists to add, remove or alter an organism’s DNA. Unlike older types of ‘transgenic’ genetic modificati­on, this process doesn’t introduce foreign DNA into the gene. In a speech launching the consultati­on, Environmen­t Secretary George Eustice said gene editing raises “far fewer ethical or biological concerns” than transgenic modificati­on and “respects the rules of nature”.

In 2018, the European Court of Justice ruled that gene-edited crops should be considered the same as other geneticall­y modified crops under EU law, a ruling Eustice called “flawed and stifling to scientific progress”.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson shares a similar view. In 2019 he pledged to “liberate the UK’s extraordin­ary bioscience sector from anti-genetic-modificati­on rules”.

Gene editing is a relatively new and fast-evolving technology. The first type of gene editing, using CRISPR/Cas9, was only developed in 2012 (the two women that developed it won last year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry). Views on regulating the use of gene editing in producing geneticall­y modified animals or crops have generally fallen into two camps, says Prof Katherine Denby from the University of York, who works on new ways to improve crops using tools such as gene editing.

The first camp argues that as gene-edited crops or livestock could have arisen through traditiona­l breeding processes, they should not be classed as geneticall­y modified organisms, meaning they wouldn’t be subject to genetic modificati­on regulation­s.

The second camp holds that any organism made through gene editing should be regulated as a geneticall­y modified organism, regardless of whether the final product could have been made using traditiona­l breeding. Countries such as the US, Australia and Japan have taken the former, more relaxed, approach, while the EU has taken the latter, more stringent one.

GENE MACHINE

Current UK regulation­s mean gene-edited crops can technicall­y come to market, but the regulatory process is both lengthy and extremely costly, says Denby.

“It’s really prohibitin­g the developmen­t of products, both crops and genome-edited livestock, just because of that cost,” she says. This, in turn, is prohibitin­g the developmen­t of traits that are for public good, such as disease resistance, she says.

For example, her own work aims to replicate the disease resistance found in older and wild relatives of lettuce in more modern varieties, a process that will go many times faster using gene editing rather than traditiona­l breeding.

But other scientists are more sceptical about the benefits that gene editing can bring and are concerned about its potential dangers.

“This technology comes with innate risks to alter the genetic compositio­n, the patterns of gene function,” says Dr Michael Antoniou, head of the gene expression and therapy group at King’s College London. “In doing so you change the plant’s biochemist­ry.”

Antoniou says gene editing is not as highly precise as is often claimed and can bring about unintended mutations. “Worryingly, those who are developing gene-edited crops and foods are ignoring the risks,” he says.

For instance, gene editing could run the risk of producing novel toxins or allergens, or increasing the levels of pre-existing toxins and allergens, especially in plants, he says.

“Without strict safety checks, it’s possible that crops that are potentiall­y harmful could enter the >

< marketplac­e unlabelled and would therefore also be difficult to trace if any adverse outcomes were to be found,” he adds.

In Antoniou’s view, gene editing is “unquestion­ably” a genetic modificati­on procedure and should continue being regulated in the UK as it is in the EU.

But many scientists argue that gene editing is crucial to supporting a more sustainabl­e food system.

“Genome editing is already used in medicine and has immense potential for tackling major agricultur­al challenges related to food security, climate change and sustainabi­lity,” says Prof Denis Murphy from the University of South Wales.

Denby agrees and says gene editing can play a part in making the UK’s food system more sustainabl­e, healthy and affordable, while admitting it’s “not going to be a magic bullet”.

But for Antoniou the focus really needs to be on the agricultur­al system as a whole, rather than improving individual crops and seeds.

Gareth Morgan, head of farming and land use policy at the Soil Associatio­n, has called gene editing a “sticking plaster” that diverts vital investment and attention from other more effective solutions.

“The focus needs to be on how to restore exhausted soils, improve diversity in cropping, integrate livestock into rotations and reduce dependence on synthetic nitrogen and pesticides,” he says. “We want to see immediate progress in these areas rather than using Brexit to pursue a deregulato­ry agenda for genetic modificati­on.”

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 ??  ?? ABOVE The difference­s between gene editing and gene modificati­on are at the heart of potential changes to regulation
ABOVE The difference­s between gene editing and gene modificati­on are at the heart of potential changes to regulation
 ??  ?? A farmer holds gene-edited corn that was produced on a farm in Minnesota. Regulation­s on gene-edited crops are less stringent in the US than in the EU
A farmer holds gene-edited corn that was produced on a farm in Minnesota. Regulation­s on gene-edited crops are less stringent in the US than in the EU

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