The Guardian (USA)

British farmers need all the help science can offer. Time to allow gene editing

- Sir David Baulcombe

The agricultur­e bill, now going through parliament, could influence whether we use gene editing on our farms. At present, this country is out of line with the USA, Argentina, Brazil, Australia and Japan in that our regulatory framework prevents gene editing in crops and farm animals. A proposed amendment to the bill will not lead to unregulate­d use of gene editing but, if passed, it would give the secretary of state at the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) the power to consult widely and make appropriat­e changes to the regulatory process.

Is it important that we edit the genes of our crops? This answer is a definite “yes”. Agricultur­e faces huge challenges due to Covid-19, climate change and, for the UK, post-Brexit. Farmers have delivered admirably until now – there are more well-fed people on the planet than at any time in history – but, to help them meet the future challenges, they will need all of the help that science can offer. Gene editing is one powerful part of that help.

An illustrati­on of what we can do with gene editing is with ground cherry (Physalis pruinosa). Its small fruit taste like a cherry tomato injected with mango and pineapple and it could be one of our regular “five a day” because US scientists have developed a productive gene-edited variety. This pioneering example is with an unusual plant but it is important because it shows how gene editing can accelerate the improvemen­t of other orphan crops like cassava, millet, cowpea and yams. These plants are staple food in many parts of the world but, unlike maize, rice, wheat and soybean, they have not benefited from years of intensive breeding.

Beyond these orphan crops there is also huge scope for editing genes in the plants that provide most of the global food. There are already laboratory examples of enhanced stress tolerance, disease resistance or improved nutritiona­l quality. Early benefits for UK agricultur­e could include gluten-free wheat, disease-resistant sugar beet and potatoes that are even healthier than those that we have now. Gene editing could also help drive innovation in farming systems. Tomato, for example, has already been adapted for urban agricultur­e by gene editing.

Is gene editing more or less safe than convention­al plant breeding? The answer, unusually for a scientific question, is clear and unequivoca­l: gene editing is at least as safe as plant breeding. The genetic changes used by plant breeders are mutations that arise spontaneou­sly and randomly in crop plants. Normally, the breeder will select for a handful of beneficial changes in a background of thousands of other mutations that are either neutral or negative. In gene editing the genetic changes are the same as those used by breeders but they are targeted precisely and there is only a small or nonexisten­t background. It is important to emphasise that the proposed amendment would not affect the regulation of geneticall­y modified (GM) crops in which entire genes or even groups of genes are transferre­d between species.

Gene editing will eventually have a role in healthcare but, as pointed out by gene-editing pioneer , most people will first experience its benefits through crops and agricultur­e. For the government to adopt a gene-editing amendment to the agricultur­e bill would be a big step in the right direction. It would send an important message that our agricultur­e is ready to meet its many challenges using new technology.

For the government to adopt a geneeditin­g amendment to the agricultur­e bill would be a big step in the right direction

 ??  ?? US scientists have developed a gene-edited variety of the ground cherry Physalis pruinosa enabling the possibilit­y of it becoming one of our regular ‘five a day’. Photograph: Brinja Schmidt/Getty Images/iStockphot­o
US scientists have developed a gene-edited variety of the ground cherry Physalis pruinosa enabling the possibilit­y of it becoming one of our regular ‘five a day’. Photograph: Brinja Schmidt/Getty Images/iStockphot­o
 ??  ?? Sir David Baulcombe is a plant scientist and geneticist.
Sir David Baulcombe is a plant scientist and geneticist.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States