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Secret
U.S. Biopharms Growing Experimental Drugs
WASHINGTON, DC, July 16, 2002 (ENS) - Experimental plants
engineered to produce pharmaceuticals are being grown at over 300
secret locations nationwide, a new report has revealed.
Biotechnology firms are conducting experiments with corn, soy, rice
and tobacco that are genetically manipulated to produce drugs
designed to act as vaccines, contraceptives, induce abortions,
generate growth hormones, create blood clots, produce industrial
enzymes and propagate allergenic enzymes.
"Just one mistake by a biotech company and we'll be eating other
people's prescription drugs in our corn flakes," said Larry Bohlen,
director of health and environment programs at
Friends of the Earth,
a member of a coalition of consumer and environmental groups that
produced the report, released late last week.
The experimental application of biotechnology in which plants are
genetically engineered to produce pharmaceutical proteins and
chemicals they do not produce naturally has been termed "biopharming."
Companies engaged in biopharming keep their activities secret,
citing the secret plantings as confidential business information.
The report, entitled "Manufacturing Drugs and Chemicals in Crops:
Biopharming Poses New Threats to Consumers, Farmers, Food Companies
and the Environment," was produced by the
Genetically
Engineered Food Alert coalition and presented to Agriculture
Secretary Ann Veneman on Thursday. To date, the secretary has made
no public comment on the report.
Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman (Photo courtesy U.S.
Government)
In a letter to Veneman, the coalition called for an end to open
air cultivation of crops engineered to produce prescription drugs or
industrial chemicals.
"The USDA [U.S.
Department of Agriculture] should prohibit the planting of food
crops engineered with drugs and chemicals to protect the food supply
from contamination," Bohlen said.
The highest number of field trials are taking place in Nebraska,
Hawaii, Wisconsin and Puerto Rico. But other states, including Iowa,
Florida, Illinois, Texas, California, Maryland, Kentucky and
Indiana, also have numerous tests being conducted near food
producing farms.
The report details the many threats that biopharm crops pose, the
extent to which crops have been planted across the United States,
the failure of regulatory agencies to regulate the experiments, and
a set of recommendations.
The coalition proposes that the USDA permit limited cultivation
of non-food plants in the same controlled environment as other drug
production.
The USDA has primary authority for experimental biopharm crop
cultivation. Historically, the agency has kept all drug and chemical
crop sites secret from the public and neighboring farmers, and has
hidden the identity of the drugs or chemicals being produced. The
agency has condoned companies' preferred practice of anonymously
planting biopharm crops without identification, security measures or
notification of neighbors, the report claims.
Coalition members are concerned that genetically engineered
traits could spread from biopharms through pollen carried by wind or
insects, spilled seed, unharvested seed sprouting the next year, and
biopharm seed residues carried by farm equipment to conventional
fields.
"Current gene containment strategies cannot work reliably in the
field, the editors of the journal "Nature Biotechnology" said. "Can
we reasonably expect farmers to [clean] their agricultural equipment
meticulously enough to remove all GM seed?"
In response to the report, a
National Academy of
Sciences spokesperson who preferred not to be identified, said,
"It is possible that crops transformed to produce pharmaceutical or
other industrial compounds might mate with plantations grown for
human consumption, with the unanticipated result of novel chemicals
in the human food supply."
Field of young Nebraska corn, not genetically engineered
(Photo courtesy
Nebraska Corn
Board)
Biopharm companies normally contract with selected farmers to
grow their genetically engineered drug or chemical crops. The
coalition contends that when one field is sown, all farmers, through
their proximity to the test field, are exposed to substantial
liability from the biopharming.
Neighboring farmers whose fields become contaminated with drug or
chemical traits have no choice but to file expensive lawsuits
against the biopharming companies.
On the other hand, biopharm companies that discover their
patented drug traits in conventional farmers' contaminated fields
could sue those farmers, alleging violation of the company's
intellectual property rights.
Genetically engineered soy beans (Photo courtesy
Monsanto)
The majority of engineered biopharmaceuticals and chemicals are
incorporated into corn, a prolific pollinator, followed by soybeans,
tobacco and rice. The engineered plants are then integrated into
farmers' fields where it is impossible to detect their presence.
Contamination of farmers' corn by engineered insecticides is
already widespread. Iowa farmer Laura Krouse said, "I've seen sales
of open-pollinated corn drop 50-75 percent due to genetic pollution
with engineered traits."
Corn is especially risky for pharmaceutical applications because
it readily cross-pollinates and its pollen can travel for miles.
This has been demonstrated by engineered StarLink corn, which
contaminated food products and corn seed stock with a potentially
allergenic protein even while companies were taking gene containment
measures.
Nevertheless, two-thirds of open air biopharm field trials have
been in corn. Experts have warned that current isolation standards
will not prevent contamination of normal corn. According to the
coalition's report, engineered viruses used to infect plants with
drug genes could easily spread to related crops.
In response to one report of biopharm contamination, Chris
Webster, a representative of Pfizer Pharmaceuticals said, "We've
seen, on the vaccine side, where modified live seeds have wandered
off and have appeared in other products."
ProdiGene,
the company with the most plantings of drug and chemical producing
plants, projects that 10 percent of the U.S. corn crop will be
devoted to biopharm production by 2010.
Far from supporting containment strategies such as buffer areas,
ProdiGene's CEO Anthony Laos is pressing for their elimination. He
wrote farmers in 2001, "We will be dealing with these distances
until we can gain regulatory approval to lessen or abandon these
requirements altogether."
Some companies propose extracting drugs or chemicals from plants,
then selling the remainder of the plant material. Incomplete
extraction would mean drug and chemical residue in food or feed.
"Farmers cannot afford another contamination incident hurting
sales and throwing the harvest into turmoil like StarLink did in
2000," said Matt Rand, biotechnology campaign manager at the
National
Environmental Trust.
Plant physiologist Katrina Cornish and associate Christopher Mau
examine guayule plantlets that they have genetically engineered
while working at the USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS).
(Photo by Jack Dykinga courtesy
ARS)
The report cites indications that standard methods of
pharmaceutical cultivation may be more cost effective and safer than
open field testing.
Laboratories conventionally develop new drugs through extraction
from animal or human tissues or production in animal, bacterial and
yeast cell cultures. Newer techniques include plant cell cultures
and secretion of biopharm proteins from plant roots into hydroponic
media.
In contrast to open air biopharming, these methods are contained
to the laboratory environment, greatly reducing contamination risks,
the coalition maintains. These practices allow complete control of
growth conditions where purification is easier, producing a more
consistent drug quality.
The complete report is available online at:
http://www.gefoodalert.org.
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