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26 May 2004 14:23:06 -0000

 

Pharm Crop Products In US Market

press-release

 

 

The Institute of Science in Society Science Society

Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

========================================================

 

 

ISIS Press Release 26/05/04

 

Pharm Crop Products In US Market

********************************

 

Prof. Joe Cummins discovers that dangerous GM pharmaceutical

crops have been produced and marketed in the United States

for at least two years, unbeknownst to the public, via a

gaping loophole in the regulatory process.

 

A fully referenced version of this article is posted on ISIS

members’ website http://www.i-sis.org.uk/full/GMBIMFull.php.

Details here http://www.i-sis.org.uk/membership.php.

 

There has been a great deal of public opposition recently to

the testing of rice genetically modified to produce the

human proteins lysozyme and lactoferrin in the United

States. So far, those tests have been stalled (see SiS 22

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/isisnews/sis22.php).

 

But, Sigma-Aldrich, a US chemical company, has been

marketing the biopharmaceutical products trypsin, avidin and

beta-glucuronidase (GUS) processed from transgenic maize,

for at least two years. Meanwhile, Prodigene Corporation and

Sigma-Aldrich are marketing aprotinin (AproliZean) from

maize and from a transgenic tobacco.

 

Trypsin is a digestive enzyme used extensively in research,

to treat disease and in food processing. The product

TrypZean is marketed as an animal free product, and is

produced jointly by Sigma-Aldrich and Prodigene (the company

fined for contaminating food crops with biopharmaceuticals

in the United States last year).

 

The development of genetically modified (GM) food crops

generally follows a certain pattern in the United States:

First, controlled field tests are undertaken for a number of

seasons. Then, the proponent applies for deregulation of the

GM crop following reviews by the Animal Plant Health Service

(APHIS) of the Department of Agriculture (USDA), the Food

and Drug Administration (FDA) and by the Environmental

Protection Agency (EPA) if the GM crop includes a plant

incorporated bio-pesticide. Upon completion of the process,

the GM crop is deemed to be deregulated and can be grown

without monitoring.

 

However, none of the biopharmaceutical-producing GM crops

appears to have gone through the usual regulatory process.

Instead they appeared to have progressed from field-testing

to marketing without the benefit of final regulatory

approval, with apparently full cooperation of the FDA and

USDA (the agriculture department has proprietary interest in

some of the biopharmaceuticals). The biopharmaceuticals have

proceeded to the market via the backdoor, thanks to a

loophole in the regulation of field tests.

 

According to the Pew Initiative on Food and Biotechnology,

" current APHIS regulations do allow the commercialization of

a GE [genetically engineered] crop without a prior

affirmative approval by the agency and without public

notice. Developers are not required to file a petition for

non-regulated status before they produce a plant

commercially. It is possible for developers to grow plants

at a commercial scale under notification or field trial

permits, even if the plants might pose some identifiable

environmental or human health risk " .

 

Crop production facilities are permitted as " field tests " ,

but locations of such facilities are designated

" confidential business information " and are not disclosed to

people living nearby, even though the genes and products of

such sites can easily contaminate crops, ground water and

surface water. There seems to be no direct way to find out

where the production facilities are, except via producers

and government regulators.

 

The US government seems committed to going ahead with a

procedure that bypasses public input and scrutiny, and which

if, when disclosed, will threaten the marketability of US

food exports. In contrast, the Canadian Food Inspection

Service maintains that " plant products of test sites cannot

be marketed " , even though numerous plant biopharmaceutical

products have been tested.

 

The regulation of plant-derived biopharmaceuticals was

reviewed by the FDA in 2000; and by the Pew Initiative in

2004. Only the Pew report came to grips with the practice of

marketing virtually untested products commercialized without

public input.

 

As indicated earlier, test plot permits for crops producing

biopharmaceutical proteins are usually designated

confidential business information so that the nature of the

products is hidden from the public as well as the location

of the test sites. APHIS does, however, record the crop and

the state in which the modified crop is tested. Between 2003

and 2004, Prodigene had test plots in Nebraska, Texas, Iowa

and Missouri.

 

Production of the commercial biopharmaceuticals was, for the

most part, achieved using maize, even though it is a food

crop of fundamental importance and should not have been used

to produce biopharmaceuticals, especially when the products

are by no means benign for humans and animals exposed to

them.

 

Trypsin is an enzyme produced in the pancreas to digest

proteins. It is extensively used in laboratory applications,

in wound treatment and to treat diabetes. It is also used in

food processing and often put into infant formulations to

aid in digestion. The plant-produced product is desirable

because it is free of prions and animal viruses.

 

According to the safety data sheets provided by trypsin

manufacturers, the product is capable of causing allergy –

it is a skin, eye and respiratory irritant and may be a

mutagen.

 

Avidin is a protein found in birds’ eggs. It functions to

bind the vitamin biotin, which is required for many insect

pests. The pests are inactivated by the absence of the

necessary vitamin. Transgenic maize modified for avidin

production is resistant to storage insect pests.

 

A case study done by the Friends of the Earth turned up

substantial evidence that the protein avidin caused

dangerous biotin deficiency in humans and animals, leading

to immune deficiency and growth retardation. Even marginal

biotin deficiency is linked to birth defects in mice and in

humans.

 

Aprotinin is a protease inhibitor normally prepared from the

pancreas and lung of cows. Recombinant aprotinin produced in

plants is currently marketed. Bill Freese of Friends of the

Earth reviewed the problem of allergy and pancreatic disease

associated with this product.

 

Aprotinin is also listed as a reproductive hazard. There is

serious danger to those exposed to aprotinin after having

had a previous exposure. For example, a two-year old child

suffered severe anaphylactic shock (a life-threatening

allergic reaction characterized by swelling of body tissues

including the throat, difficulty in breathing, and a sudden

fall in blood pressure) after a test dose of aprotinin.

Fatal anaphylaxis followed aprotinin exposure in a local

application of fibrin glue. A similar application led to an

immediate skin reaction following re-exposure to fibrin

sealant.

 

Secret field testing of plant-based recombinant aprotinin

could result in severe or fatal anaphylaxis, either in a

brief exposure in the maize field of someone previously

treated during surgery, or exposure of someone exposed to

the maize field followed by treatment during surgery.

 

The final commercial recombinant protein in maize is beta-

glucuronidiase (GUS). The gene is used in a wide range of

experimental situations but does not appear to have

therapeutic importance. It has been observed that formula

milk for infants had a low content of GUS while mother’s

milk had elevated GUS.

 

Elevated GUS has been implicated in bilirubinaemia

(jaundice) of breast-fed infants and breast-fed infants of

diabetic mothers. GUS is used extensively as a marker,

believed to have little effect on the phenotype of the test

organism. However, GUS was found to enhance the feeding

activity in the peach aphid, suggesting that the marker may

not be entirely without effect on the organism.

 

In conclusion, the secretive production of dangerous

pharmaceuticals in food crops is a truly disturbing

development. The sale of such products without transparent

public approval is adding insult on injury, reinforcing the

public perception that the regulatory authorities are

putting corporate profit far above public safety.

 

 

 

========================================================

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/GMBIM.php

 

If you like this original article from the Institute of

Science in Society, and would like to continue receiving

articles of this calibre, please consider making a donation

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ISIS is an independent, not-for-profit organisation

dedicated to providing critical public information on

cutting edge science, and to promoting social accountability

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telephone: [44 20 8643 0681] [44 20 7383 3376] [44 20

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General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

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