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22 Apr 2005 13:37:21 -0000

 

Ban GM Probiotics

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 22/04/05

 

 

Ban GM Probiotics

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

 

Beneficial bacteria living in the human gut are now subject

to extensive genetic modification that could turn them into

pathogens. Prof. Joe Cummins and Dr. Mae-Wan Ho call for a

ban on releases of GM probiotics

 

The fully referenced article is posted on ISIS members'

website. Details here.

 

Probiotics for health

 

`Probiotics' are naturally occurring beneficial bacteria

found in the human gut, and are being added to food for

their health-promoting effects. The probiotics studied most

extensively are Bifidobacterium and Lactobaccilus, both

derived from fermented milk products. The efficacy of

probiotics has been clearly established in recent years. For

example, double blind, randomized trials with probiotics

added to milk reduced respiratory infections and the

severity of illness among children in a day care setting .

Another study showed that probiotic treatment relieved

diarrhea in children.

 

This success has attracted the attention of genetic

engineers, who want to " improve " on the successful

applications, which probably date back to the beginning of

written history.

 

The cross-talk between the human host and the gut bacteria

has evolved over millions of years. Its contributions to the

health of the human host depend on an intricate network of

bacteria-bacteria and bacteria-host interactions that, if

thrown out of balance, will very likely result in disease.

 

Can GM " improve " probiotic bacteria without turn them into

dangerous pathogens?

 

Probiotic bacteria modulate the immune system and provide an

ecological balance in the gut that excludes disease-causing

microbes. Germ-free mice bred in the laboratory have less

immune cells, and tend to leak more food antigen across the

intestinal barrier. These conditions improve after about a

month of exposure to bacteria. Probiotic bacteria must not

be pathogenic, however; and it is essential for probiotic

treatments to be tested for safety. The vast majority of

applications have been free of pathological outcomes; but

there has been one case of local infection from a rogue

Lactobacillus strain. The prospect that genetic modification

might " improve " probiotic microbes must be seriously

balanced against the potential of turning harmless,

beneficial microbes into dangerous pathogens ( " No

biosecurity without biosafety " , ISIS report 16 March 2005),

particularly in the case of bacteria that naturally inhabit

the human gut.

 

The complete genome sequence of the probiotic Lactobacillus

acidophilus has been determined and features contributing to

survival in the gut and promoting interactions with the

intestines have been identified. The genome sequence of

Bifidobacterium longum, similarly, reflects its adaptation

to the human gastrointestinal tract including potential

immuno-modulating proteins. Milk-fermenting bacteria harbor

bacteriophages (viruses), including those that cause

diseases, and `temperate phages' capable of integrating

their viral genome into the bacterial genome. Temperate

bacteria phages play an important role in horizontal gene

transfer among bacteria residing in the same environment, in

this case, the human gut.

 

Genetic modification of bacteria can be done by DNA

transformation (direct uptake of DNA), transduction

(transfer of genes by temperate bacterial phage) or by the

use of plasmids (small circular DNAs that replicate with the

bacterial cell but stay outside the bacterial chromosome).

Normally, transgenes are propagated in bacteria in plasmids

because DNA transformation is not successful unless the DNA

shares homology (sequence similarity) with the bacterial

chromosome.

 

Lactic acid bacteria (Lactobacillus spp) have been

genetically modified to increase proteolytic activity, to

resist viruses, to metabolize complex carbohydrates or to

enhance metabolism. The only modified lactic acid bacterium

approved under the EU directive so far is a strain with a

modified luciferase gene to detect antibiotic residues in

milk, but that strain does not enter the food chain because

it is used on a small test sample of milk that is then

destroyed.

 

Dangerous experiments with probiotics

 

It has been suggested that a random `gene-shuffling'

technique should be employed to improve lactic acid bacteria

for use as probiotics. Gene-shuffling is an inherently

hazardous procedure that can generate millions of

recombinant bacteria in a matter of hours; it will be

impossible to predict how many of those might be lethal

pathogens ( " Death by DNA shuffling " , SiS 18 http://www.i-

sis.org.uk/isisnews.php).

 

A United States patent application for recombinant lactic

acid bacteria for treating allergy includes fermented milk

product (yogurt) containing lactic acid bacteria modified

with synthetic genes specifying epitope IgE antibodies

(allergy antibodies) on the surface of the bacterium.

Allergy therapy would include eating the recombinant yogurt

to suppress the allergy as the natural allergen is

encountered. This kind of `therapy' must be treated with

extreme caution. Experience tells us that interfering with

the immune system can lead to nasty surprises, as in the

case of the harmless mousepox virus that turned into a

lethal pathogen when a gene that was supposed to boost

antibody production was inserted into it. In another

experiment, a Lactobacterium strain of human origin was

modified with a gene for tetanus toxin to produce antigen to

immunize against tetanus. The recombinant lactic acid

bacterium was delivered as a nasal spray to provide a strong

immunization. No consideration has been given to the

distinct possibility that the tetanus toxin gene could

easily be passed along to a pathogen.

 

Genetic engineers are also identifying Bifidobacteria

probiotic strains and thinking of `enhancing' them by

genetic modification. Plasmid vectors belonging to

Bifidobacteria or shuttle plasmid vectors for transferring

genes between E. coli and Bifidobacteria are being used, so

far, to study the role of Bifidobacteria in the gut

ecosystem rather than in the production of modified

probiotic strains. The instability of recombinant plasmids

has proved an obstacle to industrial exploitation of GM

Bifidobacteria. Furthermore, gene transfer was observed in

the digestive system of previously germ free mice between

Lactobacteria and Bifidobacteria, suggesting that GM

probiotic strains would alter the entire microbial ecology

of the digestive tract in an unpredictable manner.

 

A recent review stressed the huge market for probiotics in

Europe, pointing to the value of molecular genetic

technology in characterizing and identifying many probiotic

microbes. An earlier review discussed bacterial replacement

therapy as a form of " germ warfare " to prevent and control

infections of skin, oral cavity, ears and uro-genital tract.

The friendly probiotic bacteria are used to colonize the gut

microflora to eliminate or minimize pathogens from

establishing themselves. That approach has proved successful

in controlling dental caries, ear infections and

streptococcal diseases. In some rare instances, the

" friendly " bacteria had antibiotic resistance markers or

were genetically modified.

 

No GM bacteria must be allowed for probiotic use

 

The study of bacteria colonizing the human gut has only just

begun. There are ten times more bacteria than there are

cells in the intestine, consisting of more than 400

different species; the overwhelming majority of the species

still unknown. Prof. Tore Midtvedt, who pioneered the use of

germ-free mice to study gut bacteria, was among the first to

demonstrate the importance contribution of individual

bacteria to the development of the immune system of the gut.

In view of our vast ignorance of gut ecology, we cannot

allow genetically modified probiotic bacteria to be used,

unless and until we fully understand the intricate

ecological balances that have co-evolved with the human

species. There should be a ban on the use of any GM

probiotic bacteria in human subjects.

 

 

 

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

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

 

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press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

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