
GENEWATCH
THE STATE OF THE SCIENCE
By Stuart Newman
By 2005, however, when more than 90 percent of the annual soybean crop and 50 percent of the corn crop in the United States had come to be genetically engineered - a transformation in agricultural production that took less than a decade2 - efforts at testing and regulation of genetically modified (GM) foods were increasingly portrayed as irrational. A perusal of the summaries of recent policy articles on the PubMed database turns up dozens in which reservations about the massive introduction of GM food into the food chain are represented as scientifically ignorant, economically suicidal, and cruel to the world's hungry. One abstract in the journal Nature reads: "Unjustified and impractical legal requirements are stopping genetically engineered crops from saving millions from starvation and malnutrition."3
These papers-many by European commentators decrying the successful efforts to keep GM foods out of the markets there, and some by U.S. commentators bemoaning the necessity to test these products at all-mainly support their cases by referencing short-term feeding studies of animals. But this type of study is not adequate to allay valid concerns. One group, reviewing the relevant areas, has written, "It appears that there are no adverse effects of GM crops on many species of animals in acute and short-term feeding studies, but serious debates of effects of long-term and multigenerational feeding studies remain."4
According to another group that has looked into these issues:
The most detailed regulatory tests on the
GMOs are three-month long feeding trials of laboratory rats, which are
biochemically assessed...The test data and the corresponding results are
kept in secret by the companies. Our previous analyses...of three GM
maize [varieties] led us to conclude that [liver and kidney] toxicities
were possible, and that longer testing was necessary.5
A central issue for crop foods, of course, is their effects on humans. The most comprehensive review of this subject as of 2007 stated:
...the genetically modified (GM) products
that are currently on the international market have all passed risk
assessments conducted by national authorities. These assessments have
not indicated any risk to human health. In spite of this clear
statement, it is quite amazing to note that the review articles
published in international scientific journals during the current decade
did not find, or the number was particularly small, references
concerning human and animal toxicological/health risks studies on GM
foods.7
Given the uncertainties of the long-term health impact of GM foods, it is significant that so far, virtually all genetic modification of food and fiber crops has focused on the economic aspects of production (i.e., making crops resistant to herbicides and insect damage, increasing transportability and shelf-life) rather than the more elusive goals of improving nutrition or flavor. Introducing biological qualities that enhance production, transportability and shelf life can compromise palatability, as seen with the Flavr Savr tomato, the first GM crop to be approved by the FDA for human consumption, two decades ago.9
To protect its investment against a skeptical public, the biotech food industry has depended on compliant regulators,10 on its proponents' ridicule of biotech industry critics' supposed scientific ignorance,11,12 and on expensive campaigns against labeling of prepared foods that would draw undue attention to the presence of GM components, which they claim to be natural and ordinary.13
(These are the same components that when presented to the Patent Office and potential investors are portrayed as novel and unique.) A food crop that actually benefited the people who eat it rather than only those who sell it would likely open the floodgates of greatly weakened regulation. Golden Rice, designed to provide Vitamin A to malnourished children, has failed to overcome the hurdles for approval for dietary use since it was first described in 2000. Though very limited in its ability to alleviate malnutrition, it has some merit in the prevention of blindness, and seems poised for approval in the next year or so.14 If so, it will almost certainly help agribusiness tighten its grip on the world food supply and increase its capacity to foist products that are much more questionable on their captive clientele-that is, everyone.
Stuart Newman, Ph.D., is Professor of Cell Biology and Anatomy at New York Medical College and a founding member of the Council for Responsible Genetics.
ENDNOTES
1. Weinstein, I. B., et al. 1984. Cellular targets and host genes in multistage carcinogenesis. Fed Proc. 43: 2287-2294.
2. Hsieh-Li, H. M., et al. 1995. Hoxa 11 structure, extensive antisense transcription, and function in male and female fertility. Development. 121: 1373-1385.
3. Potrykus, I. 2010. Regulation must be revolutionized. Nature. 466: 561.
4. Zhang, W. & F. Shi. 2010. Do genetically modified crops affect animal reproduction? A review of the ongoing debate. Animal. 5: 1048-1059.
5. de Vendomois, J. S., et al. 2010. Debate on GMOs health risks after statistical findings in regulatory tests. Int J Biol Sci. 6: 590-598.
6. Krzyzowska, M., et al. 2010. The effect of multigenerational diet containing genetically modified triticale on immune system in mice. Pol J Vet Sci. 13: 423-430.
7. Domingo, J. L. 2007. Toxicity studies of genetically modified plants: a review of the published literature. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr. 47: 721-733.
8. Domingo, J. L. & J. Gine Bordonaba. 2011. A literature review on the safety assessment of genetically modified plants. Environ Int. 37: 734-742.
9. Redenbaugh, K. 1992. Safety assessment of genetically engineered fruits and vegetables: a case study of the FLAVR SAVR tomato. CRC Press. Boca Raton, Fla.
10. Newman, S. A. 2009. Genetically modified foods and the attack on nature. Capitalism Nature Socialism. 20: 22-31.
11. Silver, L. M. 2006. Why GM Is good for us: genetically modified foods may be greener than organic ones. In Newsweek International, March 20: 57-58. http://128.112.44.57/CNmedia/articles/06newsweekpig1s1.pdf
12. Shermer, M. 2013. The liberals' war on science. ScientficAmerican.com, January 21. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-liberals-war-on-science
13. Vaughan, A. 2012. Prop 37: Californian voters reject GM food labelling. Guardian.co.uk, November 7. http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/nov/07/prop-37-californian-gm-labelling
14. Haskell, M. J. 2012. The challenge to reach nutritional adequacy for vitamin A: beta-carotene bioavailability and conversion--evidence in humans. Am J Clin Nutr. 96: 1193S-1203S.
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