ISIS Press Release 22/09/04
No to GM Oilseed Rape GT73
Monsanto has applied to import its GM
oilseed rape GT73 into Europe for use in animal
feed and processing. The Scientific Panel on GMOs
of the European Food Safety Authority has given
it a favourable opinion, and there will soon be a
vote on it at the Council of Ministers. Here's a
description of what it is and why it should be
rejected. Prof.
Joe Cummins, Dr. Mae-Wan
Ho and Lim Li Ching
Oilseed rape is a major crop for oil and
animal feed
Oilseed rape (Brassica napus) is grown
as a commercial crop in 50 countries with a
combined harvest of over 40 million metric
tonnes. The major producers of rapeseed in 2000
were China, Canada, India, Germany, France,
Australia, and the United Kingdom. Canola is a
genetic variation of B. napus with low
levels of the natural rapeseed toxins
glucosinolate and erucic acid. Canola is grown
for its seed, which represents a major source of
edible vegetable oil and pressed cake from oil
extraction is also used in livestock feeds [1].
Oilseed rape is called canola in North America
because the commercial oil-producing varieties
were developed in Saskatchewan, Canada.
Monsanto's canola GT73 was released
commercially in 1995 in Canada [2] and the same
strain, designated RT73, was released
commercially in the United States in 1999 [3].
Japan approved the release of GT73 in 1995 [1]
and Australia in 2003 [1]. Approval of all
releases was based on essentially the same data
sets.
GT73 in the EU
GT73 was notified for food use (as rapeseed
oil) in the European Union (EU) in November 1997,
under the simplified procedure of the Novel Foods
Regulation. This means that rapeseed oil from
GT73 was considered `substantially equivalent' to
its conventional counterpart and only required
notification by the company, with no risk
assessment or explicit approval process. Products
made from rapeseed oil may include fried foods,
baked foods and snacks.
An application for the import and use of GT73,
excluding cultivation, was submitted in 1998 to
the competent authority of the Netherlands. It
gave this application a favourable opinion, and
in January 2003 recommended that GT73 be
approved. Several member States raised questions,
including the UK, via its Advisory Committee on
Releases to the Environment (ACRE) [4]. One of
the concerns related to increased liver weights
in rats fed GT73, compared with controls (see
later).
The European Food Safety Authority's
(EFSA) Scientific Panel on GMOs was
requested to give its opinion on GT73 to resolve
the uncertainties. In February 2004, EFSA gave
its verdict that "GT73 oilseed rape is as
safe as conventional oilseed rape and therefore
the placing on the market of GT73 oilseed rape
for processing and feed use is unlikely to have
an adverse effect on human or animal health or,
in the context of its proposed use, on the
environment" [5].
Despite EFSA's positive assessment of GT73 for
feed and processing, the regulatory committee
could not reach a qualified majority to authorize
GT73 in June 2004. There were 43 votes in favour
of approving GT73 (Belgium, Czech Republic,
Finland, France, Netherlands, Latvia, Portugal,
Slovakia, Sweden), 57 votes against (Austria,
Cyprus, Denmark, Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Italy,
Malta, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland, UK), and 24
abstentions (Germany, Ireland, Spain, Slovenia)
[6].
The application now passes to the Council of
Ministers, which will make its decision very
soon. If the Council cannot decide, the decision
will rest with the European Commission, which has
shown every sign of being in favour of approving
GT73.
No event-specific characterization provided of
transgene insert
GT73 + glyphosate
tolerance: GT73 (RT73) oilseed
rape has been made tolerant to the herbicide
glyphosate. Two transgenes were used. The
first is the epsps
gene coding for the enzyme
5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase (epsps),
isolated from the
common soil bacterium Agrobacterium
tumefaciens,
and is a glyphosate tolerant form of epsps.
The epsps
enzyme is part of the important shikimate pathway
involved in the production of aromatic amino
acids. When conventional canola plants are
treated with glyphosate, the plants cannot
produce the aromatic amino acids and die, but the
enzyme encoded by the transgene is insensitive to
glyphosate.
GT replaces GOX:
The second transgene in GT73 codes for a
modified version of glyphosate oxidase (GOX)
enzyme. The gox gene inserted into GT73
was isolated from
the bacterium Ochrobactrum
anthropi.
The GOX enzyme accelerates the normal breakdown
of the herbicide glyphosate into two compounds,
aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA) and glyoxylate
[1-3, 7]. In the absence of GOX, unacceptable
levels of the herbicide may accumulate in the
canola cake in animal feed.
The two transgenes were introduced into GT73
in a plasmid using the bacterium, Agrobacterium
tumefaciens. The epsps and gox
genes were each driven by the 35S promoter from a
modified figwort mosaic virus and terminated with
the 3' (terminal) end of the pea rbcS E9
gene. The shikimate pathway is located in the
chloroplast, so the chloroplast transit signal
peptide sequence from the ribulose-biphosphate
carboxylase and EPSPS of Arabidopsis is
used to target the transgene products to
the chloroplast. According to the company, only
the primary genes and the sequences necessary for
their activity in the plant cell were inserted
into the canola cells while sequences from the
plasmid such as the plasmid origin of replication
and a gene for streptomycin resistance were lost
from the commercial strain. Monsanto claimed
that only one transgene insert is present [5],
but the exact site of insertion was not reported
[3, 5].
After evaluating the initial application
submitted by Monsanto, some member States had
requested additional information on the molecular
aspects of the dossier. However, it is clear
from the EFSA opinion that no independent tests
were carried out, and the favourable
opinion was based solely on information supplied
by the company. Worryingly, the EFSA
opinion [5] stated: "Comments raised by
the Member States on specific molecular detection
methodologies are presently not within the scope
of the GMO Panel remit." In other words,
there is no event-specific characterization, and
therefore, no unique method for detecting
this GMO for the purpose of identification or
traceability, nor for addressing safety and
liability issues that may arise.
The same EFSA dossier revealed that there are
molecular changes at the insertion site,
specifically 40 bp of the host genome is missing
from GT73 while 22 bp of extraneous DNA of
unknown origin is present at the 5' junction of
the insert. Nevertheless, these are considered
not to pose a safety risk, based solely on the
lack of homology to known toxins and allergens.
No molecular evidence of transgene stability
The transgenes were claimed by the company to
be inserted in a stable and Mendelian fashion. ISIS has pointed out more
than once that this claim of genetic stability -
based on a failure to depart from `Mendelian
ratios' in the offpring generation - is not an
acceptable criterion of genetic stability in the
absence of independent ascertainment of the
parental genotypes [8-13]. But
EFSA has accepted the same criterion of transgene
stability. It stated [5]: "The
inserted DNA is inherited in a stable fashion in
a nuclear chromosome as indicated by a number of
parameters, e.g. predicted Mendelian segregation
ratios (over several generations) from crosses
between GT73 and conventional oilseed rape."
Extensive changes in the codons of transgenes
from native genes ignored
Few of the regulatory documents have dealt
with extensive alterations in the genetic codes
of the native genes in the transgenes inserted
into GT73, but all of them acknowledge that the codes were altered to
enhance production of the bacterial gene products
in the plant. The United States
Food and Drug Administration consultation on
canola GT73 provided a somewhat fuller
description of the alterations in the bacterial
DNA [14] while the patent for the EPSPS
used in canola GT73 provides an extensive
description of the code alteration [15].
Native genes from
bacteria or humans do not function very well in
crop plants because gene expression is influenced
by codon bias specific to plants, mammals or
bacteria. For
that reason, the genetic code is altered by
genetic engineers to achieve optimum gene
expression. The optimized transgenes used in
modified crops are mainly synthetic
approximations of the real bacterial
gene [16]. The synthetic genes are very different
from the genes that evolved in bacteria and for
that reason their characteristic recombination
and mutation deserves special attention,
as does its toxicology and allergenic
potential. However,
these factors have been largely ignored by the
regulators.
Toxicology & allergenicity tests invalid
Even though the transgenes were altered in DNA
sequence from the native bacterial genes, the
proteins actually tested for mammalian toxicity
and environmental safety were not isolated from
GT73 but from the bacteria [5]. The bacterial
surrogate enzymes were assumed to be identical to
the enzymes produced in GT73 by cursory
observations using techniques such as gel
electrophoresis, N terminal analysis and enzyme
activity, even though the presence of four
anomalous amino acids were noted in the bacterial
GOX [7]. Digestibility and
degradability were tested with the bacterial
proteins in simulated gastric fluid. And acute
toxicity tests in mice were similarly done with
the bacterial proteins.
Allergy potential
Allergenicity tests were even less reliable, as
they depended on theoretical evaluations based on
assumptions that have been extensively
questioned. For example, the Austrian
government, based on an analysis of a number of
applications for GMO approval in the EU, has
concluded that no direct testing of potentially
allergenic properties of GM corps and their
products has been carried out [17]. Instead,
conclusion that the protein in question is
unlikely to exhibit allergenic properties is
largely based on the following theoretical
considerations:
1) the newly introduced protein originates from a
non-allergenic source;
2)there is no significant sequence homology to
known allergens;
3)the protein will be rapidly digested in the
intestine;
4)the protein is not glycosylated;
5)the expression level of protein in the GM crop
is low;
6) and the protein is not new to the human diet.
The Austrian
government has questioned each of these arguments
and their underlying assumptions in the light of
recent scientific data.
Consequently, these tests were neither
meaningful nor valid. Empirical
tests should have been conducted at the very
least, on the real proteins isolated from GT73,
not the bacterial surrogates.
The EFSA did
include the warning that,
"Since cross-reactivity between GOX and
tropomyosin is not ruled out completely, persons allergic to
shrimp meal should be aware of the possibility of
hypersensitivity reaction when working with GT73
oilseed rape."
Inadequate inappropriate
feeding trials with unexplained adverse effect
According to the EFSA opinion [5], "A
satisfactory explanation was sought for the potentially
adverse effect observed in one of the three
rat feeding studies." We believe that this
refers to the concerns expressed in regard to a
confidential Monsanto feeding study that showed
that rats fed GT73
experienced a 15% increase in their liver
weights.
The UK's ACRE and ACAF
(Advisory Committee on Animal Feedingstuffs)
had first raised concerns in March 2003 that the
difference in the rats' liver weights could not
be explained, as volunteered by Monsanto, by
higher glucosinolate concentration in the GM
diets compared with the corresponding control
diets [4]. Subsequently, Monsanto provided
further information on this. But both ACRE and ACAF
were "not satisfied" that Monsanto had
supported their hypothesis. They demanded a
satisfactory explanation for this potentially
adverse response.
However, it
appears that EFSA has dismissed those concerns.
A list of uninformative feeding trials was
presented on various animals of extremely short
duration in which mostly body weights and
sometimes, liver weights were recorded. No
histology was carried out. Because there were no
apparent gross pathological changes in the rat
livers following examination at necropsy, EFSA
considered the difference in liver weights an
"incidental finding".
Contamination unavoidable
The regulatory reviews leading to commercialization
of GT73 oilseed rape without exception discounted
the rapid pollution of transgenic crops by wind
spread pollen or by seed dispersal by animals or
vehicles. This can happen during transport, without
planting in the field. Escaped seed can germinate
and potentially cross-pollinate with conventional
oilseed rape, feral populations and wild
relatives. ACRE had also raised concerns
regarding seed spill, and was "not convinced
that seed spill will not occur and that feral
populations will not materialise" [4].
There is clear and growing evidence
that widespread deployment of GM oilseed rape
will lead to widespread contamination of
conventional crops. A 2003 report showed
that 95% of
certified seed stock in western Canada were
polluted to detectable levels with glyphosate
tolerance genes and 52%
exceeded the allowable contamination of
certified seed [18]. The widespread
deployment of GM oilseed rape for a variety of
herbicides is leading to pyramiding of the genes
for herbicide tolerance [19], creating crops that
turn into fertile weeds that are difficult to
eradicate.
Europe's oilseed
rape should keep its GM-free status before it too
is contaminated beyond redemption.
References
- Agbios Data base product description
MON-00073-7 (GT73, RT73) pp1-3 http://www.agbios.com/dbase.php?action=Show
Prod&data=GT73%2C+RT73
- Canadian Food Inspection Agency Plant
Biosafety Office Decision Document
DD95-02:Determination of of environmental
safety of Monsanto Canada Inc.'s Roundup
Herbicide tolerant Brassica napus canola
line GT73 1995, pp1-10 http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/plaveg/bio/dde.shtml
- Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service USDA Docket no. 98-089-2 Monsanto
co. Determination of Nonregulated status
for canola genetically engineered for
glyphosate tolerance 1999, pp1-33. http://www.aphis.usda.gov/brs/aphisdocs2/98_21601p_com
.pdf
- ACRE Advisory Committee on Releases to
the Environment. Advice on a notification
for marketing of herbicide tolerant GM
oilseed rape, 24 September 2003, http://www.defra.gov.uk/environment/acre/ad
vice/pdf/acre_advice36.pdf
- Opinion of the Scientific Panel on
Genetically Modified Organisms on a
request from the Commission related to
the Notification (Reference C/NL/98/11)
for the placing on the market of
herbicide-tolerant oilseed rape GT73, for
import and processing, under Part C of
Directive 2001/18/EC from Monsanto. The
EFSA Journal 2004, 29, 1-19
- "New Europe" blocks U.S. food
import, Friends of the Earth Europe, 16
June 2004, http://www.foeeurope.org/press/2004/GR_16_june_US_food
.htm
- ANZFA Australia New Zealand Food
Authority. Draft risk analysis report
application A363 Food produced from
glyphosate tolerant canola line GT73,
2002, pp1-73 http://www.agbios.com/docroot/decdocs/01-290-
009.pdf
- Ho MW and Cummins JC.
GM food & feed not fit for "man
or beast". ISIS Report 29 April
2004
- Ho MW. GM Science Review deeply flawed. Science
in Society 2003, 19, 7-9.
- Ho MW. GM maize approved on bad science.
ISIS Report 25 February 2002; also, Science
in Society 2002, 15, 10-25.
- Ho MW. Questionable
stability at JIC. ISIS Report 2 March
2001
- Ho MW. Letter
to the Scottish Parliament Petitions
Committee from ISIS. 28 February
2002.
- Ho MW. GM rice unstable. ISIS
News 9/10, July 2001.
- US Food and Drug Administration
Biotechnology Consultation Note to the
File BNF No.000020 Monsanto's glyphosate
tolerant canola line GT73 1995 pp1-4 http://www
.cfsan.fda.gov/~rdb/bnfm020.html
- Eicholtz D, Gasser D and Kishore G.
Glyphosate-tolerant-
5-enopyruvyl-3-phosphoshikimate
synthetase, 1999, United States patent
5,866,775.
- Cummins J. Synthetic
genes in food crops, ISIS Press
Release 1 September 2004,
- Spök A, Hofer H, Lehner P, Valenta R,
Stirn S, Gaugitsch H. Risk assessment of
GMO products in the European Union:
Toxicity assessment, allerginicity
assessment and substantial equivalence in
practice and proposals for improvement
and standardization, July 2004, Austrian
Federal Environment Agency Monograph.
- Cummins J. Transgenic
contamination of certified seed stocks,
ISIS report 2003,
- Ho M. What
lurks behind triple herbicide tolerant
oilseed rape? ISIS report 2002,
This article can be found on the I-SIS
website at http://www.i-
sis.org.uk/NTGMORGT73.php
|