West Lafayette, Indiana
June 17, 2002
Introducing genetically modified
organisms into wild populations holds a greater theoretical risk
of extinction of natural species than previously believed,
according to two Purdue University scientists.
William Muir, professor of animal sciences, and Richard Howard,
professor of biology, used computer modeling and statistical
analyses to examine the hypothetical risks of introducing
genetically modified organisms into wild populations.
"We examined these hypothetical situations because the range of
new transgenic organisms is almost unlimited," Muir said. "It is
constructive for those developing such organisms to be able to
anticipate how they could pose a hazard."
The new computer models have shown that the risk of extinction
is greater than believed before, identifying three new scenarios
in which genetically modified organisms could result in the
extinction of a natural population.
"In the broadest sense, this research tells one how to do risk
assessment and what GMOs need further containment," Muir said.
In 2000, Muir and Howard found that a release of fish that were
larger - and therefore had higher mating success - but also had
shorter life expectancy, could drive a wild population extinct
in as few as 40 generations. Muir and Howard labeled this the
"Trojan gene hypothesis."
But further investigation has found other scenarios that could
lead to extinction.
In one scenario, a genetic modification increases the size of
the male, which results in the male finding more mates and also
living longer. But if the modification also has a third effect
of making the male less fertile, the predicted result is that
the wild population will be extinct in just 20 generations.
"We consider this an extreme risk," Howard said. "That's the
most severe time frame we've encountered so far."
Howard said this risk could arise if fertility was restricted in
a genetically modified organism as a way to limit the spread of
the gene in the natural population.
"This was the biggest surprise for me, that if you lowered
fertility of genetically modified organism the time course to
population extinction was faster rather than slower when the
genetically modified young have better survival than wild-type
individuals," he said. "I still look at the graph of those data
and find it amazing."
The researchers also found scenarios in which the introduced
gene could spread through the population but not reduce the
overall population size. The researchers termed this an invasion
risk.
"The invasion risk is an unknown in assessing the overall risk,"
Howard said. "Given the biology, all we can say is that the gene
would increase in the population. We don't know if that would
cause a problem or not. In this case you wouldn't really know
until you actually released the gene into the
population."
The results of the research were published in the most recent
issue of the scientific journal Transgene Research. The research
was funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Biotechnology
Risk Assessment Program.
The Purdue research is part of an ongoing effort by Purdue and
the USDA to determine the risks of biotechnology, particularly
transferring genetic material from one species to another, known
as transgenic technology.
"Consumer confidence in the use of transgenic technology will
only happen if there is a thorough, unbiased examination of the
risks," Muir said.
The most recent study found that some of the most significant
risks occurred when the introduced gene increased the viability
of the adult organism, such as through improved immune response
or resistance to a disease or pathogen.
"It's somewhat counterintuitive that increasing the health of
the adult could hurt the overall population, but that is what we
found if they had reduced fertility," Howard said.
The scientists say the increased risk from transgenics comes
about because such transfers involve one gene from a different
species.
"This gene has a mega effect that may confer new functionality
on the organism," Howard said.
Traditional breeding, on the other hand, can only affect genes
of that species and involves an exchange of many genes, which
the scientists call polygenic inheritance.
"Selective breeding is based upon polygenic inheritance where
the result is the cumulative effect of many - perhaps hundreds -
of genes each with a small effect. In contrast, most genetic
modification involves one gene with a major effect," Howard
said. "The two methods are not substantially equivalent,
although they may be legally regulated as if they are."
Muir and Howard said the genetic background of the modified
organism may be a key to potential risk.
A 2001 report by the Royal Canadian Society found that highly
domesticated crops, such as corn and soybeans, rarely become
weeds in natural settings because "the cultivated species have
been genetically crippled through intense artificial selection."
"What this means is that the more wild an animal is, the greater
the environmental risk when using that animal to make a
transgenic organism," Muir said. "In other words, making a
transgenic salmon is going to be more of a risk to the
environment than making a transgenic cow."
Muir acknowledges that hypothetical experiments may not reflect
what happens in the real world, but he said the experiments err
on the side of caution.
"If we show that these plants or animals may be a risk in a
laboratory experiment, it could be that they wouldn't be a risk
in nature because nature is less hospitable," he said. "It may
be that things we find to be a risk in the lab aren't a risk at
all in nature. We feel that this is a conservative approach to
determining the risk."
To get a more accurate assessment of the risk of a genetically
modified organism, a facility would need to be constructed that
would replicate the natural environment. Muir said some
companies are already considering constructing such testing
facilities.
"It's going to cost millions of dollars to build elaborate
testing facilities that are as close to a natural setting as
possible," he said. "But nobody said this is going to be easy.
What's at stake is important
enough to spend that kind of money."
Writer:
Steve Tally, (765) 494-9809;
tally@purdue.edu
Sources:
Richard Howard, (765) 494-8136;
rhoward@bilbo.bio.purdue.edu
William Muir, (765) 494-8032;
bmuir@purdue.edu
Related Web sites:
Howard's Web page:
http://www.bio.purdue.edu/Bioweb/People/Faculty/howard.html
Muir's Web page:
http://www.ansc.purdue.edu/faculty/muir.htm
ABSTRACT
Assessment of possible ecological risks and hazards of
transgenic fish with implications for other sexually reproducing
organisms
William M. Muir and Richard D. Howard, Purdue University
Transgenic technology is developing rapidly; however, consumers
and environmentalists remain wary of its safety for use in
agriculture. Research is needed to ensure the safe use of
transgenic technology and thus increase consumer confidence.
This goal is best accomplished by using a thorough, unbiased
examination of risks associated with agricultural biotechnology.
In this paper we review discussion on risk and extend our
approach to predict risk. We also distinguish between the risk
and hazard of transgenic organisms in natural environments. We
define transgene risk as the probability a transgene will spread
into natural conspecific populations and define hazard as the
probability of species extinction, displacement, or ecosystem
disruption given that the transgene has spread. Our methods
primarily address risk relative to two types of hazards:
extinction which has a high hazard, and invasion which has an
unknown level of hazard, similar to that of an introduced exotic
species. Our method of risk assessment is unique in that we
concentrate on the six major fitness components of an organism's
life cycle to determine if transgenic individuals differ in
survival or reproductive capacity from wild type. Our approach
then combines estimates of the net fitness parameters into
mathematical model to determine the fate of the transgene and
the affected wild population.
We also review aspects of fish ecology and behavior that
contribute to risk and examine combinations of net fitness
parameters which can lead to invasion and extinction hazards. We
describe three new ways that a transgene could result in an
extinction hazard: 1) when the transgene increases male mating
success but reduces daily adult viability, 2) when the transgene
increases adult viability but reduces male fertility, and 3)
when the transgene increases both male mating success and adult
viability but reduces male fertility. The last scenario is
predicted to cause rapid extinction, thus it poses an extreme
risk. Although we limit our discussion to aquaculture
applications, our methods can easily be adapted to other
sexually reproducing organisms with suitable adjustments of
terminology.
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