London, United Kingdom
June 23, 2005Scientists
will today explain to a meeting in London how their research has
greatly improved our understanding of the flow of genetic
material between organisms in the environment. Outcomes from the
Gene Flow in Plants and Microorganisms Initiative, funded by the
Biotechnology and Biological
Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and the Natural
Environment Research Council (NERC), will be valuable in
informing the future of both conventional and GM crops.
The outcomes of the initiative
include the finding that separation distances of around 100m
between GM and conventional crops can meet most impurity
thresholds and restrict the transfer of genetic material into
the environment. Researchers also found that gene transfer from
GM organisms to soil bacteria is vanishingly small and highly
unlikely.
However, scientists examining
the likelihood of gene transfer from conventionally-bred
commercial oil seed rape to its waterside wild relative,
Bargeman’s Cabbage, Brassica rapa, found that transfer
was not rare. In fact, they estimated that around 32,000 oil
seed/B. rapahybrids are produced in the UK every year.
Another project explored how
the activity of genes transferred into plants could be made more
predictable. The researchers found that introducing traits by GM
methods can have less impact on overall gene expression than
conventional plant breeding.
The findings are the result of
a five-year £4.5M initiative to increase knowledge of what
happens when new or ‘foreign’ genes are inserted into an
organism’s genome, what mechanisms control the insertion,
whether inserted genetic material can transfer between
organisms, and if so what the consequences of gene flow would
be.
Professor Phil Dale, Chair of
the Initiative Steering Group, said, “The findings of the Gene
Flow Initiative are not just important in informing policy on GM
crops but for conventional farming and plant breeding as well.
Before research under this initiative began we had very little
idea of how genetic material flowed in the environment but we
are now much better placed for the future.”
BACKGROUND
The aim of the Gene Flow in
Plants and Microorganisms Initiative was to provide a greater
understanding of the biological events that control and
influence the insertion of new genetic material into the genomes
of plants and microorganisms and of the likelihood and
consequences of the subsequent transfer of the inserted material
to other organisms.
This initiative was intended to
complement other research supported by BBSRC, NERC and other
funding bodies by supporting research into the underlying
mechanisms of basic biological processes.
The initiative followed an
online consultation launched by BBSRC and NERC February 2000.
The successful projects under the initiative were announced in
November 2000.
For more information about the
initiative see:
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http://www.bbsrc.ac.uk/science/initiatives/geneflow.html
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www.bbsrc.ac.uk/media/briefings/geneflow.pdf
BBSRC and NERC are two of
the UK’s eight Research Councils.
The Biotechnology and
Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) is the UK
funding agency for research in the life sciences. Sponsored by
Government, BBSRC annually invests around £336 million in a wide
range of research that makes a significant contribution to the
quality of life for UK citizens and supports a number of
important industrial stakeholders including the agriculture,
food, chemical, healthcare and pharmaceutical sectors.
The Natural Environment Research
Council (NERC) is one of the UK's eight Research Councils.
It uses a budget of about £300 million a year to fund and carry
out impartial scientific research in the sciences of the
environment. NERC trains the next generation of independent
environmental scientists. It specialises in earth system
science, addressing some of the key questions facing mankind
such as global warming, renewable energy and sustainable
economic development. |