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These GE Animals Don't Come With Lightbulbs
Genetically modified organisms(GMOs) are a part of our everyday lives in N. America. If you've eaten soy products, used a corn sweetener or indulged in processed foods, chances are you've consumed trans-genic products. While agriculture has always modified the gene stock by selecting for the best to reproduce, for example a cow that consistently gave good milk and was healthy would be allowed to produce more calves with the hope that her offspring would inherit her good qualities. The past couple of decades has seen a shift from selecting the best to reproduce to inserting genes into the organism to achieve specific goals.
Bacteria were the first to be genetically modified, allowing the production of human insulin and human growth hormone. Plant modification followed quickly. There are widely divergent opinions about the safety and wisdom of planting field crops with recombinant DNA(rDNA). Much work has now been done to create transgenic animals for various uses. The broad categories are outlined in the highlighted area below.
Genetically Engineered AnimalsOn September 18, 2008, FDA’s Center for Veterinary Medicine released draft Guidance for Industry #187 to clarify the Agency’s regulation of Genetically Engineered (GE) Animals.
[q url="http://www.fda.gov/cvm/GEconsumersQA.htm"]
Q:What is genetic engineering?
A: Genetic engineering is a process in which recombinant DNA (rDNA) technology is used to introduce new characteristics or traits into organisms. When scientists splice together pieces of DNA and introduce a spliced DNA segment into an organism to give the organism new properties, it’s called rDNA technology. The spliced piece of DNA is called the rDNA construct. Genetic engineering has been widely used in agriculture to make crops resistant to certain pests or herbicides, in medicine to develop microbes that can produce pharmaceuticals for human or animal use, and in food to produce microorganisms that aid in baking, brewing, and cheese-making.
Q: What is a genetically engineered animal?
A: A genetically engineered (GE) animal is one that contains an rDNA construct that’s intended to give the animal a new trait or characteristic. Examples of the kind of GE animals that are being developed are provided below.
Q: What kinds of GE animals are being developed?
A: Many kinds of GE animals are in development, although none have yet been approved for commercial use.
Biopharm animals are those that have undergone genetic engineering to produce particular substances, such as human insulin, for pharmaceutical use.
Research animals may be engineered to make them more susceptible to particular diseases, such as cancer, in order to gain a better basic understanding of the disease for the development of new therapies or in order to evaluate new medical therapies.
Xenotransplant animals are being engineered so they can be used as sources for cells, tissues or organs that can be used for transplantation into humans.
Companion animals that are modified to enrich or enhance their interaction with humans (i.e., hypoallergenic pets).
Disease resistant animals may be used either for food use or biopharm applications. These animals have received modifications that make them resistant to common diseases, such as mastitis (a very painful infection of the udder) in dairy cows, or particularly deadly diseases, such as bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE).
Food use animals have been engineered to provide healthier meat, such as pigs that contain healthy omega-3 fatty acids at levels comparable to those in fish.
Q: How are GE animals regulated?
A: FDA regulates GE animals under the “new animal drug”1 provisions of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA), FDA’s regulations for new animal drugs. This draft guidance is intended to help industry understand the requirements that are established by statute and regulations as they apply to these animals, including those of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), and to inform the public about the process FDA is using to regulate GE animals. The draft guidance does not create any new obligations. It clarifies how the regulations apply to GE animals.
[/q]The release of rDNA animals for meat consumption seems to be ever closer. Some people will not have a problem eating pork that carries fish genes, but would balk at consuming pig that contains human genes. We need to be vigilant about what agribusiness is offering us to eat. The American public has a chance to comment on the draft by the FDA to regulate transgenic animals, also known as GE(genetically engineered) animals.
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Barbara McPherson
Nanaimo, Canada




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (5)
at 10:44 on September 18th, 2008
Barbara McPherson, I like this story. It's good stuff.
This is all very strange and a bit concerning to me I think.
I would not be ok eating a pig with human genes - that's too close to home...
at 11:36 on September 18th, 2008
Barbara McPherson, I like this story. It's good stuff. strange, we refuse to read it, wrong we should read it. The problem already with growth hormons
at 12:32 on September 18th, 2008
Good stuff, Barbara McPherson.
There are so many troubling aspects to the uses of genetic engineering, especially the chimera being created.
I've read that scientists devising guidelines for the development of chimeric (cross species) animals, have decided that as long as an animal developed contains no more than 90% human genetic material, there is no possibility that the creature created will approach human consciousness, trapped in an animal body.
How do they know for sure? I hope they're right!
at 14:46 on September 18th, 2008
Barbara McPherson, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 16:01 on September 18th, 2008
Barbara McPherson, I like this story. It's good stuff.