| Literature DB >> 30701172 |
René Custers1, Josep M Casacuberta2, Dennis Eriksson3, László Sági4, Joachim Schiemann5.
Abstract
The ability to successfully exploit genome edited organisms for the benefit of food security and the environment will essentially be determined by the extent to which these organisms fall under specific regulatory provisions. In many jurisdictions the answer to this question is considered to depend on the genetic characteristics of the edited organism, and whether the changes introduced in its genome do (or do not) occur naturally. We provide here a number of key considerations to assist with this evaluation as well as a guide of concrete examples of genetic alterations with an assessment of their natural occurrence. These examples support the conclusion that for many of the common types of alterations introduced by means of genome editing, the resulting organisms would not be subject to specific biosafety regulatory provisions whenever novelty of the genetic combination is a crucial determinant.Entities:
Keywords: GMO; classification; future policy; genome editing; natural genetic alterations; regulatory oversight
Year: 2019 PMID: 30701172 PMCID: PMC6343457 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2018.00213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Genetic alterations and the proposed classification of organisms in the context of GMO regulatory oversight.
| 1 | Any plant | Single point mutation | YES | Very likely | NO | The mutation rate has been estimated in different plants to be on average 1 mutation per genome per generation, meaning that every single plant will contain, at least, one new mutation. See also the |
| 2 | Any plant | 2,000 point mutations | Perhaps only in a nuclear fall-out | Extremely unlikely | YES | This is the example of classical mutagenesis using a radioactive source to induce random mutations. The organisms resulting from this intervention are exempted from the scope of the EU GMO directive on the condition that no recombinant nucleic acid molecules or GMOs have been used. |
| 3 | Any plant | Short deletions (a few bp) | YES | Very likely | NO | Such one base pair deletions occur on a regular basis. Mostly after the occurrence of a double-strand break. |
| 4 | Any plant | Larger deletions (a few kbp) | YES | It does happen | NO | Larger deletions also do occur, but with a lower frequency. In viruses such deletions occur rather frequently during processes of attenuation. |
| 5 | Any plant | Short insertions (a few bp) | YES | Very likely | NO | Small insertions also occur on a regular basis. Similar as with small deletions such insertions may occur, for example after a double-strand break. |
| 6 | Maize | 50 kb exogenous DNA insertion | YES | Very unlikely | YES | Such size of insertions do occur in very rare occasions, but the larger the insertion the more unlikely they become. |
| 7 | Any plant | 2 kb exogenous DNA insertion from a non-related source (a transgene) | YES | Very unlikely | YES | Even though there are rare events of horizontal gene transfer, it is very unlikely that such an event occurs. This is also what the legislation truly intended to have covered by the GMO legislation. |
| 8 | Any plant | A cisgene flanked by the T-DNA left and right borders | NO | Extremely unlikely | YES? | There are no known examples of such types of alterations occurring in nature. Where T-DNA has been introduced spontaneously, it was with sequences stemming from |
| 9 | Any plant | An allele swap | YES | It does happen | NO | Allele swaps do occur, especially as a result of recombination during meiosis. |
| 10 | Any plant | Cisgene addition | YES | It does happen | NO/YES | The difference with an allele swap is that the cisgene may be present anywhere in the genome, not necessarily on its 'natural' location. It is known however that in plants genes on a regular basis get duplicated, resulting in an extra copy of the gene being inserted at another location in the genome, away from its original ‘natural' location. |
| 11 | Any plant | Intragene addition | ? | Extremely unlikely | YES | The rearrangement of regulatory sequences does occur in nature and is actually important in evolutionary terms. But it is extremely unlikely to occur within a few generations in the context of plant breeding. |
| 12 | Plants that cannot naturally be infected by | T-DNA insertion | NO | Extremely unlikely | YES | When a plant cannot naturally be infected by |
| 13 | Plants that can be naturally infected by | T-DNA insertion | YES | Unlikely, but it has happened | NO | |
| 14 | Any plant | Genome duplication | YES | It does happen | NO | Genome duplications do spontaneously happen in nature but have even more been exploited by man to strengthen certain characteristics of crops. |
| 15 | Any plant | Transposon insertion | YES | It does happen | NO | Transposons mobile genetic elements that account for an important fraction of all plant genomes. Its movement generates mutations that are at the origin of many traits selected by humans to domesticate wild plants of breed new varieties. |
As proposed in the article organisms should only be considered as GMO subject to specific regulatory oversight when they fulfill two criteria: (1) the alteration must have been achieved by means of a technical intervention that does not occur naturally, and (2) the genetic combination formed must be beyond what does occur naturally by mating and/or natural recombination.