| Literature DB >> 34429575 |
Daniel Jenkins1, Raymond Dobert2, Ana Atanassova3, Chloe Pavely4.
Abstract
Various genome-editing technologies have been embraced by plant breeders across the world as promising tools for the improvement of different crops to deliver consumer benefits, improve agronomic performance, and increase sustainability. The uptake of genome-editing technologies in plant breeding greatly depends on how governments regulate its use. Some major agricultural production countries have already developed regulatory approaches that enable the application of genome editing for crop improvement, while other governments are in the early stages of formulating policy. Central to the discussion is the principle of "like products should be treated in like ways" and the subsequent utilization of exclusions and exemptions from the scope of GMO regulations for these products. In some countries, the outcomes of genome editing that could also have been achieved through conventional breeding have been defined as not needing GMO regulatory oversight. In this paper, we provide a short overview of plant breeding and the history of plant biotechnology policy development, the different classes of current regulatory systems and their use of exemptions and exclusions for genome-edited plants, and the potential benefits of such approaches as it relates to achieving societal goals. © The Society for In Vitro Biology 2021.Entities:
Keywords: Genome editing; Plant breeding; Policy; Regulation; Societal benefits
Year: 2021 PMID: 34429575 PMCID: PMC8376113 DOI: 10.1007/s11627-021-10201-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Plant ISSN: 1054-5476 Impact factor: 2.252
Figure 2.World map showing the current regulatory policy landscape related to genome-edited plant products. The key indicates which countries/regions have regulatory policies and processes already in place, which are currently having policy discussions, and areas where court rulings have determined that GMO regulations are applicable to genome-edited plants.
Figure 1.Schematic diagram illustrating the general relationship between regulatory scope, exclusions, and exemptions, and the role of eligibility criteria for plant products. Products that are, by definition, within the scope of the regulations may either be evaluated by a regulatory body and approved to gain market access or determined to meet defined exemption criteria (“eligibility criteria”) and considered to meet the same safety or protection targets as products that have been approved. It should be noted that all products whether they are “excluded from regulation,” exempted or go through a pre-market approval process would be subject to other regulatory requirements under other authorities (e.g., seed testing/quality standards, food safety standards). Depending on the country/region, a myriad of post-market safety and marketing requirements are also likely to be applicable to all products (Institute of Medicine (US) and National Research Council (US) 1998).
Summary of potential genome-edited crop products. An “x” indicates relevance to a United Nations Sustainable Development Goal (2 Zero Hunger, 3 Good Health and Well-Being, 13 Climate Action, 15 Life on Land) for those products