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Dear friends,

here the comments of John Hodgson about the Mexican gene flow case.

I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year - see 'New Years' card

Klaus


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January 2002 Volume 20 Number 1 pp 3 - 4


Doubts linger over Mexican corn analysis
John Hodgson


Research at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT; El Batan, Mexico) has cast some doubt on controversial earlier reports that DNA from genetically modified maize has been transferred to local varieties in Mexico. Although the earlier work describes the apparently widespread occurrence of the 35S promoter from cauliflower mosaic virus in locally developed maize varieties, the CIMMYT study could not detect the 35S promoter, either in historical accessions from its extensive seedbank or in samples collected recently from the field in Mexico.

The CIMMYT findings appear to be at odds both with work from Mexican government researchers announced in September and a study published in November 2001 in Nature (414, 541–543). The Mexican government research, which is supported by the National Commission of Biodiversity but which has not yet been peer-reviewed, suggested that transgenes are present in creole maize from many sites around Mexico. The Nature paper reported that transgenic DNA constructs—the 35S promoter together with, in two cases, sequences from an alcohol dehydrogenase gene—had been found in a number of creole maize varieties in two remote mountain locations in Mexico. Subsequently, both authors of the paper, David Quist and Ignacio Chapela of the Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management at the University of California (Berkeley, CA), were reported widely in the general media, drawing attention to "risks to food security" and threats to "the genetic bank account of diversity." Environmentalist groups such as Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth took up and amplified the cry, producing calls for moratoria or outright bans on GM crops. They are particularly concerned because Mexico, as the place where the first maize farmers dwelt, is the center of genetic diversity of the crop.

CIMMYT's research was in part a defensive move. The center maintains an extensive maize seedbank and supplies seeds on demand to research institutions and extension services around the developing world. "We needed to be able to reassure our users that transgenes were not running rampant through the seedbank," says David Hoisington, director of CIMMYT's Applied Biotechnology Center, "and we have shown that." Their initial results, reported in mid-October (
http://www.cimmyt.org/whatiscimmyt/init_test.htm), could not find the 35S promoter in any of 28 maize populations in its seedbank. They looked at 30 plants from each population. In a second phase, the CIMMYT researchers are looking for herbicide-resistance transgenes and, importantly, have started to examine materials that have been collected recently (1999 and 2001) from farmers' fields in Oaxaca, the state where Quist and Chapela collected their materials.
Those studies conflict with some unreported work by the Berkeley group: the Berkeley researchers used a CIMMYT maize sample gathered in 1971 from Oaxaca as a negative control in their experiments. The Nature paper reports that the original 1971 material was free of the cauliflower mosaic virus promoter but, according to Chapela, seeds grown from that original material in the mid- to late 1990s were not: "When we looked at later regenerations of the same material, we picked up CMV."
One way to start resolving the conflicts would be for the various groups to share samples. CIMMYT's recommendation to the Mexican government, for instance, has been that they have several different and independent laboratories perform a parallel analysis of the samples. "If they all see the same thing," says David Hoisington, "then you can be more sure that there is really something there. He points out that the sensitive nested PCR technique used by the Berkeley researchers is prone to false positives. Thus far, however, the exchanges between the research groups have been frosty. Tim Reeves, director-general of CIMMYT, faxed a letter to Ignacio Chapela on November 16 suggesting an exchange of experimental materials and has so far received no response. Chapela says he is willing to allow others to use his material but maintains that he has not received the CIMMYT request. He has, though, he says, received a letter from CIMMYT that in effect accuses him of stealing the material that he used as the negative control.

Meanwhile, the agbiotech community is astounded that a leading journal such as Nature published a study containing no new information. "The paper shows, in essence, that genes move around in nature, and this is hardly new," says Vivian Moses, chair of the CropGen Panel, an agbio industry–funded information initiative. Val Giddings, the agricultural biotechnology spokesperson for the US industry organization, BIO (Washington, DC), also believes the paper's finding were obvious: "Should we be shocked to discover gambling in a casino?" he says.

It is not just industry representatives who believe that the Berkeley findings are unsurprising. "Maize is an outcrossing species," says CIMMYT's Reeves, "and the farmers' varieties today are not the same as they were two years ago, let alone a hundred or a thousand years ago." Extensive work at CIMMYT has shown that the creole maize varieties planted by small farmers in Mexico are constantly changing, both as a result of the biology of the plant and traditional practices of the farmers. In areas such as Oaxaca, which is at the center of maize diversity, a land race is not stable, uniform, or distinct like a plant variety. CIMMYT's sociological studies have shown that farmers deliberately use external sources of seed to maintain vigor. "Gene flow is constant," says Reeves, "and the real question is whether it makes any difference if one of the genes that has flowed in is a transgene."

This is the major point of divergence in the current discussion. The Berkeley researchers have claimed that appearance of DNA from GM crops into creole maize compromises biodiversity. "If the transgene makes the carrier any more fit," says Chapela, "you would expect to see the crowding out of land races that do not carry the trait." He maintains not only that herbicide and insect resistance can increase fitness, but also that there is some evidence that DNA from transgenic plants is itself particularly promiscuous. "It is the loss of diversity that is of concern," he says, "rather than the appearance of any particular trait.

Luis Herrera Estrella, Director of CINVESTAV-IPN (Irapuato), Mexico's leading center for plant biotechnology, has pointed out that the Nature paper provides no experimental evidence of negative effects on biodiversity. To assess any threat to biodiversity, the researchers would have had to identify the phenotype of the maize they collected, something they did not do. He, too, argues that the presence of one or two new genes in the creole maize varieties would be unlikely to cause their disappearance.
Val Giddings agrees: "The most likely traits, if the material comes from commercial GM maize, would be herbicide tolerance and insect resistance. What would be the likely selective fate of those in the land races? At worst, the impact would be likely to be neutral. It's hard to see how protection against a pest would be negative, while herbicide resistance traits could only be neutral, in the absence of the herbicide."

"We know what threatens biodiversity," says Giddings, "and it is not the substitution of one variety for another in an agricultural field. It is the conversion of native and wild land to agriculture in the first place." He argues, therefore, that given its demonstrable influence in improving yields, improving agronomic performance and decreasing agricultural footprints, that biotechnology is combating the threat to biodiversity—"precisely 180 degrees around from what Quist and Chapela have proposed."

 

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