Title: Overview
1Overview
- How does a company take a product from concept to
market? - How do we assure the safety of food derived from
these products? - How to address specific safety issues?
- Unintended Long term Effects
- Allergy
- Antibiotic Resistance Markers
- Feed Safety
2Plant Biotechnology Product Path
Transgenic Crops Have Many Hurdles
Discovery
Line Generation
Product Advancement
Post Market
Line Selection
Variety Development
Field Trials
Field Production
Seed Sales
Gene Discovery
GH Field Evaluation
Gene Transfer
Regulatory Dossier
NIH Biosafety Audit
FDA, USDA, EPA, EU Novel Foods, EU 90/220
Discovery Program
Gene Transfer
Gene Discovery
GH Field Evaluation
33 Phases of Safety Assessment
Discovery
Line Selection
Product Advancement
Post Market
Transfor- mation
Line Selection
Variety Development
Field Production
Gene Discovery
GH Field Evaluation
Product Concept
Market
- Phase II
- Biological / agronomic equivalence
- Stringent agronomic performance and efficacy
criteria - Greater than 99 of all events are eliminated
- Key step in product evaluation for conventional
varieties
- Phase III
- Detailed product safety
- Food
- Feed
- Environmental
- Phase I
- Safety of gene, protein, crop
- Choice of genes / proteins
- mechanism of action
- Source of genes
- history of safe use
- ethics
- Environmental / ecological considerations
4Safety Assessment - Phase I
Discovery
Line Selection
Product Advancement
Post Market
Transfor- mation
Line Selection
Variety Development
Field Production
Gene Discovery
GH Field Evaluation
Product Concept
Market
- Safety / Registrability Assessment
- Choice of Genes / Proteins
- trait of interest
- selectable marker
- Source of Genes
- safety (history of safe use)
- ethics
- Ecological Hazards/Concerns
- gene
- specific crop
Early Allergology and Toxicology NIH rDNA
Biosafety Audit GO / NO GO decisions
Environmental Assessments
5History of Safe Consumption-Cry or Bt Proteins
- Derived from naturally occurring Bacillus
thuringiensis. - Present in commercial microbial products used
globally for gt 35 years, organic growers. - Microbial products contain mixtures of Bt
proteins. - Subjected to extensive safety testing
- Acute
- Subchronic
- Chronic
- Human consumption (oral gavage)
6History of Safe Consumption - Cry or Bt Proteins
- Receptor-mediated mode-of-action.
- Highly specific, selective to target insect(s).
- No adverse effects related to Bt protein during
production, use or consumption. - Studies conducted with specific Bt proteins
produced in genetically modified products have
confirmed their safety. - Plant biotechnology products have been in the
market since 1995 (potato) and 1996 (corn).
7Safety Assessment - Phase II
Discovery
Line Selection
Product Advancement
Post Market
Transfor- mation
Line Selection
Variety Development
Field Production
Gene Discovery
GH Field Evaluation
Product Concept
Market
- Stand establishment
- Leaf orientation
- Plant height
- Silk date
- Ear height
- Ear tipfill
- Tassel size
- Dropped ears
- Stalk rating
- Above ear intactness
- Early plant vigor
- Leaf color
- Root strength (lodging)
- Silk color
- Ear shape
- Tassel color
- Reaction to fungicides/herbicides
- Late season staygreen/appearance
- Susceptibility to pathogens/pests
- Yield
- Biological/ agronomic equivalence
- Stringent agronomic performance and efficacy
criteria - Greater than 99 of all events are eliminated
- Key step in product evaluation for conventional
varieties
8Safety Assessment - Phase III
Discovery
Line Selection
Product Advancement
Post Market
Field Production
Line Selection
Variety Development
Transfor- mation
Gene Discovery
GH Field Evaluation
Product Concept
Market
- Safety Assessments
- Food
- Feed
- Environmental
9International Scientific Organizations -(FAO /
WHO / OECD)
- Products of plant biotechnology are not
inherently less safe than those developed by
traditional breeding. - Food safety considerations are basically of the
same nature as conventional breeding - so
traditional approaches to assess food safety are
appropriate. - Extensive safety assessments conducted with plant
biotechnology products provide equal or greater
assurance of safety of food products.
10Assessment of Food/Feed Safety
- Standard - Reasonable certainty that no harm
will result from intended uses under the
anticipated conditions of consumption. - Food is not inherently safe.
- Considered to be safe based on experience.
- Not absolute but relative safety
-
as safe as ...
11Substantial Equivalence
- Compare food (or food components) from
genetically-modified crop to conventional
counterpart - Origin of genes
- Agronomic parameters
- Composition (key nutrients / anti-nutrients)
- Consumption
Confirmation of substantial equivalence
equals as safe as
12Outcomes
- Substantially equivalent to conventional
counterpart - Substantially equivalent to conventional
counterpart except for introduced trait(s) - Not substantially equivalent to accepted food or
food component
no further testing
focus assessment on trait(s) / gene product(s)
combined nutritional / toxicological assessment
13Compositional Analyses to Establish Substantial
Equivalence (Corn Example)
Grain Forage - Protein - Protein - Fat -
Fat - Fiber - Fiber - Starch - Amino acid
composition - Fatty acid composition - Ash -
Sugars - Calcium - Phosphorous
Evaluate Key - Nutrients - Vitamins - Minerals -
Anti-nutrients - Toxicants - Allergens -
Others List depends on crop
14Product Safety
- Integration of protein, composition, expression
and feeding studies - Protein
- make protein standard and fully characterize
(GLP) - source, bioinformatics, digestive fate, and acute
toxicity for traditional dietary proteins - case-by-case studies for exotic proteins
- Whole-food toxicology (case by case)
- Animal Performance
- (wholesomeness / acceptance)
15History of Safe Use
- Studies as confirmatory of safety
- Examples Bts
- Extensively used pesticide for 35 years
- No occupational allergy / toxicology
- Extensive database of classical toxicology
- sub-chronic feeding
- chronic feeding
- HUMAN ACUTE ORAL GAVAGE
- Well described biochemical function
16Bioinformatics Tools
- - Database of all known protein allergens
- - Contains 475 AA sequences
- - Immunologically relevant match
- - Database of all known protein toxins
- - Currently contains 4000 AA sequences
- - Test for biologically relevant match
- - All known genes / proteins
- - Expanding rapidly with genomics
- - Identify homology, helps define function
- Allergens
- Toxins
- All Others
17Digestive Fate
- Purpose Evaluate in simulated gastric and
intestinal fluids, the digestibility of proteins. - Key parameter in allergy assessment
- Stable proteins likely bad actors
- Experimental - GLP
- SGF - 1 hour, SIF - 24 hours
- High resolution SDS-PAGE - resolve 12 AA
- Immunoreactivity assessed
- Bioactivity assessed (e.g. EC50 for insecticides)
18Heat Stability
- Purpose evaluate immunoreactivity of protein
after cooking - Required for Japan
- Test substance is usually grain, from which
biologically extractable protein is evaluated - Assesses loss of extractibility,
immunoreactivity, and possible degradation - Relevance to safety remains undescribed
19Mouse Acute Oral Toxicity
- Purpose test for mammalian toxicity (LD50)
- Almost no proteins are orally toxic, but for the
few which cause problems, most act through acute
mechanisms - Single large acute dose, 10-14 days
- End points health, body weight, food
consumption, necropsy (retain tissues for a rainy
day)
20Mouse Oral Acute Toxicity
- Protein Crop Dose mg/kg)
- Cry1Ac Cotton, Tomato 4200
- NPTII Cotton, Potato, Tomato 5000
- Cry3A Potato 5200
- Cry1Ab Corn 4000
- CP4 EPSPS Soybean, Cotton, Canola, Sugarbeet 572
- GUS Soybean, Sugarbeet 100
- GOX Canola, Cotton, Corn, Sugarbeet 100
- ACC Deaminase Tomato 602
21Will the Consumption of Food From GM Crops That
Contain Antibiotic Resistance Markers Increases
Clinical Antibiotic Resistance?
- Use and misuse of antibiotics in clinical/
veterinary applications are the major causes of
antibiotic resistance - Antibiotic Resistance Markers (ARMs) remain
critical for production of GM plants with limited
alternatives - Plant expressed ARM proteins (NPTII) have been
shown to be safe - Potential to impact clinical/ veterinary use is
remote - Potential for gene transfer from plant to microbe
is virtually zero (lt10-14-10-27) - ARMs are ubiquitous in nature (10 to 40 of gut
and soil microbes) - ARMs are specifically selected with limited
clinical/ veterinary use (NPTII, AAD)
22Status of Antibiotic Resistance Markers
- Regulatory agencies and international scientific
reviews have concluded that ARMs pose no
significant safety concern - SCP, SCF, SCAN
- Based on public perceived concern, alternatives
are being evaluated, but will not be available
for 6 to 7 years
23Principles of Allergy Assessment
- Avoid transfer of known allergens
- Assume genes from allergenic sources encode an
allergen until proven otherwise - Assess the allergenic potential of all introduced
proteins - Where allergens are identified, consider
alternative sources or technical strategies to
mitigate hazard, or discontinue development
24Food Allergy Assessment
Source of Gene (Allergenic)
Yes
No
Yes
Sequence Similarity
Solid Phase Immunoassay
Commonly Allergenic
Less Commonly Allergenic
No (lt5 sera)
No
No
Stability to Digestion/ Processing
Yes
Yes
No (gt5 sera)
Skin Prick Test
No
Yes
No
Yes
Consider Options
DBPCFC (IRB)
Consult with Reg. Agency
Yes
No
No Concern
25Brazil Nut Saga
- Pioneer Hi-Bred International
- tried to correct the methionine deficiency in
soybeans - Brazil nuts rich in methionine Brazil nut
storage protein expressed in transgenic soybean
successfully increases methionine content - but, was the Brazil nut storage protein an
allergen?
26Brazil Nut Saga
- Testing of Brazil nut storage protein
- University of Nebraska/University of Wisconsin
- 9 Brazil-nut allergic subjects
- 8/9 had antibodies that recognized the Brazil nut
storage protein as an allergen - 3 were skin-prick tested with the Brazil nut
storage protein and the protein elicited an
allergic response in all 3
27Brazil Nut Saga
- Product development discontinued
- Still, however, negative publicity for Pioneer
Hi-Bred International when they did the right
thing - Jeremy Rifkin/USA Today editorial
28Approach for Safety Assessment
Food / Feed Safety
Gene / Protein
Substantial Equivalence
- Gene(s)
- Source(s)
- Molecular characterization
- Insert / copy number / gene integrity
- Protein(s)
- History of safe consumption
- Function / specificity / mode-of-action
- Levels
- Toxicology / allergenicity
- Amino Acid homology
- Digestibility
- Acute oral toxicity
- Clinical
- Crop Characteristics
- Morphology
- Yield
- Food / Feed Composition
- Proximate analysis
- Key nutrients
- Key anti-nutrients
- Feed performance studies
- Wholesomeness
29Summary
- Plant biotechnology products must meet stringent
performance standards during development - agronomics, yield, morphology and line selection
restores biological equivalence and reduces
uncertainties relative to risk - Continuous regulatory oversight occurs throughout
development and full authorization process - Candidate genes / proteins are assessed prior to
transformation
30Summary
- All products are thoroughly assessed for food,
feed and environmental assessment prior to
regulatory approval - Food / feed safety based on substantial
equivalence and safety of expressed proteins - Proteins currently produced in plants have
history of safe use