Spilling the Beans, November/December 2005
Genetically Modified Peas Caused Dangerous Immune Response in Mice
Other GM Foods are Not Tested for This and May Be Harmful
By Jeffrey M. Smith
SUMMARY
Genetically modified (GM) peas under development created immune
responses in mice, suggesting that they may also create serious
allergic reactions in people. The peas had been inserted with a gene
from kidney beans, which creates a protein that acts as a pesticide.
When this protein is produced naturally in beans, it does not elicit a
response from mice. When produced in the GM peas, however, it did
cause a reaction. Using sensitive testing methods, scientists
discovered subtle differences between the bean and the GM proteins -
the added sugar chains were slightly different. They speculate that
this difference caused the immune reactions. Based on the results of
the study, the Australian developers abandoned their 10-year, $2
million project.
This study reveals serious and potentially deadly flaws in the
regulations and assessments used to approve GM foods. GM crops on the
market, like corn and soybeans, were never tested for immune responses
using animals and never subjected to a similar analysis of their
proteins. Thus, the transgenic proteins in GM foods may have subtle
undetected differences that are causing health problems. It is
sobering to note that if the GM peas were tested with only the methods
used on soy and corn, it likely would have been approved as well.
The approvals of genetically modified (GM) food are largely based on
four pillars. The first is the reliance on a long list of assumptions
about food safety. Unfortunately, these assumptions are principally
based on what was known about genetics 40 years ago, and many have
been overturned.
The second pillar is that safety research on GM foods is primarily
controlled by industry. Much of it is secret, and the few studies that
have been made public are largely superficial-designed not to
contradict the assumptions.
The third pillar is an ineffective regulatory system, often hijacked
by people with close ties to industry. They accept unscientific
assumptions and poor research, and ignore adverse findings.
The fourth pillar is spin - merciless, relentless, in-your-face spin -
that magically flips facts to proclaim their opposite. Examples are
forthcoming.
On November 17, those pillars took a considerable beating. GM peas
under development were evaluated by tests normally applied to
medicine-not to GM food.[1] The peas created a dangerous immune
response in mice which, if found in humans, might be life threatening.
The 10-year pea project, costing over $2 million dollars (US), was
abandoned. If those same peas had been evaluated with tests used for
other GM crops, however, they could have sailed through the approval
process anywhere in the world.
The peas were developed by Australian scientists at the Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) to assist the
country's $100 million pea harvest. They targeted the pea weevil, a
pest that takes a hefty bite-up to 30%-out of yields. But if weevil
larvae were to bite a GM pea plant, they would starve to death. That's
because the pea contains a protein called alpha-amylase inhibitor, an
anti-nutrient that interferes with the bugs' digestion. That protein
is produced from a gene normally found in "common" (kidney) beans and
when fully cooked is safe for humans. Scientists spliced the gene into
peas, figuring it would be safe there as well.
Safety Assessment
Researchers checked the sequence of the kidney bean gene after it was
inserted into the pea's DNA. It hadn't changed during the insertion
process, but this is not always the case. Genes inserted into soybeans
and corn, for example, were mutated, fragmented or truncated, and
several appeared to rearrange over time. Remarkably, safety
assessments don't always require that the transgene's sequence is
determined. In the US, for example, gene sequencing is not part of the
approval process.
If a gene's sequence changes, it might create proteins with the wrong
amino acids. But analyzing the sequence of amino acids is also not
required. According to Bill Freese, a research analyst at Friends of
the Earth, "At present, the standard practice is to sequence just 5 to
25 amino acids," even if the protein has more than 600 in total. They
assume that the rest are fine. Most of GM foods on the market have
never had their novel proteins sequenced. The GM peas, however, were
checked. The protein produced in the peas did have the same amino acid
sequence as the original in the beans.
Scientists at the John Curtin School of Medical Research inCanberra
tested the peas on mice, to see if they elicited an immune or allergic
response. Groups of mice were fed a commercial diet and also given GM
peas, non-GM peas or beans, twice a week for four weeks. After the
feeding period, the mice were tested with a battery of immune response
tests. Reactions were elicited only in mice that were fed GM peas.
Specifically, injections of the GM protein into the footpad resulted
in significant swelling; when introduced into the trachea, it caused
mild lung damage and tissue inflammation (similar to asthma in
humans). Lymph nodes also responded to the presence of GM protein. The
researchers did not check for allergies, per se, but used tests that
they say are predictive of allergenic sensitivity.
Simon Hogan, the lead researcher for the study, said, "The study is
fairly conclusive." He added, "These types of assays are commonly used
in medical research." They have not, however, been used in safety
assessments for GM foods on the market. Even though experts with the
Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Health Organization (FAO-WHO)
recommend using animal studies to test for allergies, no government
actually requires it, and it is almost never done.
According to immunologist Ricki Helms, who has served on several
expert panels examining the potential allergenicity of GM foods,
"Animal models can contribute to the evaluation of allergenicity but
cannot offer absolute certainty." This lack of certainty is a common
justification by industry scientists for why they don't use animal
allergy studies as part of their assessments. The two methods that
they prefer, however, also lack certainty.
In the first method, the transgenic proteins are put into test tubes
with digestive enzymes and acid to measure how quickly they are broken
down. This test is based on the fact that allergenic proteins often -
but not always - break down slowly in the stomach and intestines. The
problem is that test tube studies do not accurately predict what
happens inside humans. And even if they did, a protein that is broken
down quickly may still cause allergies. Thus, potentially harmful
allergenic proteins can pass this test. In the other method,
researchers search databases to see if the amino acid sequences of the
transgenic protein are similar to known allergens. This method also
offers no guarantees - not all allergenic sequences have been
identified and allergenic proteins can certainly pass this test as
well. In spite of the shortcomings of these two methods, the FAO-WHO
recommends them as part of the assessment and offers specific criteria
for each. Regulators can ignore those recommendations. The GM soy,
corn, and papaya on the market, for example, fail the FAO-WHO
criteria. GM pea developer TJ Higgins told me that when his peas were
evaluated for protein stability and amino acid similarity, they were
"borderline."
In addition to creating an immune response in mice, GM peas also
increased their immune system's sensitivity to other substances. For
example, mice fed the non-GM peas showed no response to egg albumin.
The GM-fed mice did have an immune reaction to the albumin, as well as
to three other substances tested. The ability of one food to increase
the sensitivity to other foods is called an "adjuvant" response. It
suggests that humans fed GM peas might develop allergic or immune
responses to a wide range of other foods. According to Judy Carman, an
epidemiologist and the director of The Institute of Health and
Environmental Research in Australia, "If a GM food was introduced onto
supermarket shelves and caused an immune reaction, it would be very
difficult to find the culprit, particularly if it caused reactions to
other, different foods, as this GM pea was found to do." As you
probably guessed, adjuvant testing is not part of any normal GM food
approval process.
Independent researchers did test a GM product both for immune and
adjuvant responses using mice.[2] They tested one type of Bt-toxin
(Cry1Ac) found in GM cotton, which is similar to Bt toxins produced in
several varieties of GM corn (Cry1Ab). Like the alpha-amylase
inhibitor in peas, Bt toxins kill pests. Not only did the Cry1Ac
produce a significant immune response, it elicited an adjuvant
response as well. Another study showed that Bt toxins in spray form
caused antibody responses and allergic symptoms in farm workers and
others.[3] Taken together, these studies overturned several safety
assumptions. In spite of claims to the contrary, Bt is not fully
destroyed during digestion, it is bioactive in mammals (including
humans), and current safety assessments are inadequate. By the time
this research was done, Bt crops were already planted on millions of
acres. Withdrawing them will apparently require more evidence of human
harm.
Another assumption used often by the biotech industry is that cooking
their GM crop will destroy its potential to create allergies. Cooking
can change the protein's structure, or "denature" it. Proponents have
claimed that when Bt is denatured, it is no longer effective as a
pesticide and will therefore no longer be allergenic. The GM peas were
boiled for 20 minutes. After cooking, the alpha-amylase inhibitor was
denatured and was no longer effective in protecting against weevils.
Industry assumptions notwithstanding, the cooked pea protein still
caused an immune response in mice.
Tracking Down the Cause
What was it about the transgenic protein in the GM peas that caused it
to affect the mice, when the "same" protein in its natural form in
kidney beans did not? This question intrigued Hogan and his team. He
said their "scientific, inquisitive nature" led them to look for
subtle differences in the protein structure. Although the amino acid
sequences of the GM and non-GM proteins were identical, that doesn't
tell the whole story. Amino acids are the building blocks, and
according to Carman, "If you knock down a house and then study the
pile of bricks, it won't describe the house. Similarly, the amino
acids don't reveal the structure, shape and unique characteristics of
the protein."
David Schubert of The Salk Institute for Biological Studies points out
that in higher organisms such as plants and animals, "each cell type
expresses a unique repertoire of enzymes capable of modifying protein
structure." Depending on where they are, a protein may have added
molecular chains, "such as phosphate, sulfate, sugars, or lipids,"[4]
which alter their function. In a 2002 article in Nature Biotechnology,
Schubert argues, "With our current state of knowledge, however, there
is no way of predicting either the modifications or their biological
effects."[5]
We can, however, detect such modifications. For instance, when sugar
chains are added to proteins, this process, known as glycosylation,
can influence allergic responses. Hogan's team used the sensitive
MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry technique, and confirmed that the GM and
non-GM proteins had slightly different glycosylation patterns. They
believe that these subtle differences may be the cause of the immune
responses.
Here again is more bad news. The MALDI-TOF method is not required and
has rarely been used for the safety assessments of GM food already on
the market. According to Doug Gurian-Sherman, a senior scientist at
the Center for Food Safety and formerly at the US Environmental
Protection Agency, the differences in glycosylation between the GM pea
protein and the non-GM counterpart in kidney beans "would not be
detected by the tests that are currently required by US regulatory
agencies." If companies do assess differences in protein, it is
typically by "gel" tests, which won't reveal the subtle differences in
glycosylation that may have caused the immune response. In fact, TJ
Higgins looked at gel tests in the 1990s and did not see any
difference between the GM and non-GM proteins.
Approvals Rely on Dangerous Assumptions
Industry's assumption that proteins will act in a predictable manner
in a new organism has been pivotal and it certainly helped them get GM
foods approved. Take, for example, their acute toxicity tests where
they feed rodents just the isolated protein. They don't necessarily
extract the protein from the GM crop. Instead, they almost always
produce the protein using genetically engineered bacteria, since it is
cheaper and easier. They then test the animals' reactions to this
surrogate protein, assuming that if animals don't react to the
bacterial form, then they - and humans - won't react to the plant
form.
These tests, therefore, avoid measuring the health impact of any
changes in the protein in the GM crops we actually consume. The pea
study revealed that significant, potentially deadly changes occurred
when the gene from kidney beans is inserted into peas - closely
related species. But the genes put into GM foods already on the market
cross entire kingdoms. Bacterial genes are spliced into GM soybeans,
corn, cotton and canola, and viral genes are inserted into papaya,
zucchini and crook neck squash. How these crops will alter bacterial
proteins is anyone's guess - unfortunately.
Glycosylation is related to another possible problem. Proteins are
sometimes folded in precise formations by specialized "chaperone"
folders inside the cell. If a novel protein appears in a species where
it has never before existed, the chaperone folders might not do their
jobs right. A mis-folded protein can be quite dangerous. In the case
of the peas, the difference in glycosylation means that the protein is
almost certainly a different shape, but there may be other
shape-related issues that contributed to the immune reaction in mice.
In addition to changes in the target protein, side-effects from the
gene insertion process can create toxins, allergens, or adjuvants.
Earlier unpublished tests on the GM peas, for example, showed a
doubling of trypsin inhibitor, a known allergen, and a fourfold
increase in an anti-nutrient called a lectin. These or some other
unknown change in the peas' composition might have played a part in
increasing the immune responsiveness of the mice. In short, we don't
really know why genetically engineered peas are more dangerous. We do
know that the body interprets something in the pea as foreign,
different, and offensive, and it reacts accordingly. On the other
hand, all GM foods, by definition, have something foreign and
different. It makes sense that the immune systems in humans or animals
that have never eaten these novel substances before may react to them.
A handful of studies that have looked for immune responses have found
them. In 1995, a Brazil nut gene inserted into soy DNA created an
allergic reaction in human blood, and the project was stopped.[6] In
1998, a GM potato caused immune system damage in rats, among other
problems.[7] Studies implicating the Bt-toxin have already been cited
above. On top of those, a Bt potato caused abnormal and excessive cell
growth in the small intestine of mice.[8] A feeding study with Bt corn
called MON 863 caused a significant increase in male rats of three
types of blood cells: basophils, lymphocytes (22%) and total white
cell counts (20%).[9] This strongly suggests that consuming GM corn
caused changes in the immune system. According to GM safety research
expert Arpad Pusztai, "A consistent feature of all the studies done,
published or unpublished, including MON 863, indicates major problems
with changes in the immune status of animals fed on various GM
crops/foods, the latest example of this coming from the GM pea
research in Australia."[10]
We don't have the advantage of sophisticated human clinical trials, so
our evidence for immune reactions in humans is limited and
preliminary. For example,
Soy allergies jumped 50% in the UK just after GM soy was
introduced;[11]
An expert panel in the US determined that there was a moderate
likelihood that StarLink Bt corn contained a human allergen; [12]
Filipinos living next to Bt cornfields developed severe symptoms three
years in a row - only while the corn was pollinating; [13] and
A recent health report claims that Indian farm workers exposed to Bt
cotton developed moderate or severe allergic reactions. [14]
Certainly allergies and asthma are on the rise in many nations, but at
this point, we can only guess whether GM food plays a part. The pea
study provides a clue how it might be related.
Spin
No report on GM research is complete without the fourth pillar - spin.
How do you suppose the industry will respond to these pea findings
that expose an inept regulatory process that under normal test
procedures would almost certainly have allowed these peas onto the
market? Consider the response of GM pea developer TJ Higgins, "I think
that this shows that the regulatory system works." [15]
But before we condemn Higgins as a spin master, we must consider that
he might have been the victim of spin himself. I have spoken with many
biotech scientists, people of high integrity and a strong belief in
what they are doing, who have absolutely no idea about the wretched
state of regulations or safety assessments. They focus on their own
area of expertise and have bought the industry spin about safety.
I called Higgins in Australia and quizzed him on the state of affairs
of regulations and assessments of other GM foods. He said, "I didn't
feel that we were breaking particularly new ground. . . . We were
following basically the recommendations for a proper risk assessment
and I feel it is typical of the kinds of assessments that have been
done for other GM crops around the world." Lead researcher Simon Hogan
told me the same thing. I pointed out to both scientists several
unique features of their study and challenged them to name a single GM
food on the market that has had the same level of tests. They couldn't
come up with any, but they were sure that these tests were done.
They're in for a shock.
Years ago, a pro-GM scientist with high integrity also had confidence
in GM regulators and industry scientists. Higgins had asked him to
coauthor a rat feeding study with his GM peas, because the scientist
was the world's most qualified person to do the work. This scientist
was also awarded a UK government research grant to create a rigorous
safety assessment protocol, which was to be required in the UK and
eventually the EU. One day, he was asked to review several
confidential industry studies that were used to get GM foods approved.
He told me that reading those studies was perhaps the greatest shock
of his life. The studies were so superficial, so poorly done, he
realized that industry was doing as little as possible to get their
foods on the market as quickly as possible. They were not doing safety
studies. A few weeks later, this scientist confirmed that a GM potato
he was working on caused considerable damage in rats, including damage
to their immune systems. Unlike Higgins, this man knew full well that
his dangerous potatoes could have sailed through industry "safety"
studies and onto plates around the world. He went public with his
concerns.
The scientist's name is Arpad Pusztai, and he paid dearly for his
integrity. At the hands of a pro-GM government and industry-backed
scientists, he was fired, silenced with threats of a lawsuit and
mercilessly attacked. It was biotech spin at its "finest."
Pusztai has since published his potato research and is now considered
a top expert in GM safety testing. He just published a review of all
the peer-reviewed assessments and has studied nearly every industry
submission. He assured me that the GM pea immune study does, in fact,
break new ground. Likewise, Professor G.E. Seralini, who has
officially reviewed all of the submissions to Europe as well as all
the commentaries on the submissions, wrote me: "To my knowledge, no GM
plant on the market has undergone such detailed experiments to assess
allergenicity." Doug Gurian-Sherman and Bill Freese, who are experts
on submissions to US authorities, also acknowledge that industry
immune studies are considerably weaker than the pea study. And Judy
Carman, who has studied the GM applications to Australia and New
Zealand, concurs. In fact, Marc Rothenberg, who is a co-author of the
pea study and was also on the expert panel that analyzed the
allergenicity of StarLink corn, said of the pea research, "It was very
unique. It was much more extensive and rigorous than what was
previously done."
It appears that the director of the pea assessment (Higgins) and the
lead researcher in the study (Hogan) were uninformed about the state
of affairs in GM crop assessments. They appeared to be unaware that
their study was actually a breakthrough. If Higgins had known that his
peas would likely have been approved if they were tested only with the
less expensive, less rigorous research typically used for GM crops, he
might not be so quick to defend GM regulations worldwide.
I sent Higgins a peer-reviewed paper called "Safety Testing and
Regulation of Genetically Engineered Foods." [16] It not only shreds
the assessment process in the US, it also presents a case study of how
one GM corn variety gained approval based on wrong assumptions, poor
research, ineffective regulations and spin - the four pillars. I wrote
Higgins, "I am confident that after reading this article, you will
agree with the authors that the tests used for approving this Bt corn,
as well as other varieties, were not sufficient to protect the
public." I asked that he then make corrective statements about GM
regulations. More importantly, Higgins is The Deputy Chief of CSIRO
Plant Industry. If he acknowledges that even one GM crop has not been
thoroughly tested, I asked him to propose that his organization
immediately conduct rigorous safety assessments on that crop to
protect the health of consumers. I understand that CSIRO has business
relationships with Bayer Crop Science and Monsanto. The close ties
between research organizations and the biotech industry has, in many
instances, stifled criticism of GM crops and even stopped important
research from being conducted. I am hopeful that Higgins, who
pioneered new safety assessments on GM food crops and canceled his own
10 year pea project based on the findings, will direct his institution
to similarly break new ground. I will be sure to report his response
in future columns.
In the meantime, my Institute for Responsible Technology is passing
the hat to collect money to fund independent research on the GM foods
already on the market. We are not willing to wait.
Jeffrey M. Smith is the author of Seeds of Deception, and is working
with a team of international scientists to compile all known risks of
GM foods.
The letter to TJ Higgins can be found by clicking here.
http://www.seedsofdeception.com/utility/showArticle?objectID=305
Spilling the Beans is a monthly column available at
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REFERENCES:
[1] V. E. Prescott, et al, Transgenic Expression of Bean r-Amylase
Inhibitor in Peas Results in Altered Structure and Immunogenicity, J.
Agric. Food Chem. 2005, 53
[2] Cry1Ac protoxin is a systemic and mucosal adjuvant (Vazquez-Padron
et al, 2000b)
[3]Bernstein, et al., (1999). Immune responses in farm workers after
exposure to Bacillus thuringiensis pesticides. Environmental Health
Perspectives 107(7), 575-582
[4] David Schubert, "A different perspective on GM food," Nature
Biotechnology vol. 20, 2002, p. 969
[5]David Schubert, "A different perspective on GM food," Nature
Biotechnology vol. 20, 2002, p. 969
[6] J Ordlee, et al, "Identification of a Brazil-Nut Allergen in
Transgenic Soybeans," The New Englandd Journal of Medicine, March 14,
1996
[7] Pusztai, A. et al. (2003) Genetically Modified Foods: Potential
Human Health Effects. In: Food Safety: Contaminants and Toxins (ed.
JPF D'Mello) pp.347-372. CAB International, Wallingford Oxon, UK, also
additional communication with Arpad Pusztai
[8]Nagui H. Fares, Adel K. El-Sayed, Fine Structural Changes in the
Ileum of Mice Fed on -Endotoxin- Treated Potatoes and Transgenic
Potatoes, Natural Toxins Volume 6, Issue 6, 1998. Pages: 219-233
Published Online: 29 Jun 1999
[9] http://www.monsanto.com/monsanto/content/sci_tech/prod_safety/fullratstudy.pdf
[10] October 24, 2005 correspondence between Arpad Pusztai and Brian
John
[11]Mark Townsend, "Why soya is a hidden destroyer," Daily Express,
March 12, 1999
[12] SAP Report No. 2000-06, December 1, 2000, FIFRA Scientific
Advisory Panel Meeting, November 28, 2000, Assessment of Scientific
Information Concerning StarLink(tm) Corn
[13]Jeffrey M. Smith,Bt-maize (corn) during pollination, may trigger
disease in people living near the cornfield, Press Release February
2004,http://www.seedsofdeception.com/Media-maizepollen.php and Allen
V. Estabillo, Farmer's group urges ban on planting Bt corn; says it
could be cause of illnesses, Mindanews / 19 October 2004, http://www.seedsofdeception.com/Media-update-Philippines-BT-corn.php
[14] Bt cotton causing allergic reaction in MP; cattle dead, Bhopal,
Nov 23 2005
http://news.webindia123.com/news/showdetails.asp?id=170692&cat=Health
[15] GM crop failure shows rules force: CSIRO November 19, 2005,
http://www.theage.com.au/news/National/GM-crop-failure-shows-rules-force-CSIRO/2005/11/19/1132017013629.html
[16] William Freese and David Schubert, Safety Testing and Regulation
of Genetically Engineered Foods, Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering
Reviews - Vol. 21, November 2004, http://www.foe.org/camps/comm/safefood/gefood/testingregbackgrounder.pdf
© Copyright 2005 by Jeffrey M. Smith. Permission is granted to
reproduce this in whole or in part.
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