The Hidden Cost Of Genetically Modified Foods
Posted: October 28, 2009
University Park, PA-Genetically modified squash plants that are resistant to a debilitating viral disease become more vulnerable to a fatal bacterial infection, according to biologists.
"Cultivated squash is susceptible to a
variety of viral diseases and that is a major problem for
farmers" said Andrew Stephenson, Penn State professor of
biology. "Infected plants grow more slowly and their fruit
becomes misshapen."
In the mid-1990s, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture approved genetically modified
squash, which are resistant to three of the most important
viral diseases in cultivated squash. However, while
disease-resistant crops have been a boon to commercial
farmers, ecologists worry there might be certain hidden
costs associated with the modified crops.
"There is
concern in the ecological community that, when the
transgenes that confer resistance to these viral diseases
escape into wild populations, they will (change) those
plants," said Stephenson, whose team's findings appeared
Oct. 26 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences. "That could impact the biodiversity of plant
communities where wild squash are native."
Stephenson
and his colleagues James A. Winsor, professor of biology;
Matthew J. Ferrari, research associate; and Miruna A. Sasu,
doctoral student, all at Penn State; and Daolin Du, visiting
professor, Jiangsu University, China, crossed the
genetically modified squash into wild squash native to the
southwestern United States and examined the resulting flower
and fruit production.
Unlike a lab experiment, the
researchers tried to mimic a real world setting during their
three-year study.
The researchers then looked at the
effects of the virus-resistant transgenes on prevalence of
the three viral diseases, herbivory by cucumber beetles, as
well as the occurrence of bacterial wilt disease that is
spread by the cucumber beetles.
"When the cucumber
beetles start to feed on infected plants they pick up the
bacteria through their digestive system,"explained Sasu.
"This feeding creates open wounds on the leaves and when the
bugs' feces falls on these open wounds, the bacteria find
their way into the plumbing of the plant."
The
researchers discovered that as the viral infection swept the
fields containing both genetically modified and wild crops,
the damage from cucumber beetles is greater on the
genetically modified plants. The modified plants are
therefore more susceptible to the fatal bacterial wilt
disease.
"Plants that do not have the virus-resistant
transgene get the viral disease," explained Stephenson,
whose team's work is funded by the National Science
Foundation. "However, since cucumber beetles prefer to feed
on healthy plants rather than viral infected plants, the
beetles become increasingly concentrated on the healthy --
mostly transgenic -- plants."
During a viral
epidemic, the transgene provides modified plants with a
fitness advantage over the wild plants. But when both the
bacterial and viral pathogens are present, the beetles tend
to avoid the smaller viral infected plants and concentrate
on the healthy transgenic plants. This exposes those plants
to the bacterial wilt disease against which they have no
defense.
"Wild and transgenic plants had the same
amount of damage from beetles before viral diseases were
prevalent in our fields,"said Stephenson. "Once the virus
infected the wild plants, the transgenic plants had
significantly greater damage from the beetles."
Results from the study show that over the course of three
years, the prevalence of bacterial wilt disease was
significantly greater on transgenic plants than on
non-transgenic plants.
According to the researchers,
their findings suggest that the fitness advantage enjoyed by
virus-resistant plants comes at a price. Once the virus
infects susceptible plants, cucumber beetles find the
genetically modified plants a better source for food and
mating.
"Our study has sought to uncover the
ecological cost that might be associated with modified
plants growing in the full community of organisms, including
other insects and other diseases," said Ferrari. "We have
shown that while genetic engineering has provided a solution
to the problem of viral diseases, there are also these
unintended consequences in terms of additional
susceptibility to other diseases."
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