Hornless cattle make case for gene editing and less restrictive regulation of GM animals

Hornless cattle, described by GLP’s Jon Entine here last year, have lumbered onto the GMO scene once more. This time they appear as an example in Antonio Regalado’s speculations at Technology Review about the future of GMO regulation, especially animal biotechnology.

Because the cattle are made using gene editing techniques and no genes from other species, the hope by some is that regulators will accept them more readily than they have GM animals produced in other ways. The hornless cattle are the brainchild of molecular geneticist Scott Fahrenkrug, who used to be at the University of Minnesota but left to form his animal GMO startup, Recombinetics. He wants to breed GM pigs as model animals for human disease research as well as cattle without horns.

Hornless cattle are desirable because they are less dangerous to people and to each other. Some breeds are hornless naturally, but dairy cattle breeds usually have horns that are burned or sliced off, a horribly painful process. A Recombinetics investor who took part in dehorning in his youth told Regalado that it was a bloody mess. “You wouldn’t want to show that on TV.”

Fahrenkrug, whose company is using a gene editing method called TALENs, is not the only scientist hoping that gene editing will pass muster with regulators. A few weeks ago I wrote here at GLP about a gene deletion, using a different gene editing technique called CRISPR, which helps wheat resist powdery mildew. The hope is that because the work did not involve gene transfer it will not arouse opposition.

Is gene editing close enough for government work?

It’s not clear that organisms made via gene editing techniques will be able to avoid the name-calling and regulatory suspicion usually heaped on GMOs. Optimists are hoping that gene-edited products will impress regulators when they contain no foreign genes and so make it to market.

The Chinese scientists who developed the disease-resistant wheat said that explicitly. China has invested in research on GM crops but has approved none for field-testing recently, ostensibly in response to public concern. Two plant geneticists (one from China) took to the pages of PLOS Biology in June to make the case for regulatory approval of genetic modification of plants that does not involve “foreign” genes. In addition to gene editing methods like CRISPR, there are plant GM methods that resemble natural mutations, and also mutations produced by  techniques long accepted in agriculture, such as those induced by chemicals, X-ray, and gamma rays.

The hornless cow people are hoping for regulatory benignity too. A hornless cow has a uniquely attractive quality: its purpose is to produce dairy herds that don’t have to undergo the painful de-horning procedure now common in the industry. This is a GMO that is the embodiment of kindess to animals, in contrast to the complaints often leveled against genetically engineered livestock. Good PR for a change?

The question of “foreign” genes is a little iffier here though. Hornlessness is produced by insertion of genes from other cattle breeds that are naturally hornless. “We’re talking about genes that already exist in a species we already eat,” Fahrenkrug told Tech Review.

Is that close enough for government work? Would the Food and Drug Administration nod and approve its first genetically modified food animal because–although a hornless dairy cow is, strictly speaking, a transgenic organism–it contains only inserted genes from the same species?

Even if the argument is persuasive with regulators, would it fly with the general public, and particularly with opponents of genetic modification? I’m doubtful. For one thing, the professional GMO antagonists often have agendas not directly related to genetic modification, for example opposition to agricultural multinationals. For them, how GM is done doesn’t matter much.

For others, a lot of the unease with genetic modification appears to involve inchoate worries about “tinkering with Nature” and “playing God.” For people with those concerns, the methods of genetic modification are irrelevant. It’s the very idea of genetic modification that worries them.

Note also that not all applications of gene editing are transgene-free. Presumably they would encounter the same objections made to any GM project involving insertion of foreign genes. One extraordinary example: The breathtaking proposal to modify the genes of the entire species of mosquito that carries malaria. The proposal employs CRISPR gene editing. But it also involves insertion of a gene, designed by the researchers, that would make mosquitoes resist the malaria parasite. My July GLP article about this plan, and proposals made by the researchers themselves for public discussion of this massive project, is here.

Bringing home CRISPR bacon

Meantime, gene editing, especially CRISPR, continues to take genetic science by storm. (Here’s my GLP description of how CRISPR works.)

In just a year, Spanish researchers say, CRISPR has made possible “an immense range of genetic modifications in most model organisms.” With CRISPR, multiple genetic modifications can be introduced seamlessly in a single step. It has enabled precise genetic engineering of organisms with difficult-to-edit genomes. Also technically challenging species. (They are speaking here of primates.)

Scientists at the Université Laval in Quebec report that they have used CRISPR to alter virulent phages. Phages are viruses that infect bacteria, not people; they can’t even recognize animal cells. That kind of thing will make it possible to study relationships between phages and their hosts, and presumably could lead to engineered phages that could destroy disease bacteria.

CRISPR and other synthetic biology techniques will lead to cures for diseases of neurodegeneration, according to researchers at Imperial College London.

On September 5 in Science, scientists at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center announced that they had prevented muscular dystrophy in mice by using CRISPR to correct the mutation that causes it. They did this in the mouse germline, so the correction showed up in their offspring. The plan for humans is to cure the disease, not prevent it, by correcting disease-causing mutations in the muscle tissue of patients with muscular dystrophy.

But why wait until a patient has suffered? Why not prevent the disease long before birth? Researchers at the University of Wisconsin say the CRISPR “system is poised to transform developmental biology by providing a simple, efficient method to precisely manipulate the genome of virtually any developing organism.”

Franco J. DeMayo and Thomas E. Spencer, Editors-in-Chief of the journal Biology of Reproduction, declared last month that CRISPR “is completely revolutionizing genome engineering.” This was a commentary on “sizzling work” describing the “easy and efficient” way CRISPR generates genetically engineered pigs. They say the techniques are critical to developing new animal biomedical research models, agricultural animals with specific desired traits achieved without a complicated breeding scheme, and therapeutics to correct human and animal diseases. “In summary, we expect this technology to revolutionize all aspects of science.”

Wow. That’s a pretty comprehensive forecast. And please believe me when I tell you that these examples are just a few highlights. There’s more, much more about the coming glory days of gene editing methods, especially CRISPR. My point is to emphasize once more the unprecedented power that scientists are claiming for these techniques. And it’s not just boyish enthusiasm and hype. They think gene editing, which employs a tactic that bacteria invented 3 billion years ago for warding off disease, is light-years better than other genetic engineering techniques. Easier. Cheaper. And therefore bound to become more widespread.

And just to be clear, we are not talking here only about plant and animal GMOs. In a New England Journal of Medicine paper recounting gene editing techniques for modifying primate embryos and calling for public discussion of the implications of this work, scientists at the University Medical Center Freiburg, Germany said this: “The successful genetic editing of one-cell primate embryos raises ethical issues that go beyond the balance between the scientific value of transgenic monkey models in understanding human disease and concerns about their creation. These studies bring us one step closer to the potential for manipulating genes in human embryos.”

Tabitha M. Powledge is a long-time science journalist and a contributing columnist for the Genetic Literacy Project. She also writes On Science Blogs  for the PLOS Blogs Network. Follow her @tamfecit.

4 thoughts on “Hornless cattle make case for gene editing and less restrictive regulation of GM animals”

  1. To be clear, gene editing to make hornless cows does not involve transgenesis. It involves changing the letters in the dairy cow to a sequence that is already there in some beef cattle. The end result is the same as (identical) as if a beef bull was bred to a dairy cow, only 20 years faster since there is no need for backcrossing to regain dairy traits.

    Reply
  2. Horns are only a problem when cattle are raised in confinement. Is it dangerous for cattle and people when several horned animals are kept in a small space and fed out of feed bunkers? Yes. Is that sort of beef and dairy production humane and environmentally sound? No. My horned, grassfed steers do not hurt each other or me.

    Reply
  3. Horns are RECESSIVE. If you breed a horned cattle to hornless cattle you get hornless. Horned cattle can protect themselves from predators like coyotes in open pasture situations. Confined cattle fed antibiotic laced GMO feed must be hornless.

    If you have any understanding of animal husbandry you know that grain is an unnatural diet for livestock and is used to force fat and growth.

    Reply

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