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Genetically Engineered Crops May Produce Herbicide Inside Our Intestines
By Jeffrey M. Smith
Spilling the Beans/Institute for Responsible Technology
Straight to the Source

Pioneer Hi-Bred's website boasts that their genetically modified (GM)
Liberty Link corn survives doses of Liberty herbicide, which would
normally kill corn. The reason, they say, is that the herbicide becomes
"inactive in the corn plant." They fail to reveal, however, that after you
eat the GM corn, some inactive herbicide may become reactivated inside
your gut and cause a toxic reaction. In addition, a gene that was inserted
into the corn might transfer into the DNA of your gut bacteria, producing
long-term effects. These are just a couple of the many potential
side-effects of GM crops that critics say put the public at risk.

Herbicide tolerance (HT) is one of two basic traits common to nearly all
GM crops. About 71% of the crops are engineered to resist herbicide,
including Liberty (glufosinate ammonium) and Roundup (glyphosate).  About
18% produce their own pesticide. And 11% do both. The four major GM crops
are soy, corn, cotton and canola, all of which have approved Liberty- and
Roundup-tolerant varieties. Herbicide tolerant (HT) crops are a
particularly big money-maker for biotech companies, because when farmers
buy HT seeds, they are required to purchase the companies' brand of
herbicide as well. In addition, HT crops dramatically increase the use of
herbicide, which further contributes to the companies' bottom line.

There are no required safety tests for HT crops in the US-if the biotech
companies declare them fit for human consumption, the FDA has no further
questions. But many scientists and consumers remain concerned, and the
Liberty Link varieties pose unique risks.

Liberty herbicide (also marketed as Basta, Ignite, Rely, Finale and
Challenge) can kill a wide variety of plants. It can also kill bacteria,
fungi and insects, and has toxic effects on humans and animals. The
herbicide is derived from a natural antibiotic, which is produced by two
strains of a soil bacterium. In order that the bacteria are not killed by
the antibiotic that they themselves create, the strains also produce
specialized enzymes which transform the antibiotic to a non-toxic form
called NAG (N-acetyl-L-glufosinate). The specialized enzymes are called
the pat protein and the bar protein, which are produced by the pat gene
and the bar gene, respectively. The two genes are inserted into the DNA of
GM crops, where they produce the enzymes in every cell. When the plant is
sprayed, Liberty's solvents and surfactants transport glufosinate ammonium
throughout the plant, where the enzymes convert it primarily into NAG.
Thus, the GM plant detoxifies the herbicide and lives, while the
surrounding weeds die.

The problem is that the NAG, which is not naturally present in plants,
remains there and accumulates with every subsequent spray. Thus, when we
eat these GM crops, we consume NAG. Once the NAG is inside our digestive
system, some of it may be re-transformed back into the toxic herbicide. In
rats fed NAG, for example, 10% of it was converted back to glufosinate by
the time it was excreted in the feces. Another rat study found a 1%
conversion. And with goats, more than one-third of what was excreted had
turned into glufosinate.

It is believed that gut bacteria, primarily found in the colon or rectum,
are responsible for this re-toxification. Although these parts of the gut
do not absorb as many nutrients as other sections, rats fed NAG did show
toxic effects. This indicates that the herbicide had been regenerated, was
biologically active, and had been assimilated by the rats. A goat study
also confirmed that some of the herbicide regenerated from NAG ended up in
the kidneys, liver, muscle, fat and milk.

More information about the impact of this conversion is presumably found
in "Toxicology and Metabolism Studies" on NAG, submitted to European
regulators by AgrEvo (now Bayer CropScience). These unpublished studies
were part of the application seeking approval of herbicide-tolerant
canola. When the UK government's Pesticide Safety Directorate attempted to
provide some of this information to an independent researcher, they were
blocked by the company's threats of legal action. The studies remained
private.

Toxicity of the herbicide

Glufosinate ammonium is structurally similar to a natural amino acid
called glutamic acid, which can stimulate the central nervous system and,
in excess levels, cause the death of nerve cells in the brain. The common
reactions to glufosinate poisoning in humans include unconsciousness,
respiratory distress and convulsions. One study also linked the herbicide
with a kidney disorder. These reactions typically involve large amounts of
the herbicide. It is unclear if the amount converted from GM crops would
accumulate to promote such responses or if there are low dose chronic
effects.

Perhaps a more critical question may be whether infants or fetuses are
impacted with smaller doses. A January 2006 report issued by the
Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Office of Inspector General said
that studies demonstrate that certain pesticides easily enter the brain of
young children and fetuses, and can destroy cells. That same report,
however, stated that the EPA lacks standard evaluation protocols for
measuring the toxicity of pesticides on developing nervous systems.
Scientists at the agency also charged that "risk assessments cannot state
with confidence the degree to which any exposure of a fetus, infant or
child to a pesticide will or will not adversely affect their neurological
development." Furthermore, three trade unions representing 9,000 EPA
workers claimed that the evaluation techniques used at the agency were
highly politicized. According to a May 24, 2006 letter to the EPA's
administrator, the unions cited "political pressure exerted by Agency
officials perceived to be too closely aligned with the pesticide industry
and former EPA officials now representing the pesticide and agricultural
community."

Although the EPA may be hampered in its evaluations, research has
nonetheless accumulated which suggests that glufosinate carries
significant risks for the next generation. According to Yoichiro Kuroda,
the principal investigator in the Japanese project entitled "Effects of
Endocrine Disrupters on the Developing Brain," glufosinate is like a "mock
neurotransmitter." Exposure of a baby or embryo can affect behavior,
because the chemical disturbs gene functions that regulate brain
development.

When mouse embryos were exposed to glufosinate, it resulted in growth
retardation, increased death rates, incomplete development of the
forebrain and cleft lips, as well as cell death in part of the brain.
After pregnant rats were injected with glufosinate, the number of
glutamate receptors in the brains of the offspring appeared to be reduced.
When infant rats were exposed to low doses of glufosinate, some of their
brain receptors appeared to change as well.

Glufosinate herbicide might also influence behavior. According to Kuroda,
"female rats born from mothers that were given high doses of glufosinate
became aggressive and started to bite each other-in some cases until one
died." He added, "That report sent a chill through me."

Disturbing gut bacteria

If the herbicide is regenerated inside our gut, since it is an antibiotic,
it will likely kill gut bacteria. Gut microorganisms are crucial for
health. They not only provide essential metabolites like certain vitamins
and short fatty acids, but also help the break down and absorption of food
and protect against pathogens. Disrupting the balance of gut bacteria can
cause a wide range of problems. According to molecular geneticist Ricarda
Steinbrecher, "the data obtained strongly suggest that the balance of gut
bacteria will be affected" by the conversion of NAG to glufosinate.

When eating Liberty Link corn, we not only consume NAG, but also the pat
and bar genes with their pat and bar proteins. It is possible that when
NAG is converted to herbicide in our gut, the pat protein, for example,
might reconvert some of the herbicide back to NAG. This might lower
concentrations of glufosinate inside of our gut. On the other hand, some
microorganisms may be able to convert in both directions, from glufosinate
to NAG and also back again. If the pat protein can do this, that is, if it
can transform NAG to herbicide, than the presence of the pat protein
inside our gut might regenerate more herbicide from the ingested NAG.
Since there are no public studies on this, we do not know if consuming the
pat gene or bar genes will make the situation better or worse.

But one study on the pat gene raises all sorts of red flags. German
scientist Hans-Heinrich Kaatz demonstrated that the pat gene can transfer
into the DNA of gut bacteria. He found his evidence in young bees that had
been fed pollen from glufosinate-tolerant canola plants. The pat gene
transferred into the bacteria and yeast inside the bees' intestines. Kaatz
said, "This happened rarely, but it did happen." Although no studies have
looked at whether pat genes end up in human gut bacteria, the only human
GM-feeding study ever conducted did show that genetic material can
transfer to our gut bacteria. This study, published in 2004, confirmed
that portions of the Roundup-tolerant gene in soybeans transferred to
microorganisms within the human digestive tract.

Since the pat gene can transfer to gut bacteria in bees, and since genetic
material from another GM crop can transfer to human gut bacteria, it is
likely that the pat gene can also transfer from Liberty Link corn or
soybeans to our intestinal flora. If so, a key question is whether the
presence of the pat gene confers some sort of survival advantage to the
bacteria. If so, "selection pressure" would favor its long term
proliferation in the gut.

Because the pat protein can protect bacteria from being killed by
glufosinate, gut bacteria that take up the gene appears to have a
significant survival advantage. Thus, the gene may spread from bacteria to
bacteria, and might stick around inside us for the long-term. With more
pat genes, more and more pat protein is created. The effects of long-term
exposure to this protein have not been evaluated.

Now suppose that the pat protein can also re-toxify NAG back into active
herbicide, as discussed above. A dangerous feedback loop may be created:
We eat Liberty Link corn or soy. Our gut bacteria, plus the pat protein,
turns NAG into herbicide. With more herbicide, more bacteria are killed.
This increases the survival advantage for bacteria that contain the pat
gene. As a consequence, more bacteria end up with the gene. Then, more pat
protein is produced, which converts more NAG into herbicide, which
threatens more bacteria, which creates more selection pressure, and so on.
Since studies have not been done to see if such a cycle is occurring, we
can only speculate.

Endocrine disruption at extremely low doses

Another potential danger from the glufosinate-tolerant crops is the
potential for endocrine disruption. Recent studies reveal that
endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) can have significant hormonal
effects at doses far below those previously thought to be significant. The
disruptive effects are often found only at minute levels, which are
measured in parts per trillion or in the low parts per billion. This is
seen, for example, in the way estrogen works in women. When the brain
encounters a mere 3 parts per trillion, it shuts down production of key
hormones. When estrogen concentration reaches 10 parts per trillion,
however, there is a hormone surge, followed by ovulation.

Unfortunately, the regulation and testing of agricultural chemicals,
including herbicides, has lagged behind these findings of extremely low
dose effects. The determination of legally acceptable levels of herbicide
residues on food was based on a linear model, where the effect of toxic
chemicals was thought to be consistent and proportional with its dosage.
But as the paper 'Large Effects from Small Exposures' shows, this model
underestimates biological effects of EDCs by as much as 10,000 fold.

In anticipation of their (not-yet-commercialized) Liberty Link rice, Bayer
CropScience successfully petitioned the EPA in 2003 to approve maximum
threshold levels of glufosinate ammonium on rice. During the comment
period preceding approval, a Sierra Club submittal stated the following.

"We find EPA's statements on the potential of glufosinate to function as
an endocrine-disrupting substance in humans and animals as not founded on
logical information or peer-reviewed studies. In fact EPA states that no
special studies have been conducted to investigate the potential of
glufosinate ammonium to induce estrogenic or other endocrine effects. . .
. We feel it's totally premature for EPA at this time to dismiss all
concerns about glufosinate as an endocrine-disrupting substance. . . . Due
to the millions of Americans and their children exposed to glufosinate and
its metabolites, EPA needs to conclusively determine if this herbicide has
endocrine-disrupting potential."

The EPA's response was that "glufosinate ammonium may be subjected to
additional screening and/or testing to better characterize effects related
to endocrine disruption" but this will only take place after these
protocols are developed. In the mean time, the agency approved glufosinate
ammonium residues on rice at 1 part per million.

Since glufosinate ammonium might have endocrine disrupting properties,
even small conversions of NAG to herbicide may carry significant health
risks for ourselves and our children.

The EPA's response was that "glufosinate ammonium may be subjected to
additional screening and/or testing to better characterize effects related
to endocrine disruption"  but this will only take place after these
protocols are developed. In the mean time, the agency approved glufosinate
ammonium residues on rice at 1 part per million.

Since glufosinate ammonium might have endocrine disrupting properties,
even small conversions of NAG to herbicide may carry significant health
risks for ourselves and our children.

Inadequate animal feeding studies

If we look to animal feeding studies to find out if Liberty Link corn
creates health effects, we encounter what independent observers have
expressed for years-frustration. Industry-sponsored safety studies, which
are rarely published and often kept secret, are often described as
designed to avoid finding problems.

If we look to animal feeding studies to find out if Liberty Link corn
creates health effects, we encounter what independent observers have
expressed for years- frustration. Industry-sponsored safety studies, which
are rarely published and often kept secret, are often described as
designed to avoid finding problems.

In a 42-day feeding study on chickens, for example, 10 chickens (7%) fed
Liberty Link corn died compared to 5 chickens eating natural corn.  Even
with the death rate doubled, "because the experimental design was so
flawed," said bio-physicist Mae-Wan Ho, "statistical analysis failed to
detect a significant difference between the two groups."  Similarly,
although the GM-fed group gained less weight, the study failed to
recognize that as significant. According to testimony by two experts in
chicken feeding studies, the Liberty Link corn study wouldn't identify
something as significant unless there had been "huge" changes. The experts
said, "It may be worth noting, in passing, that if one were seeking to
show no effect, one of the best methods to do this is would be to use
insufficient replication, a small n," which is exactly the case in the
chicken study.

Without adequate tests and with a rubber stamp approval process, GM crops
like Liberty Link corn may already be creating significant hard-to-detect
health problems. In Europe, Japan, Korea, Russia, China, India, Brazil and
elsewhere, shoppers have the benefit of laws that require foods with GM
ingredients to be labeled. In the US, however, consumers wishing to avoid
them are forced to eliminate all products containing soy and corn, as well
as canola and cottonseed oils. Or they can buy products that are organic
or say "non-GMO" on the package. Changing one's diet is a hassle, but with
the hidden surprises inside GM foods, it may be a prudent option for
health-conscious people, especially young children and pregnant women.


Jeffrey Smith is the author of the international bestseller, 'Seeds of
Deception.' The information in this article presents some of the numerous
health risks of GM foods that will be presented in his forthcoming book,
'Genetic Roulette: The documented health risks of genetically engineered
foods,' due out in the fall.

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