참고자료

[유전자조작] 미 FDA, 몸무게 2배 성장 GM 연어, 식용 허용할 듯

미 FDA가 몸무게가 2배로 성장하는 유전자조작 연어의 인간의 식용으로 허용할 것을
고려중이라는 [시애틀 타임즈] 6월 26일자 보도입니다.

유전자조작 연어는 인간 식용으로 허용되는 유전자조작 동물의 첫번째 사례가 될
것입니다. 아마 올 가을쯤 공청회가 열릴 예정인가 봅니다.

이 연어를 개발한 회사는 매사추세츠 Waltham의 AquaBounty Technologies라고 하는데요,
양어장에서 양식하고 있다고 합니다ㅣ.

대서양연어(Atlantic salmon)에 왕연어(chinook salmon)의 성장호르몬 유전자를 포함하고
있으며, 연어의 먼 친척인 대구류(ocean pout)의 유전적 스위치가 있다고 합니다.

일반적인 추운 날씨에는 연어의 성장 호르몬이 나오지 않는데, 왕연어(Chinook salmon)의
유전적 스위치는 1년 내내 작용하여 성장호르몬이 분비된다고 합니다. 이에 따라 3년이 
되어야 성장하는 연어들이 16~18개월 만에 판매할 수 있을 만큼의 크기로 성장하여
이윤을 높여주게 된다고 합니다.

과학적인 원리 그 자체는 소 성장 호르몬을 사용하여 빠른 시일내에 우유와 고기 생산을
극대화하여 이윤을 최대화하는 것과 거의 비슷하다고 볼 수 있습니다. 현재 이러한 방식의
소 사육은 미국, 캐나다, 호주, 한국 등에서는 적극적으로 권장되는 반면, 유럽에서는
금지되어 있습니다.

유전자조작 슈퍼 연어의 상업화가 허용될 경우, 환경 문제와 보건 문제가 발생할 가능성이
있습니다. 유전자조작 슈퍼연어가 양식장을 탈출하여 생태계를 교란시킬 수 있으며,
미국에서는 ‘유전자조작(GM) 표시제’가 시행되지 않고 있기 때문에 소비자들이 유전자
조작 여부에 대해서 어떠한 정보를 가지지 못한 채 식용함으로써 소비자의 알권리가 
침해받을 수 있습니다. 

유전자조작 연어 다음으로 승인될 것으로 보이는 식용 유전자조작 동물은  “enviropig,”라고
 이름 붙여진 분변에 인(phosphorus) 성분이 적게 배출되어 환경오염을 줄이는 캐나다에서
개발된 ‘친환경(?) 돼지’라고 합니다. 




FDA considering designer salmon with genes to double growth rate


The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is considering whether to approve the first genetically engineered animal that people would eat: Salmon that can grow at twice the normal rate.



The New York Times






The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is considering whether to approve the first genetically engineered animal that people would eat: Salmon that can grow at twice the normal rate.


The developer of the salmon has been trying to get approval for a decade. But now the company seems to have submitted most or all of the data the FDA needs for analyzing whether the salmon are safe to eat, nutritionally equivalent to other salmon and safe for the environment, according to government and biotechnology industry officials. A public meeting to discuss the salmon may be held in the fall.


Some consumer and environmental groups are likely to raise objections to approval. Even within the FDA, there has been a debate about whether the salmon should be labeled as genetically engineered; genetically engineered crops are not labeled.


Approval of the salmon would help open a path for companies and scientists developing other genetically engineered animals, such as cattle resistant to mad-cow disease or pigs that could supply healthier bacon. After the salmon, next in line for possible approval would probably be the “enviropig,” developed at a Canadian university, which has less phosphorus pollution in its manure.


The salmon was developed by a company called AquaBounty Technologies and would be raised in fish farms. It is an Atlantic salmon that contains a growth-hormone gene from a chinook salmon and a genetic on-switch from the ocean pout, a distant relative of the salmon.


Normally, salmon do not make growth hormone in cold weather. But the pout’s on-switch keeps production of the hormone going year round. The result is salmon that can grow to market size in 16 to 18 months instead of three years, though the company says the modified salmon will not end up any bigger than a conventional fish.


“You don’t get salmon the size of the Hindenburg,” said Ronald Stotish, AquaBounty’s chief executive. “You can get to those target weights in a shorter time.”


AquaBounty, based in Waltham, Mass., and publicly traded in London, said last week that the FDA had signed off on five of the seven sets of data required to demonstrate that the fish is safe for consumption and for the environment.


“Perhaps in the next few months, we expect to see a final approval,” Stotish said.


He said it would take two or three years after approval for the salmon to reach supermarkets.


The FDA confirmed it was reviewing the salmon but, because of confidentiality rules, would not comment further.


Under a policy announced in 2008, the FDA is regulating genetically engineered animals as if they were veterinary drugs and using the rules for those drugs. And applications for approval of new drugs must be kept confidential by the agency.


Critics say the drug-evaluation process does not allow full assessment of the possible environmental impacts of genetically altered animals and also blocks public input.


Some government officials and industry executives said FDA officials had discussed internally whether the salmon could be labeled to give consumers the choice of avoiding them.


The government has opposed mandatory labeling of foods from genetically engineered crops and animals merely because genetic engineering was used. Foods must be labeled, it says, only if they are different in their nutritional properties or other characteristics.


Stotish, of AquaBounty, said his company was not against voluntary labeling, but the matter was not in its hands because it would be selling only fish eggs to fish farms, not grown salmon to the supermarket.


He said the company had submitted data to the FDA showing that its salmon was indistinguishable from nonengineered Atlantic salmon in terms of taste, color, vitamins, minerals, fatty acids, proteins and other nutrients.


“If there’s no material difference, then it would be misleading to require labeling,” Stotish said.



 

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