The search for better tomatoes.
Gene Research Finds New Use in Agricultural Breeding By ANDREW POLLACK NY Times March 7, 2001 nytimes.com
As the controversy surrounding genetically modified foods intensifies, scientists are trying to use the rapidly growing knowledge about genes to enhance conventional breeding of crops and livestock rather than implant genes from one species into another.
Many say such an approach is less likely to arouse the public objections that have been raised by the development of genetically altered plants and animals.
The enhanced breeding approach involves testing which genes are in a plant or animal, allowing researchers to select more easily which ones to cross. That can shave years off the breeding of a new variety.
* * *
Compared with genetic engineering, this enhanced breeding has technical advantages and disadvantages. But its biggest advantage is political. Many opponents of bioengineered foods do not object to the technique because it avoids artificially transferring genes between organisms. It is that transfer that opponents say is unnatural and poses risks to human health and the environment.
Indeed, some opponents of genetically altered plants and animals even champion the approach as a way for society and companies to reap some of the benefits of genetic science and avoid the risks.
"I think that's where the future is, to upgrade classical breeding," said Jeremy Rifkin, a prominent critic of the biotechnology industry. "Classical breeders and geneticists can use the genome but not do gene splicing." Mr. Rifkin calls this approach the soft path, and says better understanding of genes could even be used to improve organic farming.
* * * [Etc. etc. Companies mentioned include: Monsanto .... Pioneer Hi-Bred International (a unit of DuPont).... Mendel Biotechnology, a plant genetics company in Hayward, Calif ...... Syngenta (formed by the merger of the agricultural businesses of Novartis and AstraZeneca) .... AniGenics (a start- up in Concord, Mass.)....
* * * Usually, scientists do not test for the genes themselves, since many of the genes are still not known. Instead, they look for markers along the chromosome that are near the gene and therefore tend to travel with the gene from one generation to the next. The advantage of this technique is that the markers can be used even if the breeders have not identified the gene. Genetic engineering can be done only if the gene is known and isolated.
It is also possible to use markers to follow numerous traits through the breeding process. Genetic engineering is at present limited to transferring only one or a few genes. Yet many traits, like the yield of a crop, are governed by multiple genes.
But marker-assisted selection can be extremely difficult and has not lived up to the expectations scientists had when the technique was first developed in the late 1980's, said Nevin D. Young, professor of plant pathology and biology at the University of Minnesota. "Traditional breeding is like a dice-rolling experiment," he said. "Markers are like loaded dice, but they're hardly precise surgical instruments."
It can take years to find the associations between markers and traits, and sometimes links cannot be found at all, he said. It also now costs about $1 to test one marker in one plant, which makes it very expensive to test numerous genes in thousands of plants. Still the costs of such genetic analysis are expected to drop rapidly with the advancement of new DNA testing methods that are also being developed for medical diagnosis.
One of the biggest opportunities presented by marker-assisted selection is to improve the harnessing of wild relatives of crops. Human beings domesticated plants by selecting for obvious traits, like bigger fruit. But over time, the genetic variation in commercial crops has become limited, so when breeders cross these crops, the possible outcomes are also limited.
"We've left behind in this process a huge reservoir of natural variation," said Steven D. Tanksley, professor of plant breeding and plant biology at Cornell. All the commercially grown tomatoes in the world, from the tiniest cherry tomato to the beefiest beefsteak, have less genetic variation than the wild tomatoes in a single valley in Peru, he said.
Breeders have tried to cross wild relatives with commercial crops but with limited success. One problem, Dr. Tanksley said, is knowing which wild plants to pick. Wild tomatoes often are small and green and taste bad. Someone just looking at them would not think of using them in breeding.
But even small, green tomatoes can contain some genes for redness and large fruit. The marker studies allow these genes to be found. "The markers allow you to scan through the whole genome," he said. "You can pick out the flavor genes away from the yucky gene."
Indeed, Dr. Tanksley has crossed wild green tomatoes with commercial red ones and produced even redder ones. And he crossed small wild tomatoes with big commercial ones and got even bigger ones.
Robert Goodman, a professor of plant pathology at the University of Wisconsin, said there was still a risk that marker-assisted breeding could run into the same opposition as transgenic crops because people might fail to make any distinction. But if that does not happen, he said, the breeding approach could provide a way out of the contentious debate.
"Maybe in five to eight years we'll look back on this argument over transgenics and say, `How arcane,' " said Dr. Goodman, who once headed research at Calgene, the company that marketed the first genetically modified crop, a tomato. "Not because it became unpopular but simply because it got bypassed by the advances made by breeding powered by genomics." |