Problems in monitoring horizontal gene transfer in field trials of transgenic plants
- PMID: 15340480
- DOI: 10.1038/nbt1009
Problems in monitoring horizontal gene transfer in field trials of transgenic plants
Erratum in
- Nat Biotechnol. 2005 Apr;23(4):488
Abstract
Transgenic crops are approved for release in some countries, while many more countries are wrestling with the issue of how to conduct risk assessments. Controls on field trials often include monitoring of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) from crops to surrounding soil microorganisms. Our analysis of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and of the sensitivity of current techniques for monitoring HGT from transgenic plants to soil microorganisms has two major implications for field trial assessments of transgenic crops: first, HGT from transgenic plants to microbes could still have an environmental impact at a frequency approximately a trillion times lower than the current risk assessment literature estimates the frequency to be; and second, current methods of environmental sampling to capture genes or traits in a recombinant are too insensitive for monitoring evolution by HGT. A model for HGT involving iterative short-patch events explains how HGT can occur at high frequencies but be detected at extremely low frequencies.
Comment in
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Monitoring horizontal gene transfer.Nat Biotechnol. 2004 Nov;22(11):1349; author reply 1349-50. doi: 10.1038/nbt1104-1349a. Nat Biotechnol. 2004. PMID: 15529149 No abstract available.
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Bt toxin not guilty by association.Nat Biotechnol. 2005 Jul;23(7):791. doi: 10.1038/nbt0705-791b. Nat Biotechnol. 2005. PMID: 16003355 No abstract available.
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