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  • Hello!

  • I'm Hank Green, and this is SciShow!

  • So, we made a video about this once before, but some of the studies we cited turned out

  • to be bunk, and, in general, I think we played our cards too close to our chest when it comes

  • to how we really feel about genetic engineering here at SciShow.

  • So, why are GMOs bad?

  • They're not.

  • They just aren't, not intrinsically, and certainly not for your health.

  • We've been eating them for decades with no ill effects, which makes sense, because

  • a genetically modified organism is simply an organism, like any other organism, that

  • produces hundreds of thousands of proteins, but one or two of them are proteins that were

  • chosen specifically by us humans.

  • Genetic engineering is necessary for the continued success of the human experiment here on planet

  • Earth.

  • Just like the advent of nitrogen fixing allowed for more fertile fields that saved millions

  • from starvation, the fruits of genetic engineering (sometimes literally) will help us face the

  • significant challenges of a world with more and more people and a climate that is less

  • and less stable.

  • Of course, just like nitrogen fixing also allowed Germany to build bigger bombs, genetic

  • engineering is a tool that can be used for good or for evil.

  • So, yes, it must be studied and controlled and understood.

  • But that understanding has to start with, like, us.

  • Right now!

  • [Intro]

  • If you live in the United States, you almost certainly eat genetically modified organisms,

  • or GMOs; thus far, it's just plants, though pretty much every kind of meat on the market

  • was likely fed with GM corn at some point.

  • And it won't be long before the animals themselves are genetically modified.

  • In 2012, the FDA reviewed a new kind of Atlantic salmon, engineered to have higher levels of

  • growth hormone, using the genes of Pacific salmon and an eel-like fish called the ocean

  • pout.

  • They concluded that the engineered fish was safe and opened up the discussion for public

  • comment, but still haven't announced a final decision.

  • GMOs are everywhere in the US, pretty much literally.

  • 95% of sugar beets, 88% of corn, 94% of soybeans grown in the U.S. contain traits -- like being

  • insect-resistant or herbicide-resistant -- that were engineered into them.

  • And some crops are genetically modified simply for human benefit.

  • Around 500,000 children go blind every year because of vitamin A deficiency.

  • So a strain of rice has been developed that, unlike normal rice, contains enough vitamin

  • A to keep children healthy.

  • Or, healthier, anyway.

  • Now the termgenetically modified organismis actually somewhat of a misnomer.

  • I mean, people have been genetically modifying organisms since the invention of agriculture.

  • Every plant and animal species has natural genetic variability, and for thousands of

  • years, we've harnessed this variability by practicing artificial selection.

  • We cultivate and breed organisms to emphasize their most desirable traits - cows that produce

  • more milk and squash plants that survive drought.

  • Brassica oleracea, also known as wild cabbage, has been bred so intensively that it is the

  • wild ancestor of half a dozen different garden staples, including broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower,

  • brussel sprouts.

  • kohlrabi and kale.

  • Corn originally looked like this.

  • Over the years of selective breeding, we have turned it into a massive, crazy giant mutant

  • version that we happily throw on the grill without thinking of the centuries of breeding

  • necessary to turn a grass seed into a sweet and starchy masterpiece.

  • But when we talk about GMOs today, we're actually talking about genetically engineered

  • organisms or transgenic organisms.

  • We're talking about genes from one species being extracted and then fused into the genome

  • of a different species.

  • This is called transgenesis, and though not all GMO food is created this way, transgenic

  • crops are by far the most common kind of genetically engineered organisms you come across.

  • But here's the thing: engineered organisms aren't anything new either -- we've been

  • tinkering with food in laboratories for nearly a hundred years.

  • In the 1920s, scientists realized that they could cause mutations in plants -- thereby

  • creating more genetic diversity and possibly more desirable traits-- by exposing them to

  • x-rays, gamma rays, and various chemicals.

  • Through the 1970s, these methods of mutation breeding were quite popular, and completely

  • unregulated and largely ignored by the public.

  • Thousands of cultivars produced this way are currently on the market.

  • It's a kind of brute-force hack, just mess the genes up, plant the seeds, and see what

  • happens and then breed the cool new traits back into various strains of crop.

  • Then in 1983, scientists pioneered a new tactic, where they successfully took a gene from an

  • antibiotic-resistant bacterium and spliced it into the DNA of a tobacco plant.

  • Now, of course, antibiotic-resistant tobacco doesn't have any real purpose, but it did

  • prove that single-gene transfer was possible.

  • The new practice of transgenics was born.

  • Now the GM industry wasn't really able to take hold until 1994, when the USDA approved

  • something called the Flavr Savr Tomato, a fruit, invented by a California biotech company,

  • that was altered so that it took longer to ripen, giving it a longer shelf life.

  • It was the first genetically engineered crop sold to consumers.

  • The Flavr Savr, though, didn't last very long -- partly because people didn't like

  • the taste, and partly because others, mainly in Europe, were suspicious of its genetic

  • alterations.

  • The flavr savr, and its non-ideal flavr touched off a debate that continues to rage.

  • Today, most GMOs aren't found in your produce section like the Flavr Savr was.

  • Instead, more than 90 percent of commercially grown GM foods are commodity crops, staples

  • like feed corn and soybeans, which have been modified to resist herbicides or insects.

  • These crops are used to make the ingredients in lots of the processed foods we eat, or

  • are used as fodder for animals that we later enjoy consuming the flesh of.

  • Probably the most well-known of these transgenic crops are the so-called Roundup-ready crops

  • -- foods like soybeans, corn, sugar beets, cotton, alfalfa and canola that are engineered

  • to resist the herbicide Roundup.

  • These crops provide us with some, you might say, digestible examples of how transgenic

  • foods are engineered, why they're made the way they are, what they do as well as what

  • they don't do.

  • Let's start with why they were made in the first place.

  • The active ingredient in the herbicide Roundup is glyphosate, a chemical that inhibits an

  • enzyme plants use to synthesize amino acids.

  • By blocking this enzyme, Roundup stops plants from making what they need to grow and metabolize

  • food, thereby killing them.

  • And it pretty much takes no prisoners.

  • So much so that it can be hard to use around plants that you don't want to kill, like

  • your crops.

  • So in the early 1990s, the company that makes Roundup, Monsanto, decided to develop crops

  • that were resistant to glyphosate, so farmers could spray the herbicide over their whole

  • crop, but only kill the weeds.

  • See, there are microorganisms that produce an enzyme that is unaffected by glyphosate.

  • All Monsanto had to do was transfer those bacteria genes to food plants, and farmers

  • could use Roundup to protect their crops without killing them.

  • So they extracted small pieces of bacterial DNA that were responsible for making the enzyme

  • and set about introducing them into plants.

  • But how do you get the genes of a bacterium into the nucleus of a plant cell?

  • On the Tree of Life, plants and bacteria aren't even on the same branch!

  • Well, it turns out there are a couple of pretty interesting ways.

  • The first involves gene guns.

  • Yeah, you heard me!

  • Gene guns!

  • Gene guns do pretty much what they sound like -- literally and kind of haphazardly, blasting

  • DNA into plant cells.

  • Most commonly used to engineer corn and rice species, they start with tiny particles of

  • gold that are coated with hundreds of copies of a desired donor gene, called a transgene.

  • Cells from the plant that's gonna receive the new genes are put into a vacuum chamber

  • and then, fire away!

  • The gene-covered gold particles are shot at the cells using high-pressure gas.

  • Once inside the nucleus of a plant cell, the gold dissolves, and the scientists cross their

  • fingers and hope that the DNA is taken up by the chromosomes in the nucleus, which it

  • sometimes it.

  • Once the transgenes have been incorporated into the plant's DNA, it can then be bred

  • into offspring plants.

  • Not exactly elegant, but it's a heck of a lot more subtle than just bombarding the seed

  • with radiation and hoping for the best.

  • Another more recent, and more effective, way to create transgenic organisms involves using

  • a soil-dwelling bacterium called Agrobacterium.

  • This is a plant parasite and a natural genetic engineerit has an extra, and quite special,

  • piece of DNA called a plasmid that can move outside the bacterium and implant itself into

  • a plant cell.

  • In nature, the Agrobacterium uses this lil' trick to re-code plant cells to grow food

  • for it.

  • But in the lab, engineers can use the plasmid as a kind of carrier for fancy transgenes,

  • using it to infuse plant cells with new genetic material.

  • So -- whether you've used the Agrobacterium or the gene guns, you now have a new engineered

  • crop plant.

  • But you can't just put that thing into the ground -- you have to introduce this new genetic

  • material into existing, traditional strains of the crop.

  • This last step, called backcross breeding, involves repeatedly crossing the new transgenic

  • plant with breeding stock, over and over again, until you wind up with a new transgenic crop.

  • At the end of the process, Monsanto had a patented plant that could be sprayed with

  • glyphosate and survive.

  • Previously, plants would have to be seeded far enough apart that machines could till

  • away competing weeds, increasing soil loss and costs to the farmer, not to mention fuel

  • consumption.

  • Plus, Monsanto gets a whole new, massive customer base for glyphosate.

  • It's a long processthe whole thing can take as long as 15 yearsbut that's

  • how just about all genetic engineering is done to your food, whether scientists are

  • putting a bacterium's antibiotic resistance into a tobacco plant, or an eel's growth

  • pattern into a salmon.

  • Of course, then there's the process of getting the crop or animal approved for use, which

  • can also take quite a number of years.

  • At the moment, it's extremely expensive, though there are some technologies on the

  • horizon that might make it cheaper.

  • The fact that it's so expensive and yet still economically worth doing indicates how

  • extremely useful GM crops can be.

  • It also means that the companies that produce them closely guard and restrict the patents

  • and sale and growth and even research done on the crops.

  • One of the reasons engineered foods are attacked so viciously is not because of the scientific

  • consequences of their existence, but the economic and cultural consequences of placing so much

  • power over our food supply into the hands of very few very large companies.

  • The GMO debate has become something of a surrogate for a much larger debate about economics that,

  • frankly, is out of our league.

  • There are scientific concerns about genetically modified food.

  • How does inserting a single gene, for example, rather than swapping out huge hunks of genetic

  • material, affect the genome at large?

  • We used to thinknot at all,” but it turns out, the genome is more complicated

  • than that.

  • Additionally, many farmers save non-patented seed for next year's crop, something you can't

  • do with patented GM crop seed.

  • But if your public domain seed was unintentionally fertilized by a patented strain, you might

  • find that suddenly the seed you saved from last year's harvest to plant next year has

  • genes owned by someone else.

  • Someone who is, it turns out, suing you.

  • And if your livelihood depends on selling certified organic crops or selling into markets

  • where GMOs are prohibited, the consequences can be even more dire.

  • And, of course, the traits we're engineering into crops might have potential ecological

  • effects, like if we're engineering in insect resistance, we want to make sure that we're

  • not harming the insects we DO like, like bees and butterflies.

  • But after having been consumed in hundreds of millions of meals by me and probably by

  • you, and having been studied for decades, there has been zero implication that genetically

  • modified food poses a danger to human health.

  • That has not stopped an extremely vocal opposition from funding poorly-designed studies and publishing

  • misleading papers.

  • We here at SciShow even reported on a study indicating that GMOs caused an increase in

  • cancer in rats.

  • This study, led by a guy who was not-coincidentally publishing a book on the topic that same week

  • was published in a peer-reviewed journal and was initially taken at face value.

  • But cherry picked data, a lack of dose-response, small sample groups, and a strain of rat that

  • has an 80% chance of developing cancer in its lifespan eventually combined to completely

  • discredit the study.

  • Of course, as with any new technology, it can have unintended consequences; it can be

  • controlled and monopolized and even weaponized, so there is plenty of reason to keep an eye

  • on the companies making these advances.

  • But when considering the number of hungry people on the planet, we have an obligation

  • to explore every possible avenue to increase crop yields and to decrease the amount of

  • herbicide, pesticide, energy and water needed to produce a crop.

  • Traditional and advanced breeding methods need to be a part of that, and so does genetic

  • engineering.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow, and thank you to the people who pushed me

  • to write up a more complete and accurate version of this episode.

  • If you want to continue getting smarter with us, you can go to youtube.com/scishow and

  • subscribe.

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