Gene Edited Catastrophe in Brazil
By F. William Engdahl
By F. William Engdahl
2 October 2019
Image credits: CDC/ James Gathany - Ochlerotatus triseriatus, also known as Aedes triseriatus, identified in mosquito pools, which had been designated as positive for the West Nile Virus, and is also a known vector for the La Crosse virus. https://phil.cdc.gov/Details.aspx?pid=2166
A British-American gene-editing
company has released millions of genetically modified mosquitoes containing a
dominant lethal gene, each week for 27 months in the Bahia, Brazil region in a
test to see if the gene-edited mosquitoes would mate with local mosquitoes
carrying Zika, malaria or other mosquito-borne diseases. A new study documents
the alarming fact that following an initial reduction of the target population
of mosquitoes, after some months the “population which had been greatly
suppressed rebounded to nearly pre-release levels.” Scientists to date have no
idea what dangers are presented by the new mutations. This once more highlights
the dangers of uncontrolled gene-editing of species.
According to a new published study in
Nature Reports journal, genetically engineered mosquitoes produced by the
biotech company, Oxitec, now part of the US company Intrexon, have escaped
human control after trials in Brazil and are now spreading in the environment.
On paper the theory was brilliant.
Strains of “yellow fever” male mosquitoes taken from Cuba and Mexico were
altered using gene-editing to make it impossible for their offspring to
survive. Oxitec then began a systematic release of tens of millions of the
manipulated mosquitoes over more than two years in the the city of Jacobina in
the region of Bahia in Brazil. The Oxitec theory was the altered mosquitoes
would mate with normal females of the same type which carry infectious diseases
like dengue fever, and kill them off in the process.
‘Unanticipated Outcome…’
A team of scientists from Yale
University and several scientific institutes in Brazil monitored the progress
of the experiment. What they found is alarming in the extreme. After an initial
period in which the target mosquito population markedly declined, after about
18 months the mosquito population recovered to pre-release levels. Not only
that, the paper notes that some of the mosquitos likely have “hybrid vigor,” in
which a hybrid of the natural with the gene-edited has created “a more robust
population than the pre-release population” which may be more resistant to
insecticides, in short, resistant “super mosquitoes.”
The scientists note that, “Genetic
sampling from the target population six, 12, and 27–30 months after releases
commenced provides clear evidence that portions of the transgenic strain genome
have been incorporated into the target population. Evidently, rare viable
hybrid offspring between the release strain and the Jacobina population are
sufficiently robust to be able to reproduce in nature…” They continue, “Thus,
Jacobina Ae. aegypti are now a mix of three populations. It is unclear how this
may affect disease transmission or affect other efforts to control these
dangerous vectors.” They estimate that between 10% and 60% of the Bahia natural
Ae. Aegypti mosquitoes now had some gene-edited OX513A genome. They conclude
that “The three populations forming the tri-hybrid population now in Jacobina
(Cuba/Mexico/Brazil) are genetically quite distinct, very likely resulting in a
more robust population than the pre-release population due to hybrid vigor.”
This was not supposed to happen.
Professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, Jeffrey Powell, senior author of
the study, remarked on the findings: “The claim was that genes from the release
strain would not get into the general population because offspring would die.
That obviously was not what happened.” Powell went on to note, “But it is the
unanticipated outcome that
is concerning.”
A Gates Foundation Project
The Brazil study deals a major alarm
signal on the uncontrolled release of gene-edited species into nature. It calls
to mind the horror plot of Michael Crichton’s 1969 science fiction novel,
Andromeda Strain. Only it is no novel.
The Oxitec mosquitoes were developed
using a highly controversial form of gene-editing known as gene drive. Gene
Drive, which is also being heavily funded by the Pentagon’s DARPA, combined
with CRISPR gene-editing, aims to force a genetic modification to spread through
an entire population, whether of mosquitoes or potentially humans, in just a
few generations.
The scientist who first suggested
developing gene drives in gene-editing, Harvard biologist Kevin Esvelt, has
publicly warned that development of gene editing in conjunction with gene drive
technologies has alarming potential to go awry. He notes how often CRISPR
messes up and the likelihood of protective mutations arising, making even
benign gene drives aggressive. He stresses, “Just a few engineered organisms
could irrevocably alter an ecosystem.” Esvelt’s computer gene drive simulations
calculated that a resulting edited gene “can spread to 99 percent of a
population in as few as 10 generations, and persist for more than 200
generations.” This is
very much what has now been demonstrated in the mosquito experiment in Brazil.
Notable is the fact that the Oxitec
Brazil mosquito experiment was funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation. In June, 2018 Oxitec announced a joint venture with the Gates
Foundation, “to develop a new strain of Oxitec’s self-limiting Friendly™
Mosquitoes to combat a mosquito species that spreads malaria in the Western
Hemisphere.” The Brazil results show the experiment is a catastrophic failure
as the new strain is anything but
self-limiting.
The Gates Foundation and Bill Gates
have been backing development of the radical gene-editing technology and gene
drive technology for more than a decade. Gates, a long-time advocate of
eugenics, population control and of GMO, is a strong gene-editing promoter. In
an article in the May/June 2018 magazine of the New York Council on Foreign
Relations, Foreign Affairs, Gates hails gene editing technologies, explicitly
CRISPR. In the article Gates argues that CRISPR and other gene-editing
techniques should be used globally to meet growing demand for food and to
improve disease prevention, particularly for malaria. In his article he adds,
“there is reason to be optimistic that creating gene drives in
malaria-spreading mosquitoes will not do much, if any, harm to the
environment.”
Every bit as alarming as the failure
of the Brazil gene-editing mosquito experiment is the fact that this technology
is being spread with virtually no prior health or safety testing by truly
independent government institutions. To date the US Government relies only on
industry safety assurances. The EU, while formally responsible to treat
gene-edited species similarly to GMO plants, is reportedly trying to loosen the
regulations. China, a major research center for gene-editing, has extremely lax
controls. Recently a Chinese scientist announced an experiment in human
gene-editing allegedly to make newborn twins resistant to HIV. Other experiments
are proliferating around the world with gene-edited animals and even salmon.
The precautionary principle has been thrown to the winds when it comes to the
new gene-editing revolution, not a reassuring situation.
Currently Oxitec, which denies that
the Brazil results show failure, is now trying to get regulatory approval from
the US Environmental Protection Agency to conduct a similar experiment with the
same gene-edited species in Texas and Florida. One of the people involved in
the attempt, Texan Roy Bailey, is a Washington lobbyist and close friend of
Randal Kirk, the billionaire CEO of Intrexon, owner of Oxitec. Bailey is also a
major Trump fundraiser. Let’s hope that regulatory prudence and not politics decide the outcome.
F. William Engdahl is strategic risk
consultant and lecturer, he holds a degree in politics from Princeton
University and is a best-selling author on oil and geopolitics, exclusively for
the online magazine “New Eastern
Outlook”
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