Bioengineering
has pushed farmers beyond the age-old practice of selective breeding,
whereby one animal or plant strain was crossed with a related one to
bring out desirable characteristics and suppress less useful ones. Now,
scientists can manipulate genes and create new strains out of unrelated
species. Foods, ingredients, and additives produced by bioengineering
must meet the same FDA
safety
standards as traditional products. The total acreage of bioengineered
crops is still small, but it represents a growing practice.
Safety
Food producers are responsible for ensuring that the foods they sell
are safe. The US Department of Agriculture has the authority to remove
meat, poultry, and
egg products
produced in federally inspected plants, and the FDA has the authority
to remove all other foods from the market if they pose a risk to public
health.
Risk of Allergic Reactions
One area of concern related to the transfer of genetic material is the possibility that
proteins introduced from one food into another could cause
allergic reactions
in people sensitive to the first food. For example, a tomato bred to
produce a protein normally found in peanuts could cause potentially
life-threatening symptoms when eaten by someone allergic to peanuts. For
this reason, the FDA requires clear scientific proof of safety from
developers working with foods to which people are commonly allergic,
such as milk, eggs, wheat,
fish,
tree nuts (eg, walnuts, pecans), and legumes (eg, beans, peanuts). It’s
impossible to predict allergic reactions to proteins derived from
plants or other sources if they are not recognized causes of allergy.
Nevertheless, scientists can test a bioengineered protein to see whether
its structure resembles that of a known allergen. If it does, further
tests show whether an allergic cross-reaction is likely.
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