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APPLICATION SUMMARY Prepared by applicant Application code: Applicant: GMD02028 Develop in Containment any New Organism under the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms (HSNO) Act 1996 AgResearch Limited Applicant contact: Paul Atkinson Purpose: The two broad objectives of this containment application are to develop transgenic cattle that can express functional therapeutic foreign proteins in their milk, and to develop transgenic cattle to study gene function and genetic performance Date application received: 1 May 2002 Date application verified 13 May 2002 ERMA New Zealand contact: Suzanne Lambie Application category: SUMMARY Expression of therapeutic and active proteins by transgenesis The two broad objectives of this containment application are to develop transgenic cattle that can express functional therapeutic foreign proteins in their milk, and to develop transgenic cattle to study gene function and genetic performance. This application is to develop genetically modified cattle that possess either exogenous genes controlled to express novel therapeutic proteins in their milk, or modifications of endogenous genes for altered phenotypic expression of products. Of all systems capable of expressing genetically modified proteins, the cow mammary gland is necessary because of the high-protein output and the ability to produce correctly processed functional proteins. The application is on a “project” rather than single organism basis. We have defined specific parameters of the project to ensure that risk is managed. These parameters include a single recipient type (cattle), limited donor species (cattle, sheep, goat, deer, mice, copy human), limited types of modification (deletion, insertion, deletion and insertion), a restricted number of modifications, containment of Tg and GMO to experimental sites, a research program to account for all insertions of Tg DNA and monitoring of genetic modification in microorganisms at disposal sites to ensure no escape of functional Tg genes. The potential risk for the classes of genes defined does not vary between individual genes within the class, and we note that genes we will transfer are already in the environment and fall into the low risk category as defined by the HSNO (Low-Risk Genetic Modifications) Regulations, 1998. Genes encoding toxins, allergens or human virus receptors will not be used in transgenesis. A project based application gives us necessary flexibility to change experimental variables according to the outcomes of intermediate steps in the experimental process. The application is for a development and that means genetic modification of any organism but does not include field testing. In a development program, scientific unknowns are researched and worked through. The work is not aimed at determining environmental impacts as a field test. A field test aims to determine environmental impacts of technologies already developed and also to produce a self-sustaining herd of cows for assessment under controlled field conditions. The development envisaged in this application in large part will occur in laboratories but whether the transgenesis and expression in Tg calves is successful will be determined in a highly regulated containment farm. The application is written sufficiently generally to allow such systematic testing of key experimental variables as is required in the development of a technology but also to allow the development of Tg expression/alteration of a number of genes whose products fall into defined classes. Thus this application seeks approval to develop conditions for controlling expression of genes, of human and animal pharmaceutical value, by transgenesis and to assess the function of gene products. Large quantities of many functional proteins require mammalian expression systems for mammalian proteins and often require tissue systems rather than cultured mammalian cells (Appendix 10). We seek approval of this application for the development of new knowledge. Generic issues of the science will include achievement of significant posttranslational modification, the correctly spliced isoforms of mRNA and in expression of large amounts of functional human and other therapeutic and bioactive proteins in milk and the probing of gene function. An example of the importance of correct splice and posttranslational isoforms is exemplified by human myelin basic protein (hMBP), which has four splice variants derived from seven exons. It also has a number of charge isoforms based chiefly on posttranslational de-immination of arginines, protein phosphorylations or carboxylations. High value biopharmaceutical (see, for example, Appendix 6) protein could also be a bovine anti-microbial peptide or a mouse monoclonal antibody. Complexities in mammalian protein expression, also including oligomerization, proteolytic processing and glycosylation all affect the function of some proteins. As an example, regulatory proteins of the immune system are especially affected by oligomerisation and the state of terminal sugars in N-linked glycosylation. The application seeks approval to develop transgenic embryos and then transfer those embryos to conventional recipient cattle housed in a containment facility, better described as an outdoor laboratory, at Ruakura thus producing transgenic calves. We plan to evaluate expression of the transgene (or modification) in the facility. The containment facility comprises buildings and pastures all within a security controlled perimeter, in order to provide for optimal conditions for calf growth. Genetic modifications will be introduced in to cattle, and will result in the expression of modified forms of an endogenous protein or in the expression of exogenous proteins in milk of the animals. All modifications will be stable genetic changes, being incorporated in to the genome of the animals, and will be inherited in the normal Mendelian fashion. Genetic modification is expected to occur at a number of steps (a) to (e) described below. The scope of research for this project based application will be limited to production of scarce, valuable human and animal therapeutics and bioactives in the protein, glycolipid and carbohydrate classes of substances to be secreted into cow’s milk and chemically purified to homogeneity. The proposed research also includes probing gene function by alteration (e.g. deletion) of limited numbers of genes and their proteins. Some substances of human therapeutic value can only be expressed in sufficient and functional amounts in large lactating animals. These complex substances will be increasingly needed as our understanding of human and animal diseases increases. Transgenesis will be used for the authentic expression of splice-modified and posttranslationalmodified human therapeutic proteins expressed in cow’s milk in amounts sufficient for purification of the proteins in useful amounts (Appendix 10). The technology being developed will be generic to many valuable therapeutic proteins and the outcomes important to new scientific knowledge and to future useful products. The organisms created by transgenics can be described as genetically modified cattle that possess modifications to endogenous genes or exogenous genes controlled to express novel, therapeutic and bioactive proteins and substances in milk for human health therapy and for improved understanding of animal performance and genetic gain. The source of the donor nucleic acid material and the purpose of the modification The donor nucleic acids, in term of genes being studied, will be derived from mammalian sources of New Zealand (where possible) livestock (cattle, sheep, deer and goats), from murine origin or from human genes. Genes of ruminant origin will be derived from New Zealand animals of known pedigree. Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathys, Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE), sheep scrapie, and Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) will pose no risk in this experiment. Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy (TSE) infectivity is transmitted by a specifically misfolded shape of a normal cellular protein, prion protein (see Saborio et al, 2001). The sources of TSE infectivity (BSE, scrapie, CWD of deer) are not present in NZ (reviewed Atkinson, 2001). In any event purified genes, copied by bacteria or PCR techniques, will be used for transfections and preparations will contain no protein as possible sources of TSE infection. In general, such elements of viruses as structural, non-structural, or polymerase will not be used in the proposed experiment. No genetic elements from human or mammalian pathogens capable of recreating the viable pathogen will be used. No toxin genes from any source or genes for biocides of any nature will be used. Genes for known allergens or human virus receptors will not be used. Where human genes are used they will be sourced from commercial gene banks overseas and synthetically produced. None will be sourced from New Zealand. Other donor nucleic acids to be used may include reporter genes, selectable marker genes, and promoter sequences which may be derived from mammalian and non-mammalian organisms. The development of a line (modification) of transgenic cattle will initially span a period of 3-4 years in which production of the transgenic cattle will occur in the first year and breeding and milking of the animals would be carried out in the second and third years. Hormonal induction of lactation is after 16 months and will allow first characterisation of expression. First natural lactation is after approximately 3 years and determination of milk and protein yields will be year 4. The total length of the experiment will not exceed 10 years. Successful expression of transgene may lead to a field test application to expand the herd to test performance in a field test situation. What the transgenic organism (GM-cows) will be used for and why it has been selected The genetic modifications will result in either protein products in the milk of the animals or modifications of the phenotype of the animal for the study of gene function or for genetic improvement. The mammary gland is capable of very high protein output and therefore production of very high amounts of transgenic protein can be achieved (e.g. the production of fibrinogen in the udder is about 1000 fold higher than achieved in cultured cells) see Appendix 10. Also, milk is an easily harvested fluid and the range of proteins that can be expressed in it is wide, from single chain to complex proteins requiring significant post-translational modification. Evidence suggests that the udder can posttranslationally modify complex proteins better than other systems (e.g. transgenic mammary-produced Fibrinogen and Protein C are both functional/active in vitro). The ultimate purpose of introducing a novel protein into the milk is the development and production of pharmaceutical products to meet unmet human health clinical needs. However, these studies are aimed at development of a functioning transgene and gene products in mammary tissues and have the outcome of new scientific knowledge on protein expression and gene function. The risks, costs and benefits and the assessment of these Risks • Physico-biochemical risk in the types of application and the genes to be expressed is not more than PC1. Apart from selection markers, only mammalian genomic material will be used to modify the cattle genome in animals. In general, only one mammalian gene at a time, out of 30,000 to 40,000 total cattle genes will be used in transgenesis. Human equivalent genes to be used for transgenesis are 85-95% homologous to cattle and the risk of the modified animal is no greater than the normal genes of existing cows and human beings. Categories of specific risk genes are excluded. It is very unlikely that transgenic cattle will escape or be released from the facility, and even less likely that any successful breeding to produce a sustainable population of introgressed genes would occur without deliberate human intervention for which this is not an application. Breeds are examples of humancontrived gene introgression and are maintained by ‘human selection pressure’. In the absence of such selection pressure (selection and culling) breeds rapidly revert to feral types and original genetic homeostasis of species underscoring that allelic frequencies evolve which are best suited to the given environments and not just the mere presence of specific alleles. There is no conjectural adverse, or positive effects of the animals on the native flora or fauna that are different from the current conventional farmed cattle spread throughout New Zealand. No adverse effects are expected on the environment because the transgenes are unlikely to amplify and survive outside of cattle should they escape the GM animals, and the animals are not planned for use in normal commercial reproduction. We will likely mate animals to check gene stability and so some reproduction is likely to occur as part of the development program described here, especially as in the case of gene knock-outs in order to achieve homozygosity (see page 15 “Description of Project” and Step (f) page 19. • No adverse effects are predicted or anticipated on human health or safety from exposure to, or consumption of milk or meat from the transgenic cattle expressing therapeutic human proteins. However, by express intention and execution of AgResearch, no such transgenic cattle or their products will enter the human food chain. It is relevant to note that these transgenic animals and their products will have an intrinsic value both experimentally and therapeutically way beyond any conceivable food value and there will be no incentive to use them as food. Transgenic animals used for study of genetic gain will likewise not enter any food chain as a result of this application. However, even if they did inadvertently enter the environment, genes so released would not be substantially different from those already present in the environment in their natural hosts in studies on therapeutic protein expression. In gene heritability studies, mutant genes from outliers in natural variation are also present in the environment (Galloway et al, 2000) and pose no hazard. Because the Tg cattle subject of this application will never leave containment or enter any food chain, issues of direct horizontal gene transfer are not applicable. Background on important HGT issues is given in Appendix 7 should escape of the animals occur accidentally. In anticipation of the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms (Genetically Modified Organisms) Amendment Bill (reported back 28 March 2002) the application includes explicit information on “human safety and ecological effects” and controls for outdoor containment. • There may be adverse effects arising from an affront to spiritual beliefs and cultural values, the subject of an ongoing assessment of risk in consultation with Maori. Issues of papatuanuku have been raised for discussion by some members of Ngati Wairere for example, in relation to ground water, and are part of the ongoing consultation between Ngati Wairere and AgResearch (see for example, Appendix 4 for evidence of recent consultation; Appendix 5 for evidence of earlier consulation). Costs • “Cost” is defined in Reg 2 of the Methodology Order as “the value of a particular adverse effect expressed in monetary or non-monetary terms”. There is one potential adverse effect which generates a greater than negligible risk. This is the adverse effect (or effects) arising from affront to spiritual beliefs and values of Ngati Wairere (and maybe other Maori/other cultures). This is assessed as non-monetary. Its magnitude is high for those who hold the spiritual beliefs and values. Benefits • A major benefit from the work described in this application will be increased scientific knowledge, in a number of areas including the following: complex protein expression and appropriate posttranslational modification, potential of the mammary gland to express authentic functional proteins coming from multiple splice isoforms and a range of posttranslational modifications, functional characterisation of bovine genes (by overexpression of authentic product), development of large animal sources of human proteins for research into human diseases namely the provision of therapeutic and research reagents, improvement in the efficiencies of cloning technologies by an increased understanding of nuclear reprogramming that occurs in nuclear transfer (NT), and in vitro embryonic development and transplant technologies in livestock animals. Somatic cells from day 60 foetuses will mostly be the source of cloning genetics but adult somatic cells may be used also and genetic reprogramming of the donor cell nucleus during nuclear reprogramming will be analysed providing another scientific benefit. A further benefit will be to improve the potential for rate of genetic gain by understanding through transgenesis of the genetic basis of outliers, namely the genes involved in beneficial natural mutations identified through techniques of quantitative genetics. We will not attempt direct use of Tg for genetic gain, which is unlikely to be an economic way of accelerating genetic gain in herds. Summary of assessment of risks, costs and benefits The risks have been assessed as low and the track record of the containment facility indicates that the likelihood of escape is very low. In any event, the transgenic animals generated will have high intrinsic value because of the sophistication and cost of their development, but also because of the therapeutic and biologically active substances they may be producing. Such animals will not enter the food chain. AgResearch recognises that the risk to the relationship of Maori (particularly Ngati Wairere) with their taonga is likely to be significant. AgResearch does not believe that this risk outweighs the benefits of the research. The benefits of the programme are considerable particularly the advancement of scientific knowledge. AgResearch believes the benefits potentially far outweigh the conjectural or potential adverse effects. The containment systems proposed Molecular work with bacterial and animal cell cultures will be done in laboratories meeting PC1 and PC2 criteria. The outdoor containment facility is based on MAF Biosecurity Authority guidelines for low security quarantine facilities. The facility design and management has been based on MAFBA Standard 154.03.06. The containment facility was approved with application GMF98009. The containment facility has the characteristics of an outdoor laboratory in order to provide animals with healthy living conditions whilst the transgenes of interest are studied. The perimeter fencing of the facility completely encloses the site within two, 2 metre high netting fences. This standard of fencing exceeds the low security quarantine standards. A two-metre spacing separates the two fences. The area between the fences will be sprayed to control grass growth and will remain free of livestock animals so as to act as an early warning of possible breakout of stock if cattle enter the area. In order to avoid any possibility of trees falling across the perimeter fence during a storm, either the fences have been positioned so as to avoid large old trees or the trees have been removed from the site. Likewise, no fences have been placed over or near waterways, which may also be difficult to ensure complete containment. Within the enclosed containment facility, we have also located the buildings and yards that will be used for animal handling and care. The transgenic animals, or recipient cattle carrying transgenic embryos will not leave or be taken out of this containment facility. Furthermore, embryos reconstructed in the laboratory will only be transferred to recipient animals within the containment area. This application is comparable to AgResearch’s previous cattle application GMF98009 that included modifying milk proteins in cloned transgenic cattle. This application was approved by ERMA and we refer to the application and decision. Practices will be the same as in the previously approved application.