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Global regulatory policies for animal biotechnology: overview, opportunities and challenges. | LitMetric

Global regulatory policies for animal biotechnology: overview, opportunities and challenges.

Front Genome Ed

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Geelong, VIC, Australia.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Genome editing (GnEd) can help farmers grow animals faster, make them resist diseases, and create new features without long breeding processes.
  • So far, only a few genetically modified animals, mainly fish that grow quicker, are sold commercially because of expensive regulations.
  • New rules in places like Argentina make it easier for GnEd animals to be treated like regular animals, which could help more biotech innovations get through the approval process and be used in farming.

Article Abstract

Genome editing (GnEd) has the potential to provide many benefits to animal agriculture, offering a means for achieving rapid growth, disease resistance, and novel phenotypes. The technology has the potential to be useful for rapidly incorporating traits into existing selectively bred animals without the need for crossbreeding and backcrossing. Yet only four products from animals created via biotechnology, all growth-enhanced fishes, have reached commercialization and only on a limited scale. The past failure of genetically engineered (or GM) products to reach conventional producers can largely be attributed to the high cost of meeting GMO regulatory requirements. We review the history of GMO regulations internationally, noting the influence of Codex Alimentarius on the development of many existing regulatory frameworks. We highlight new regulatory approaches for GnEd organisms, first developed by Argentina, and the adoption of similar approaches by other countries. Such new regulatory approaches allow GnEd organisms that could have been developed by conventional means to be regulated under the same rules as conventional organisms and in the future is likely to enhance the opportunity for biotech animals to enter production. Treating certain GnEd products as conventional has had a large impact on the variety of biotechnological innovations successfully navigating regulatory processes. We suggest that for the full potential of GnEd technologies to be realized, enabling public policies are needed to facilitate use of GnEd as a breeding tool to incorporate new traits within existing animal breeding programs, rather than only a tool to create distinct new products.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11459211PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgeed.2024.1467080DOI Listing

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