GMOs are often defined as events that cannot occur in nature.
GMO Pundit’s series on natural GMOs has provided many examples of movement of DNA between different species, indeed different biological kingdoms that are found in the natural world. Click on the natural GMOs tag to find these examples.
This new paper by Pernilla Vallenback and co-authors for which there is open Internet access, provides a thorough characterisation of an example where a gene segment has moved between two different types of grass species that are reproductively isolated in nature.
Preliminary information about this event has appeared in the literature before this time, but the new paper provides a thorough characterisation of the nature of the genes near the natural transgene. The authors do not have any clear idea of how the event occurred but the evidence in the paper shows that it does occur, and as a mobile gene related gene segment appears near the natural transgene, quite likely it was involved in some way in the movement of DNA between two different species.
The authors talk about a vector for the DNA movement, which might be a virus, or might be some other agency such as a parasitic insect that injects plant cells with material as part of its life cycle.
Because its review section at the start contains an excellent introduction to the scientific literature on the topic of horizontal gene movement or lateral gene movement between different species, the complete paper has been provided below.
It shows that the legal basis for regulating laboratory-based genetic events on the assumption that they cannot occur in nature means that has been thoroughly undermined by scientific proof that transgenes are natural.
But first, an update:
Structure of the Natural Transgene PgiC2 in the Common Grass Festuca ovina
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Abstract Top
Background
Methodology/Principal Findings
Conclusions/Significance
Introduction Top
Results Top
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0013529.g001
Comparison between PgiC2 and Other PgiC Sequences
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0013529.t001
The Transgene Associated Fragment (TAF) and its distribution
Sequence information from downstream PgiC2
Discussion Top
Materials and Methods Top
Plant Material, Genome Walking and Sequence Analysis
Analysis of the Transgene Associated Fragment (TAF).
Acknowledgments Top
Author Contributions Top
References Top
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