Jan 6th 2005 
>From The Economist 


GM trees are on their way

IN SEPTEMBER 2004, a group of scientists from around
the world announced that they had deciphered yet
another genome. By and large, the world shrugged and
ignored them. The organism in question was neither
cuddly and furry, nor edible, nor dangerous, so no one
cared. It was, in fact, the black cottonwood, a
species of poplar tree, and its was the first arboreal
genome to be unravelled. But perhaps the world should
have paid attention, because unravelling a genome is a
step towards tinkering with it. And that, in the end,
could lead to genetically modified forests.

The black cottonwood was given the honour of being
first tree because it and its relatives are
fast-growing and therefore important in forestry. For
some people, though, they do not grow fast enough. As
America's Department of Energy, which sponsored and
led the cottonwood genome project, puts it, the
objective of the research was to provide insights that
will lead to “faster growing trees, trees that produce
more biomass for conversion to fuels, while also
sequestering carbon from the atmosphere.” It might
also lead to trees with “phytoremediation traits that
can be used to clean up hazardous waste sites.”


It is also pretty sure to lead to a lot of
environmental protest—hence, perhaps, the
environmental emphasis of the energy department's
mission statement. Given the argument about
genetically modified field-crops that has taken place
in some parts of the world, genetically modified
forests are likely to provoke an incandescent
response. Soya, maize, cotton and the like were
already heavily modified for human use before
biotechnologists got their hands on them. One result
is that they do not do very well in the big, bad,
competitive world outside the farmer's field. But
trees, even the sorts favoured by foresters, are wild
organisms. GM trees really might do well against their
natural conspecifics.



The wood and the trees
Lofty mission statements aside, the principal
commercial goals of arboreal genome research are
faster growth and more useful wood. The advantage of
the former is obvious: more timber more quickly. More
useful wood, in this context, mainly means wood that
is more useful to the paper industry, an enormous
consumer of trees. In particular, this industry wants
to reduce the amount of lignin in the wood it uses.

Lignin is one of the structural elements in the walls
of the cells of which wood is composed. Paper is made
from another of those elements, cellulose. The lignin
acts as a glue, binding the cellulose fibres together,
so an enormous amount of chemical and mechanical
effort has to be expended on removing it. The hope is
that trees can be modified to make less lignin, and
more cellulose. 

In a lucky break, it looks as though it might be
possible to achieve both goals simultaneously. A few
years ago a group of researchers at Michigan
Technological University, led by Vincent Chiang,
started the ball rolling. They produced aspens,
another species of poplar, that have 45% less lignin
and 15% more cellulose than their wild brethren, and
grow almost twice as fast, as well. The mixture the
team achieved leaves the combined mass of lignin and
cellulose in the trunk more or less unchanged and,
contrary to the expectations of many critics, the
resulting trees are as strong as unmodified ones.

The trick Dr Chiang and his colleagues used was to
suppress the activity of one of the genes in the
biochemical pathway that trees employ to make lignin.
They did this using so-called “antisense” technology. 

Antisense technology depends on the fact that the
message carried by a gene is encoded in only one of
the two strands of the famous DNA double helix.
Because of the precise pairing between the components
of the two strands, the other strand carries what can,
in essence, be described as an “antimessage”. The
message itself is copied into a single-stranded
messenger molecule which carries it to the
protein-making parts of the cell, where it is
translated. But if this messenger meets a
single-stranded “antimessenger” before it arrives, the
two will pair up. That silences the messenger. Dr
Chiang therefore inserted into his aspens a gene that
makes antimessengers to the lignin gene in question.

Wood can be improved in other ways, too. When it comes
to papermaking, long fibres of cellulose are
preferable to short ones. Thomas Moritz, of the Umea
Plant Science Centre in Sweden, and his colleagues,
have found out how to make hybrid poplars that reflect
this industrial preference. In this case they did it
by making a gene work overtime, rather than by
suppressing its activity. The gene they chose is
involved in the synthesis of a hormone called
gibberellin and, once again, a side-effect of the
alteration was to cause the trees to grow faster.

How such genetically modified trees would fit in with
the natural environment is, of course, an important
question—and it is important for two reasons. The
first is political. The row about GM crops shows that
people have to be persuaded that such technology will
have no harmful effects before they will permit its
introduction. But there is also a scientific reason.
Trees have complex interactions with other species,
some of which are necessary for their healthy growth.

Claire Halpin, of Dundee University in Scotland, and
her colleagues have been looking into the question of
environmental interactions using hybrid poplars that
contain antisense versions of two other genes for
enzymes involved in the production of lignin. The
trees were grown for four years at two sites in France
and England, in order to see how they fitted in with
the local environment. 



The trees and the bugs
The answer seems to be that they fitted in reasonably
well. They grew normally and had normal diplomatic
relations with the local insects and soil microbes.
They also produced high-quality pulp.

A tree's interactions with soil microbes are often
beneficial to it (the microbes provide nutrients) so
this is an important result. But insects are
frequently hostile, and some researchers are looking
for ways to protect trees from them. Lynette Grace of
Forest Research in Rotorua, New Zealand, for example,
has taken an approach based on introducing the gene
for Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxin, a natural
insecticide. This gene is already used to produce
versions of crops such as cotton that do not require
the application of synthetic insecticides. Dr Grace
and her colleagues adapted it to the radiata pine,
which is plagued by the caterpillars of the painted
apple moth.

Genetic modifications based on Bt are environmentally
controversial. On the one hand, they reduce the amount
of pesticide needed. On the other, there is a fear
that the gene might “escape” from crops into wild
plants that form the foodstuffs of benign insects. In
the case of trees it might not even be necessary for
the gene to jump species. GM trees, with immunity to
insect pests and faster growth rates than their
unmodified competitors, might simply spread by the
normal processes of natural selection. That really
would be survival of the fittest.



 
 
The Economist 


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