Gene Editing 'Would Allow Us To Create Hardier Farm Breeds' (theguardian.com) 91
Leading UK researchers, vets and farmers have urged ministers to free livestock science of unnecessary legal curbs as the country prepares, post-Brexit, to ease gene-editing rules. Such a move would allow the creation of new breeds of animals resistant to disease, heat and drought, they argue. From a report: The government is expected to propose easing gene-editing restrictions in the near future to enable the creation of new generations of crops. However, the group -- which has written to the environment secretary, George Eustice -- worries there is less interest in using the technology to create new breeds of pigs, cows and poultry.
"It is every bit as important that we use the enormous power of gene editing to create breeds of animals that are resistant to disease, droughts and heatwaves as it is to fashion new crop varieties," said Professor Bruce Whitelaw of Edinburgh's Roslin Institute. "This is particularly important as global warming intensifies and we strive to ensure we are protected against future outbreaks of zoonotic diseases." The value of gene editing in this latter field is shown by work carried out at Roslin and Imperial College London, where scientists have identified a gene that may confer resistance to influenza. "We can now think about using gene editing to create breeds resistant to avian and swine flu, and so curb outbreaks on farms, while also reducing the risk of triggering future pandemics in humans," added Whitelaw, one of the letter's signatories.
"It is every bit as important that we use the enormous power of gene editing to create breeds of animals that are resistant to disease, droughts and heatwaves as it is to fashion new crop varieties," said Professor Bruce Whitelaw of Edinburgh's Roslin Institute. "This is particularly important as global warming intensifies and we strive to ensure we are protected against future outbreaks of zoonotic diseases." The value of gene editing in this latter field is shown by work carried out at Roslin and Imperial College London, where scientists have identified a gene that may confer resistance to influenza. "We can now think about using gene editing to create breeds resistant to avian and swine flu, and so curb outbreaks on farms, while also reducing the risk of triggering future pandemics in humans," added Whitelaw, one of the letter's signatories.
To be fair... (Score:4)
I would rather see hardier human breeds, and would be happy to volunteer once you get the anti-aging stuff nailed down
Error in MasterRace.py, line 492142 (Score:2)
You know some nation is going to use this technology in an attempt to create a "superior race". The USA may have to follow suit to keep up economically. The big dilemma will be that things will sometimes go wrong, resulting in say hundreds of thousands of screwed up humans.
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Gene editing with Thalidomide ...
Thalidomide works as an angiogenesis inhibitor.
It does not edit or modify genes.
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Thalidomide works as an angiogenesis inhibitor.
It does not edit or modify genes.
So thalidomide has much less potential for unforeseen long-term harm.
Re: Error in MasterRace.py, line 492142 (Score:2)
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They may publicly claim that, but inside know they are full of it, and call the program a "minor tuning".
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The big dilemma will be that things will sometimes go wrong, resulting in say hundreds of thousands of screwed up humans.
Try hundreds of millions. Or billions.
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Mmmm hmmm!
Bob's Burgers fans will get it.
Here come the pigoons (Score:4, Interesting)
Chalk up another point to Margaret Atwood on the 'this really is the unspeakably grim future that we are inevitably heading towards':
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
'Oryx and Crake' really is a terrific dystopian sci-fi novel and I'm very much looking forward to it coming to TV. The post-apocalyptic landscape is infested with pigoons, a genetically-developed pig-baboon farm animal that goes feral and hunts down humans in packs.
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Dystopia aside, at least we get SpiderPig.
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Or a ManBearPig rampage.
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Too late, already here. [wikimedia.org]
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Or Spider-goat
BioSteel was a trademark name for a high-strength fiber-based material made of the recombinant spider silk-like protein extracted from the milk of transgenic goats, made by Montreal-based company Nexia Biotechnologies, and later by the Randy Lewis lab of the University of Wyoming and Utah State University.
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Reality is becoming dystopian enough, thanks.
Re: Here come the pigoons (Score:2)
Because sci-fi has such an impeccable track record of predicting outcomes.
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Science fiction (or SF for short - nobody who really likes SF ever calls it "sci-fi") is not about predicting the future. Inasmuch as it has a relationship with the real world, it is more a matter of suggesting possible scenarios. "What if...?"
You may be confusing SF with the kind of computerised mathematical modelling that has become so popular (and profitable) of late among alleged scientists.
Re: Here come the pigoons (Score:2)
No, sci-fi is what normal people call it. SF is what people typing on a phone keyboard without gesture typing (like a typical iphone) call it.
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Not really sure why genetically engineered farm animals is some how inherently dystopian, particularly for a world that needs to figure out a way to feed an extra 2 billion people sustainably by 2050 and let's face it, most people love eating meat.
Is it just an "ew" thing like with meat substitutes or eating crickets?
I mean, even that book premise sounds crazy to me. Who would farm animals that are so dangerous to humans to begin with?
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Well, I didn't go into what the apocalypse is in the book because that would be a spoiler. But it's not the invention of transgenic farm animals, it's just a complicating factor after all the shit goes down.
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Well sure, that makes sense. Regardless though, one of the first things our ancestors did when breeding animals for domestication was to breed for passivity. Why would we introduce new ones that were aggressive? Seems like any advantages provided would be outweighed by the obvious difficulties such aggression would provide.
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As the 21st century unfolds, Fermi's Paradox looks less paradoxical every day .
If all intelligent species develop the way ours has, it's not in the least surprising that none of them survive for long after discovering nuclear fission and fusion and - especially - genetic manipulation.
It's like some horrible SF version of The Sorcerer's Apprentice, where a cruel, mentally retarded child somehow gets into God's workshop and starts playing around with the most powerful tools.
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I share your anxiety on this point...
Reading around the topic, I found this sobering Wikipedia article called 'The Great Filter.' Assuming that the answer to Fermi's Paradox is 'they all died,' what is the inevitable step in the development of a civilization that leads to this extinction? This is 'The Great Filter' - it might be genetic science, or fission, or bioweapons, or AI, or gray goo, or a combination...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
It's not good news: "On the other hand, if we find that life is c
Help us, Ian Malcom (Score:3)
You're our only hope.
Gee, the lack of humility before nature that's being displayed here, uh... staggers me.
Editing (Score:1)
And Gene Wilder editing would allow us to produce more excellent comedy performers.
It is a risk, but I am all for it.
How about breeding them to be healthier for humans (Score:3)
I fear we're not looking enough at the big picture.
All of this genetic tinkering for plants and animals is geared towards improving output by volume rather than by quality, usually without concern to long-term health consequences (and not just the monoculture risk). I'd love to see research that was more concerned with the well-being of the humans that consume them and of the animals' quality of life. A little "waste" is okay.
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imo the best advance would be non-animal based meat so we could get rid of the vast majority of domesticated animals and let the bio-diverse wild animal communities use their resources
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Re: How about breeding them to be healthier for hu (Score:2)
The only real way to target profits is to increase yields, which has the side effect of reducing the environmental impact of agriculture.
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I couldn't agree more, Khopesh. One syndrome that seems to contribute to that kind of foolish idea is that everything is "fungible" - one of those ghastly words that economists introduced. It means that, just as one bun or car or TV set is supposedly interchangeable with any other (as of course they never are), one cow or pig or chicken or fish or vegetable is as good as any other.
The concept of fungibility is a boon to economists and traders, as it makes their lives much less complicated than a world where
and then someone breeds raptors! (Score:2)
and then someone breeds raptors!
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according to the movie the problems were triggered by a slashdot nerd
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they really should of paid him more.
As long as (Score:1)
they don't create anything that can fly or swim long distances, I think I'm OK with that.
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I'm sure GM franken-chickens and franken-fish are planned.
Let's face it: we don't know what we're doing (Score:2)
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now someone wants to start modding farm animals?
Humans have been modding farm animals for ten thousand years.
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Yeah, it produces a lot of animals that aren't really ideal for the objective. Plus the difficulty of getting it to breed true (hell, mules don't breed at all, much less breed true).
And then there are the things that screw up the local ecology in a big way (rabbits in Australia? Great idea, right?).
But all those successes aside, the old-fashioned way is just...better!
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Look it up sometime and then you can pull your head out of your ass.
FYI the genetic modifications are for factory farming for higher yields. Moron.
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What do you think happens when you cross breed? Literal retard. Randomization and recombination produces new features.
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Pendantry, the argument of losers.
Re: Let's face it: we don't know what we're doing (Score:2)
Where is the pedantry? Species hybridization is far more unknown and dangerous than targeted gene editing. That is a scientific fact. Have you tried cross breeding anything? It is rolling the dice with thousands of genes instead of one.
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And there's the false choice.
The problem with posting insight on /., yes the people really are that stupid.
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Breeding animals for particular traits through normal reproduction is in no way shape or form the same thing as directly manipulating their DNA
Indeed. In many ways, it is worse.
With direct editing of DNA, the changes are specific and targeted.
With the old-fashioned methods of inducing mutations with radiation or chemicals, the changes are random and more likely to have unintended side effects.
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What part of 'we don't really know what the ACTUAL FUCK we're doing' are you not understanding?
Has tradtional brreeding methods produced dangerous changes? Or food animals that are toxic to humans in ways no one foresaw? Or diseases that killed entire populations of animals, or one that was communicable and deadly to humans? 'Law of Unintended Consequences'? All of theset things are possible because we don't really have a fucking idea what we're doing. It's just more arrogance and stupidity.
Re: Let's face it: we don't know what we're doing (Score:2)
Yeah, hybridization and cross breeding is a far worse way of manipulating the DNA.
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A thousand times this. I wish I could mod parent to 5, sticky-note it to the top of every discussion on this topic ever, and tattoo it on the insides of the eyelids of all the science-bros who lambaste us as anti-science for not wanting to blindly jump off this particular cliff.
I knew, just KNEW that this stupid dissembling semantic argument would be made. It happens every time. I'm perfectly willing to see proponents of gene-editing defend their stance, but not like this. Stop it. STOP NOW. You do yo
Re: Let's face it: we don't know what we're doing (Score:2)
Just because your favorite sci-fi movie predicts a disaster, doesn't mean there will be a disaster.
You go ahead and boycott GMO. The rest of us will reap the benefits without you. Don't forget your cross and your bible on the way out.
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Utterly predictable kind of reply--set up a Bible thumping straw man, and tear it down. If I could let you "reap the benefits" without me, I would; but we've already had corporations contaminating non-DGM fields and then suing the farmer. We've already had Starlink corn not approved for human consumption getting in to the food supply. We can't even control the basics, or protect fundamental human rights and we're just getting started. Ask a Mexican farmer about the genetic diversity of their maize.
We
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we've already had corporations contaminating non-DGM fields and then suing the farmer.
Bullcrap. No farmer has ever been sued for unintentional cross-pollination.
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Course they have inhibitors. It's called an ethics board.
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"Engineered"
You literally have no fucking clue about *anything* that happened.
You weren't there. You haven't met anyone who was there. You don't even know if such a person exists.
Nor can you even determine if any of these things are the case.
You literally confuse everything somebody tells you for reality, if only it feels good. Like you didn't have a pre-frontal cortex *at all*.
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LOL
*ba-dum TISS*
Those "ethics boards" don't even attempt to think scientifically or be aware of their own social conditioning.
It's just "what does my belly tell me the crowd will boo at"?
So mostly religious nonsense and cultural pseudo-morals that have actively been prevented from being checked against reality. Like doing actual scientific studies on questions like: What are the resource flows? (space-time, matter-energy, work-information) How big is the upper bound on the devation from a perfectly equal di
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Rules of scientific ethics:
1. Don't do anything which will get you or your co-workers imprisoned.
2. Don't do anything which will get you or your organization sued.
3. Don't do anything which will summon an angry mob and make everyone hate the organization.
If you're going to carry out painful animal experiments, keep it to species that don't have a recognizable face.
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Nature has built in inhibitors? Haha, assuming that is true .. which it isn't. Then why is it allowing itself to get edited?
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If we only did things we were 100% sure of the outcome, I guarantee none of humanity's achievements would have occurred. Did Columbus have any idea of what would happen if he encountered a civilization that might follow him back to Europe? Did Gutenberg have any idea what unleashing printing would do? We know a hell of a lot more than our ancestors who did cross-species hybridization with plants -- did they have any idea of how the different species of grain plants genes would interact?
Farm animals? (Score:1)
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Or the part that gives us Democrats. Think they'll go for it?
Why??? It's Trumpublicans who are the anti-vaxxer morons who are treating viral infections by eating horse de-worming suppositories, not Democrats.
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Like the leading Democrats were before election?
---
Trump, who has accused Biden and his campaign of stoking doubt among Americans about the efficacy of a vaccine, told reporters at the White House later that Biden should stop promoting âoeanti-vaccine theories.â
âoeTheyâ(TM)re recklessly endangering lives. You canâ(TM)t do that,â said Trump, who predicted at least 100 million doses of a coronavirus vaccine could be distributed by the end of 2020.
biden and anti vaccine throries (Score:2)
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FYI, WSJ was purchased by Murdoch Media, the same people that bring you Faux News
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I'm sorry but that would mean the end of the USA.
Everyone who /believes/, instead of experiencing reality, concluding patterns, predicting events, and acting accordingly, is on the same level as anti-vaxxers. Just not triggered in the right wound yet.
And as far as I know, that's pretty much all of you guys. (Among, sadly, most of the world too.)
Be careful what you wish for.
The solution is simply education though. As in: Giving people the opportunities and abilities to actually understand the world and how i
Not wise (Score:1)
Letting psychopatic troglodytes have access ... (Score:1)
... to gene editing.
In lifeforms that will spread in the wild.
What could possibly go wrong!
(And don't even try to act like I'm against genetics. I'm against handing it to people with zero morals or forethought and not even remotely the wisdom to handle it properly.)
Ending factory farming (Score:2)
Cross a chicken with an octopus (Score:2)
Major cow (Score:2)
Lots of good genes we know (Score:2)
Even in the human genome, there are a lot of interesting anomalies, things we should be able to at least experiment in adding to chimpanzees.
There is a man with the genetic capacity to run for ever. He just does not get lactic acid build up.
Then there are people that can see additional colors, they have 4 types of color detecting 'cones' rather than 3.
There are several special genes that expand how many things you can smell and taste. A common one is the 'supertaster' gene.
There are a few genes that are k
Animals are very inefficient (Score:3)
Animals only convert about 10% of feed calories to useful human consumption calories.
Much better to just synthesize the proteins, etc. directly and bypass the ecological disaster that is the livestock industry.
Before you say "But I'll never eat synthetic food"... you won't have a choice. Most synthetic food will be sold "business to business". That is, it will be manufactured by one large corporation and sold to another large corporation that makes "food". It will be incorporated into the manufactured food that you buy in the store and given some plausible name so you never will know. (You must know by now that most of the food in grocery stores is manufactured by a few large corporations with multiple mystery ingredients. This will just be the next step in that process.)
I predict that synthetic food will make livestock obsolete within 10 years.
Free livestock science of unnecessary legal curbs? (Score:2)
The animals, resistant to most pathogens, until the remaining animals develop resistance. Such pathogens could be then passed onto humans. Also, who would own the progeny of the animals, the gene owners?
Hardier than Corona ? (Score:2)
Hardier than Corona ?
monoculture (Score:2)
Creating monocultures, even if you think they are hardier, guarantees that some day some thing will come along that wipes them all out at once.
We need to be careful here (Score:1)