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thanks to Ron Baxter for forwarding this - apologies for any cross-posting
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Dear folks,

Enclosed is an excellent 'roundup' of some of the mistakes made by the  biotech industry, so far! 

Ron
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REFERENCES - BIOTECH MISTAKES (01/22/01)

Originally posted by:   This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. (Cliff Kinzel)  [Thanks Cliff!] Via::   This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.   
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Low-Tech Woe Slows Calgene's Super Tomato.
1995, April 12
Wall Street Journal

 SUMMARY:  Having spent years overcoming complex technological, regulatory and   environmental obstacles, Calgene has been tripped up by a mundane   problem: Its super tomato, designed to last longer and taste better,   hasn't been able to take the pounding dished out by Calgene's system   for picking, packing and shipping it. Standard tomatoes are picked   green and rock-hard, bumped down conveyor belts, blasted into bins   and gassed with a hormone, ethylene, that triggers their reddening.   Then they are boxed. What this efficiency sacrifices, of course, is   taste.  Calgene's tomato hasn't been tough enough for the real world.  
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Monsanto's cotton gets the Mississippi blues.
1997, November 1   New Scientist

 SUMMARY:  Farmers in Mississippi could lose millions of dollars following the   partial failure of a new genetically engineered cotton crop. The   cotton, produced by Monsanto, contains a gene for resistance to the   company's herbicide glyphosate, sold as Roundup.  Some 320 000   hectares across the US were planted with the cotton this season, its   first on the market. Most farmers are happy with the results. But in   Mississippi, and to some extent in Arkansas, Tennessee and Louisiana,   entire fields have shed their bolls--the fluffy part harvested for   fibre--or have developed small, malformed bolls. Robert McCarty,   director of Mississippi's Bureau of Plant Industry in Starkville,   says that only Monsanto plants seem to have failed, over an area   totalling 12 000 hectares. "Cotton right across the road of a   different variety was not affected," he says.  _____________________________________________   

GE mistake -- GE sugar beet refined illegally.   
1997, December 3   Reuters

SUMMARY:  A test batch of Monsanto genetically-modified sugar beets was   mistakenly sent to a Dutch refiner and mixed with normal sugar,   company and government officials said on Wednesday. But some pulp   from the beets was sold for use in animal feed before CSM learned   about the error, Peter Dek, commercial director of CSM's sugar   division, told Reuters. The Environment Ministry has launched an   enquiry, which could result in a fine for Monsanto, a spokeswoman   said.  
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Monsanto to be prosecuted over crops.   
1998, December 18   The Independent

SUMMARY:  The Health and Safety Executive is prosecuting both Monsanto and an   agricultural seed company, Perryfields Holdings, over their failure   to comply with  regulations designed to control the spread of pollen   from modified  crops. It was found  that the pollen barrier   surrounding  the trial was only two metres wide on the site of the   trial, rather than  the required six metres. The trial  had already   flowered and  pollination with the surrounding crop may have taken   place.  
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Cotton Growers Blame New Seed For Crop Losses.   
1999, January 25   Augusta Chronicle

 SUMMARY:  Andrew Thompson said he felt like a failure when nearly a quarter of   his cotton crop withered in the field last year, costing him about   $250,000.  He is among about 190 farmers in Georgia, Florida and North Carolina   who have hired attorneys to represent them in a legal dispute with   **Monsanto** Co. and Delta Pine and Land Co. Mr. Thompson's suit   contends the companies rushed the seed to market without adequate   testing and, when they began receiving complaints in 1997, misled   growers and agriculture officials about the extent of the problem.  
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The elusive truth about Benlate.   
1999, Dec 30   Tampa Tribune

 SUMMARY:  In 1991, DuPont pulled the fungicide Benlate 50 DF, blamed for   devastating Florida crops, off  the market. R. Hilton Biggs, a   biochemist from the University of Florida, handled the state's early   investigation into Benlate plant damage. Hollingsworth reports Biggs   "concluded that contaminants in  Benlate, as well as compounds   produced when the fungicide decomposes, combined with certain  environmental factors to create both chemical buildup and an  imbalance in microorganisms in the  soil." This, he said, could   result in toxins. He called Benlate "the second worst chemical   disaster in the history of the world," with only DDT  being more   damaging. Growers  around the country who did not receive settlements   were forced to sue. In the first crop damage  case to come to trial,   DuPont  scientists testified in court that it was safe. Later evidence   surfaced in another trial that DuPont had withheld laboratory results   indicating batches of Benlate may have been contaminated with a   powerful  weedkiller.  _____________________________________________   

French farmer blames Monsanto for GM woe.
1999, Dec 15   Reuters

 SUMMARY:  A French farmer named in a class action lawsuit against Monsanto Co   (NYSE:MTC - news) said he blames the life-sciences giant's   involvement in genetically modified (GM) crops for miring him in a   legal dispute dating back to 1997. Patrick de Kochko, an organic   farmer in southwest France said the lawyers who filed the landmark   antitrust suit against Monsanto on Tuesday asked him to join as a   plaintiff because of legal problems over his 1996 soybean crop. De   Kochko said he believes a unit of Monsanto sold him soybean seeds   containing GM material, which then contaminated his crop and made it   difficult for him to market his soybeans.  _____________________________________________   

GM foods - Revealed: false data misled farmers.   
1999, Feb 21   Independent

 SUMMARY:  Monsanto, the genetic engineering company, included false information   about a genetically engineered crop it wants to sell in a safety   assessment submitted to government advisers. The gene giant was   forced to carry out its research again after it emerged last month   that crucial information about the gene it proposed to put in a new   strain of maize was incorrect. "It's very worrying. This means that   somebody somewhere in Monsanto is getting it wrong," said Janey   White, a molecular biologist.  _____________________________________________   

Genetic guideline breaches revealed.   
2000, Jan 5   Australasian Business Intelligence (Source: The Courier-Mail)

SUMMARY:  According to the Genetic Manipulation Advisory Committee's 1998-99   annual report there have been two serious breaches of Australian   guidelines. In the past financial year, Monsanto Australia Limited   mistakenly breached guidelines regarding herbicide-resistant, or   Roundup Ready, canola. And South Australia-based company GroPep   accidentally released genetically manipulated micro-organisms   containing the bacteria E.coli into the sewer  _____________________________________________   

Officials say unauthorised GM seed grown in UK.
2000, October 10   Reuters

 SUMMARY:  Britain said on Tuesday unauthorised GM sugar beet had been grown by   accident on experimental sites by biotech company Aventis. The   department of the environment said it had been notified that tiny   amounts (0.5 percent) of the unauthorised sugar beet had been found   on two sites. ``Aventis informed the government after discovering a   background level of a second, unauthorised, herbicide tolerant GM   beet line as part of the routine destruction of the crops,'' the   department said in a statement.  The sites had been cleared and the crop had not been allowed to flower, to stop pollen from contaminating nearby crops.
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Poor crop results were replaced by a forgery, Ministry's internal paper  shows.
2000, April 16   The Observer    

SUMMARY:  Results from vital Government-backed crop trials to assess   genetically-modified seeds have been falsified, The Observer can   reveal. Internal minutes from the Ministry of Agriculture, obtained   by this newspaper, show that an employee at a Suffolk-based firm,   Grainseed, manipulated scientific data to make certain seeds in the   trials appear to perform better than they really did. This will cast   a shadow over the Government's programme of GM trials, and further   undermine public confidence in the controversial crop technology. MPs   and environmentalists want the trials suspended.  _____________________________________________   

Plant DNA viruses and gene silencing.
2000, S. N. Covey, Al-Kaff, N. S. Plant Molecular Biology, 43, 307-322

SUMMARY:  Gene silencing is a multifaceted phenomenon leading to propagative   down-regulation of gene expression. Gene silencing, first observed in   plants containing transgenes, can operate both at the transcriptional   and post-transcriptional levels. Silencing effects can be triggered   by nuclear transgenes and by cytoplasmic RNA viruses, and it can be   propagated between these elements and endogenous plant genes that   share sequence homology. Although some aspects of gene silencing are   becoming better understood, little is yet known about the   relationship between nuclear and cytoplasmic events. Plant DNA   viruses, both the ssDNA geminiviruses and the reverse-transcribing   pararetroviruses, have properties with the potential to initiate gene   silencing in the nucleus and in the cytoplasm. Characteristics   include production of multiple copies of viral DNA genomes in the   nucleus, illegitimate integration of viral DNA into host chromosomes   mimicking transgene transformation, and generation of abundant viral   RNAs in the cytoplasm. Evidence is emerging that geminiviruses and   plant pararetroviruses can interact with the gene silencing system   either from introduced DNA constructs or during viral pathogenesis.   Some observations suggest there are complex relationships between DNA   viral activity, transcriptional and post-transcriptional gene   silencing mechanisms. DNA viruses also have properties consistent   with an ability to counteract the plant silencing response. In this   article, features of plant DNA viruses are discussed in relation to   gene silencing phenomena, and the prospects for understanding the   interaction between nuclear and cytoplasmic silencing processes. 71   ref.  
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Monsanto GM seeds contain 'rogue' DNA.   
2000, May 28   The Sunday Herald

 SUMMARY:  Monsanto told the Sunday Herald it was about to  submit the first   full analysis of the genetic sequences in  Roundup Ready soybean for   publication in a scientific  journal. "We've identified two inactive   pieces of the  Roundup Ready gene in addition to the complete Roundup   Ready gene within Roundup Ready soybeans," said Dan  Verakis, a   spokesman for the company. Monsanto has been  informing regulatory   agencies around the world of the  discovery. "Those two pieces were   present within the  soybeans used in all original safety tests and   hence do not  change the conclusion by global regulatory authorities   that  Roundup Ready soybeans are as safe and nutritious as   conventional soybeans," claimed Verakis. But Charlie Kronick, head of   Greenpeace's anti-GM campaign  in the UK, argued that the company's   findings heightened  worries about safety. "Imports of contaminated   seeds have  left the UK and the rest of Europe reeling from further   revelations of the biotechnology industry's failure to  control their   products," he said. "Now Monsanto announces a  new discovery   concerning the genetic make-up of their first  GM product. After   years on the market, Monsanto reveals  that neither the industry or   the regulators actually know  what genes are in it. What else don't   we know?  _____________________________________________   

ERRORS FOUND IN PATENT FOR AIDS GENE, SCIENTISTS SAY;   BIOTECH: NEWS   COMES AMID CONCERNS THAT GENOMICS RACE COULD LEAD TO SHODDY SCIENCE  AND PROFITEERING.

2000, March 21   Los Angeles Times    
SUMMARY:  Scientists have found at least four significant errors in a newly   issued patent of a human gene that plays a role in AIDS infection.   The mistakes in the description of the chemical makeup of the gene   raise questions about the rush to patent genes and could loosen Human   Genome Sciences Inc.'s hold on the patent, genetics experts told the   Times. ``This is a perfect example of the rush to sequence (human   genes),'' said Christopher Broder, a former member of a National   Institutes of Health team that pioneered work on the gene. ``They get   it wrong. They don't know the function.'' Researchers say the gene is   responsible for the production of a protein that sits on the surface   of a cell and is used by the AIDS virus as a docking site. Scientists   targeted the gene after learning that people who have defective   copies of the gene are resistant to HIV infection. Broder said he did   a quick comparison of the amino acid building blocks of the protein   described in the company's patent and he said he found that four of   the 352 amino acids in the protein were incorrectly identified.  _____________________________________________   

Modified beet seed dropped after trial mistake.   
2000, October 9     Financial Times (London)

 SUMMARY:  A German biotech company has unwittingly produced a genetically   modified beet that is resistant to two of the most used herbicides.   But cross-pollination from another trial rendered the beet resistant   to "Roundup", another leading herbicide. The mistake was discovered   when the beet in question was tested in 39 German trials and a   further nine across Europe including the UK, France and the   Netherlands. All of the affected seed was withdrawn.  _____________________________________________   

Europe allows patent on human cloning - by mistake.   
2000, February 22   Reuters

 SUMMARY:  The European Patent Office said on Monday it made a mistake in   recently granting a patent to a process that could include the   cloning of humans. The Munich-based office granted Edinburgh   University a patent on altering cells and human embryos in December,   but the decision only came to public attention after the   environmental group Greenpeace issued a critical statement on Monday.   ``It's a mistake, yes,'' said patent office spokesman Rainer   Osterwadter. ``It could be seen to embrace the cloning of humans.   ``What's missing is the disclaimer that it does not refer to humans.'' Osterwadter said his office could not immediately reverse the decision, but would have to wait for outside parties to file   their opposition to the patent.  _____________________________________________   

Lab creates killer virus by accident - Special report: the ethics of genetics.
2001, January 11   Guardian    

SUMMARY:  Australian scientists who made a killer virus by accident have raised   the spectre of biological weapons in the hands of terrorists or rogue   states. The virus kills mice, not humans. The researchers were   actually working on a mouse contraceptive vaccine for pest control,   according to New Scientist today. But they started with a mousepox   virus that normally made laboratory mice feel mildly ill. They   inserted an extra gene, and ended up with a virus that wiped out all   animals in nine days. The result astonished them: the Il-4 killed the   mice by shutting down a vital part of their immune system. It also made the engineered virus unnaturally resistant to normal vaccines.