What are CRISPR and other New Breeding Techniques (NBTs)?
At a Glance
New breeding techniques (NBTs) are new methods of genetic engineering that give scientists the ability to more precisely genetically modify crops and animals. Using NBTs, researchers can enhance or silence or insert or remove desired traits. Scientists usually move genes from within species (although there are a few transgenic examples of NBTs), bypassing a common argument against first generation genetic engineering (GMOs), which required crossing the “species barrier” through the transfer of genes from bacteria and other plant species. NBTs also allow researchers to more precisely and quickly insert desired traits from within species than traditional breeding, which is one reason why regulators look at them as a faster version of conventional breeding techniques. Due to these differences with GMOs, plants bred with these techniques have so far faced lower regulatory hurdles than “transgenic” products, although the regulatory landscape is unsettled.
Researchers have used NBTs to engineer products that sailed through the regulatory system, such as the non-browning Arctic Apple and bruise and disease-resistant Simplot potato varieties developed using gene silencing. There are hundreds of CRISPR crops in development with dozens of useful traits but only one approved product in the US—a non-browning mushroom. Despite the fact that NBTs almost never involve transgenics, which had been central complaint of anti-GMO critics, biotechnology skeptics and advocacy groups almost universally have declared their extreme skepticism of NBTs. They refer to CRISPR and other gene editing techniques, and even gene silencing, as “extreme engineering”, and advocate for them to be regulated as transgenic crops are currently.
Science and Politics
Until recently, most genetic engineering relied on transgenic techniques, with modifications made through the addition of genetic material from different species. These modifications led to a range of products, including crops resistant to destructive insects (Bt crops) and herbicides (glyphosate, dicamba). But the regulatory process for traditional GMOs is arduous, taking seven to 13 years and more than one hundred million dollars.
Anti-biotechnology activists have labeled these crops Frankenfoods because they were often created by moving so-called “foreign genes” from one species to another. “Plants and organisms unable to physically reproduce can become unnaturally intertwined,” read a typical NGO posting, headlined “Frankenfood=Genetically Modified Food”. “A novel gene may be cobbled together from a plant virus, a soil bacterium and a petunia plant, for example—creating a kind of botanical Frankenstein,” reads another.
In contrast, few NBTs use transgenics and most new products can be developed in a fraction of the time and cost of conventional or transgenic breeding. There is no finite set of NBTs and future techniques may be put under the same umbrella term, “New Breeding Techniques.” There are currently seven broad, scientific categories of NBTs. Most popular in agricultural biotechnology are gene editing—CRISPR systems and TALENs—and other NBTs, including RNA interference (RNAi) and epigenetic techniques and sprays:
Gene or Genome Editing is a broad category that includes several techniques allowing scientists to do precise editing, including CRISPR. There are three gene editing NBTs:
- ZFNs (Zinc Finger Nucleases) is the oldest of the gene editing technologies, developed in the 1990s and owned by Sangamo BioSciences. It has been primarily used in research for a variety of human diseases, including HIV/AIDS and hemophilia. It is used in plants to stimulate the cell’s naturally occurring DNA repair processes, as an aid in mutagenesis and to enhance the efficiency of transgenic product development.
- TALENs (Transcription Activator-like Effector Nucleases), developed in 2009, offer an easier and more accurate method of gene editing. Its first reported success came in 2012 when researchers at Iowa State University used the technique to develop disease-resistant rice. TALENs result in the few “off-target” effects. The technique has also been used to create hornless cattle (avoiding the painful dehorning practice used by many dairy farmers) and soybeans with higher quality oil.
CRISPR-Cas9 (Clustered Regulatory Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats) is the newest and most powerful of the gene-editing techniques. It is a natural bacterial defense system that scientists have “programmed” to target and edit DNA at precise locations. It offers researchers a relatively inexpensive, easy and quick option to engineer changes. CRISPR is akin to a “biological word processing” system or molecular scissors that allows scientists to snip away weaknesses or insert strengths already found in the species being developed. Researchers cut out a section of DNA. Then, one of two things happens: The loose ends are essentially glued back together, eliminating the undesired trait or weakness. Or a “repair” with a desired trait is inserted into the void.
CRISPR is being widely used in human disease research (Read Biotech 2.0 FAQ on Gene Editing), but there are few approved advances. The agricultural sector is further along. The USDA determined in April 2016 that it will not regulate a non-browning mushroom genetically modified using CRISPR–Cas9, making it the first CRISPR-edited product to receive a green light from the US government.
Other products in development include commodity crops such as corn, soybeans, canola, rice, and wheat engineered for drought resistance, resistance to disease or higher yields. Researchers have used NBTs to remove allergens from peanuts, make various foods more nutritious and breed farm animals resistant to deadly viruses. Scientists believe advanced NBTs could help farmers deal with climate change and a growing global population. CRISPR has been used to create disease-resistant cassava and oilseed crops with high levels of omega-3 fatty acids.
Numerous animal products are being developed including pigs that don’t need to be castrated, piglets protected from disease, and low-fat piglets that better regulate heat (leading less piglet deaths due to cold).
Here is a visual representation of how gene silencing and editing with CRISPR works (Science in the News, Harvard)
Other non-gene editing NBTs include:
- RNAi (RNA interference) is a natural pathway involved in the regulation of gene expression, turning genes on and off. It works by attacking the messenger RNA that carries the instructions for the targeted genetic trait. RNAi has been used in several crops already, including the approved Arctic Apple and various Simplot Innate Potatoes. Scientists have also used RNAi to develop insect and disease resistant crops, crops that neutralize aflatoxin (dangerous to humans) and are exploring its possible use to target bee-killing varroa mites and other harmful insects. Monsanto is working on an RNAi spray to combat weeds that have developed resistance to its glyphosate herbicide. The spray would neutralize the resistance in those weeds.
- Agroinfiltration is used to induce transient gene expression in plants or even in culture in plant cells, and is mostly confined to research or in production of drug proteins.
- Epigenetic approaches (such as RNA-directed DNA methylation) are being explored to manipulate plant DNA without permanently changing it. Modified crops such as soybeans, tomatoes and sorghum have shown increased yields and stress tolerance.
- Site-directed mutagenesis (aka oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis) is a more targeted form of more random chemical or radiation mutagenesis—two techniques which have been in use since the 1930s and have resulted in some 3000 plants. It’s now used mostly as an investigative tool.
The Takeaway
The precision of the new techniques also results in fewer unintended changes. Researchers say there is still the chance of creating so-called “off-target effects” during the slicing and splicing, but say the dangers are minimal with crops. GMO critics argue that there’s no reason to view gene-edited crops differently than transgenic crops even though ‘foreign’ genes are almost never involved.
It’s still not clear whether the USDA has jurisdiction, under current laws, over crops and livestock developed through gene editing that doesn’t involve the insertion of foreign DNA. The agency has concluded that if an edit cannot be distinguished from a natural occurring mutation, it is not a GMO. The United States is working on an overhaul of its patchwork method of regulating this fast-moving sector.
The European Union, which heavily restricts many traditional GMOs in part because of the concern of moving genes across the species barrier, is assessing how to regulate plants and animals developed through these techniques. The commission currently defines GMOs as organisms with alterations that can’t occur ‘naturally’, but it says it will clarify the issue. In Sweden, authorities concluded that CRISPR-edited plants (as long as they don’t contain foreign DNA) shouldn’t be defined as GMOs under EU legislation. Other countries throughout the world are going through their own evaluations as how to regulate NBTs.
Related GMO FAQs
- How are governments regulating CRISPR and New Breeding Technologies (NBTs)?
- How does genetic engineering differ from conventional breeding?
GLP Articles
- CRISPR breathing new life into crop breeding—can it avoid GMO controversy?, Andrew Porterfield, November 21, 2017
- Can epigenetics change the way we breed crops for drought and climate change? Richard Levine, August 23, 2017
- CRISPR conundrum: Is there a line between GMOs and ‘natural’ crops when genes are edited? Andrew Porterfield, April 20, 2017
- White privilege? Will Western activists block CRISPR solution to protecting millions of Africans against malaria?, Eva Glasrud and Justin Smith, December 9, 2015
- Next generation crop precision editing can avoid marketing pitfalls of GMOs, Andrew Porterfield, October 19, 2015
- Next-generation genetic engineering must address public fears, Andrew Porterfield, September 29, 2015
- Ethical and regulatory reflections on CRISPR gene editing revolution, Jon Entine, June 25, 2015
- Hornless cattle make case for gene editing and less restrictive regulation of GM animals, Tabitha M. Powledge, September 9, 2014
Additional Resources
- Video: Plant Breeding Innovation, American Seed Trade Association, July 11, 2017
- VIdeo: What is gene editing and how does it work?, The Royal Society, October 4, 2016
- Video: Genetic Engineering Will Change Everything Forever – CRISPR, Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell, August 10, 2016
- CRISPR: A new toolbox for better crops, Melody M. Bomgardner, Chemical & Engineering News, June 12, 2017
- CRISPR, microbes and more are joining the war against crop killers, Brooke Borel, Nature, March 14, 2017
- CRISPR: An In-Depth Primer On All Its Varieties, Sterling Ericsson, Bioscription, March 31, 2017
- How Gene Editing Will Change Agriculture, Betsy Freese, Successful Farming, November 22, 2016
- What is CRISPR-Cas9 and Why Do We Need to Know About It, Julianna Le Mieux, May 25, 2016
- CRISPR Is Going to Revolutionize Our Food System—And Start A New War Over GMOs, Adele Peters, Fast Company, March 15, 2016
- CRISPR-Cas9: Not Just Another Scientific Revolution, Kenneth Krause, The Doting Skeptic, February 6, 2016
- Europe’s genetically edited plants stuck in legal limbo, Alison Abbott, Nature, December. 15, 2015
- Gene editing of plants – GM through the back door? Greenpeace policy paper, November 30, 2015
- CRISPR tweak may help gene-edited crops bypass biosafety regulation, David Cyranoski, Nature, October 19, 2015
- DuPont Predicts CRISPR Plants on Dinner Plates in Five Years, Antonio Regalado, MIT Technology Review, October 8, 2015
- New Gene-Editing Techniques Mean a Lot of GMO Loopholes, Sarah Zhang, Wired, August 19, 2015
- A Potato Made with Gene Editing, Antonio Regalado, MIT Technology Review, April 20, 2015
- Gene Editing and GMOs, Layla Katiraee, Biology Fortified, February 11, 2015.
- Transgenics: A new breed, Daniel Cressey, Nature, May 1, 2013
- New Breeding Techniques for Plants, NBTPlatform.org
- Gene Editing with CRISPR, Australian Academy of Science