Beyond food and
drugs,
biotech fights pollution
On the site of a former hat factory in Danbury, Conn., a
stand of genetically altered cottonwood trees sucks mercury from the contaminated soil.
Across the continent in California, researchers use transgenic Indian mustard plants to
soak up dangerously high selenium deposits caused by irrigation of the nation's bread
basket.
Still others are engineering trees to retain more carbon and thus combat global warming.
The gene jockeys conducting these exotic experiments envision a future in which plants can
be used as an inexpensive, safer and more effective way of disposing of pollution.
"Trees are really made for this ... we just have to trick them to do what we want
them to do," said Richard Meagher, whose University of Georgia students went to
Danbury in 2003 as part of the most advanced, open-air experiment in the United States
involving trees genetically engineered to eat pollution.
Biologists for decades have been trying to exploit the genetic mechanisms that let
microscopic bugs survive in polluted places where most living things die.
Indeed, the 1980 landmark U.S. Supreme Court case that allowed the so-called
"patenting of life" that launched the biotechnology industry centered on
bacteria genetically engineered to clean oil spills.
But simply dumping engineered bugs on polluted sites has its dangers and drawbacks.
Elements like mercury can't be broken down into harmless bits like oil, so researchers
have turned to engineering plants to draw pollutants out of the ground.
Meagher uses genes from E. coli that enable the common bacterium to live amid mercury.
He's spliced them into a variety of plants in the laboratory, where he says his results
are dramatically positive.
But proving genetic engineered plants work outside the lab is the real challenge - and
Danbury, which at the turn of the last century reigned as the hat-making capital of the
world, was a natural destination for his team.
Animal pelts in the town's many factories were softened in mercury baths, and the
resulting waste was dumped outside. Only later did residents understand how mercury
attacks the central nervous system. By then, many longtime factory workers had suffered
from the "Danbury shakes."
Meagher's team planted about 45 engineered cottonwood trees in a polluted lot. The trees
are expected to treat the mercury as a nutrient and draw the toxic element for the soil
with their roots.
Some of the mercury is expected to vaporize into the air while most is stored in the tree.
After several years of growth, the trees will be cut down and incinerated.
Meagher expects to see results from the Danbury experiment later this year. He figures
hundreds of trees per acre would need to be planted to be effective. But if his removal
method works, the cost of cleaning an acre of mercury-laced soil will plummet from about
$2 million to $200,000, Meagher estimates.
Meagher agrees with critics who argue that his solution isn't ideal - but he says the
trees beat the current clean-up method of digging out contaminated sites and dumping the
tainted soil in toxic dumps. Meagher said he's also hoping to someday deploy genetic
engineered trees in northern India and Bangladesh where arsenic poisoning is rampant.
Drinking water throughout the region has been contaminated by soils polluted naturally and
by spills and drainage from factories.
Still, some potential allies are wary.
The Sierra Club and others fret that grime-busting plants and their unnatural,
industrial-strength cleaning genes will contaminate naturally growing relatives. Promises
that researchers are engineering sterility into trees don't calm their concerns.
"I'm a pediatrician and I can tell you birth control doesn't work 100 percent of the
time," said Dr. Jim Diamond, the Sierra Club's biotechnology expert. "I don't
see it working in trees either."
The criticism sows seeds of public uncertainty and makes it difficult for researchers to
fund and apply their work. Meagher is operating on about $1 million in grants, mostly from
the Department of Energy, which is saddled with polluted weapons sites.
Meagher also says he's hindered by political apathy and commercial disinterest. A company
he helped launched to bring his technology to market is struggling for financing.
"It's not as sexy as trying to cure cancer or give you an erection," Meagher
said.
Nonetheless, scientists are increasingly joining this once obscure branch of
biotechnology.
Researchers at Purdue University are engineering trees to retain more carbon in an effort
to combat global warming. Applied PhytoGenetics Inc., the biotech company Meagher helped
launch, also has planted its modified trees at a polluted site in Alabama.
Another example is the work of University of California-Berkeley researchers who are
tweaking the genes of the Indian mustard plant to clean up selenium deposits in the
California's Central Valley. They've planted small plots of their creations near Fresno
last year, and say the results are promising.
Selenium is naturally occurring but becomes toxic when high-density pockets form because
of water flow. Selenium poisoning can stunt growth and cause brain disorders, among other
health risks.
"This is a really good way to bring new resources to solve environmental
problems," said Berkeley scientist Danika LeDuc. "But first, we do have to
increase public confidence in the technology."
Paul Elias
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