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A General Safety Assessment for Purified Food Ingredients Derived From Biotechnology Crops: Case Study of Brazilian Sugar and Beverages Produced From Insect-Protected Sugarcane

Insect-protected sugarcane that expresses Cry1Ab has been developed in Brazil. Analysis of trade information has shown that effectively all the sugarcane-derived Brazilian exports are raw or refined sugar and ethanol. The fact that raw and refined sugar are highly purified food ingredients, with no...

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Autores principales: Kennedy, Reese D., Cheavegatti-Gianotto, Adriana, de Oliveira, Wladecir S., Lirette, Ronald P., Hjelle, Jerry J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5932186/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29755976
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2018.00045
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author Kennedy, Reese D.
Cheavegatti-Gianotto, Adriana
de Oliveira, Wladecir S.
Lirette, Ronald P.
Hjelle, Jerry J.
author_facet Kennedy, Reese D.
Cheavegatti-Gianotto, Adriana
de Oliveira, Wladecir S.
Lirette, Ronald P.
Hjelle, Jerry J.
author_sort Kennedy, Reese D.
collection PubMed
description Insect-protected sugarcane that expresses Cry1Ab has been developed in Brazil. Analysis of trade information has shown that effectively all the sugarcane-derived Brazilian exports are raw or refined sugar and ethanol. The fact that raw and refined sugar are highly purified food ingredients, with no detectable transgenic protein, provides an interesting case study of a generalized safety assessment approach. In this study, both the theoretical protein intakes and safety assessments of Cry1Ab, Cry1Ac, NPTII, and Bar proteins used in insect-protected biotechnology crops were examined. The potential consumption of these proteins was examined using local market research data of average added sugar intakes in eight diverse and representative Brazilian raw and refined sugar export markets (Brazil, Canada, China, Indonesia, India, Japan, Russia, and the USA). The average sugar intakes, which ranged from 5.1 g of added sugar/person/day (India) to 126 g sugar/p/day (USA) were used to calculated possible human exposure. The theoretical protein intake estimates were carried out in the “Worst-case” scenario, assumed that 1 μg of newly-expressed protein is detected/g of raw or refined sugar; and the “Reasonable-case” scenario assumed 1 ng protein/g sugar. The “Worst-case” scenario was based on results of detailed studies of sugarcane processing in Brazil that showed that refined sugar contains less than 1 μg of total plant protein /g refined sugar. The “Reasonable-case” scenario was based on assumption that the expression levels in stalk of newly-expressed proteins were less than 0.1% of total stalk protein. Using these calculated protein intake values from the consumption of sugar, along with the accepted NOAEL levels of the four representative proteins we concluded that safety margins for the “Worst-case” scenario ranged from 6.9 × 10(5) to 5.9 × 10(7) and for the “Reasonable-case” scenario ranged from 6.9 × 10(8) to 5.9 × 10(10). These safety margins are very high due to the extremely low possible exposures and the high NOAELs for these non-toxic proteins. This generalized approach to the safety assessment of highly purified food ingredients like sugar illustrates that sugar processed from Brazilian GM varieties are safe for consumption in representative markets globally.
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spelling pubmed-59321862018-05-11 A General Safety Assessment for Purified Food Ingredients Derived From Biotechnology Crops: Case Study of Brazilian Sugar and Beverages Produced From Insect-Protected Sugarcane Kennedy, Reese D. Cheavegatti-Gianotto, Adriana de Oliveira, Wladecir S. Lirette, Ronald P. Hjelle, Jerry J. Front Bioeng Biotechnol Bioengineering and Biotechnology Insect-protected sugarcane that expresses Cry1Ab has been developed in Brazil. Analysis of trade information has shown that effectively all the sugarcane-derived Brazilian exports are raw or refined sugar and ethanol. The fact that raw and refined sugar are highly purified food ingredients, with no detectable transgenic protein, provides an interesting case study of a generalized safety assessment approach. In this study, both the theoretical protein intakes and safety assessments of Cry1Ab, Cry1Ac, NPTII, and Bar proteins used in insect-protected biotechnology crops were examined. The potential consumption of these proteins was examined using local market research data of average added sugar intakes in eight diverse and representative Brazilian raw and refined sugar export markets (Brazil, Canada, China, Indonesia, India, Japan, Russia, and the USA). The average sugar intakes, which ranged from 5.1 g of added sugar/person/day (India) to 126 g sugar/p/day (USA) were used to calculated possible human exposure. The theoretical protein intake estimates were carried out in the “Worst-case” scenario, assumed that 1 μg of newly-expressed protein is detected/g of raw or refined sugar; and the “Reasonable-case” scenario assumed 1 ng protein/g sugar. The “Worst-case” scenario was based on results of detailed studies of sugarcane processing in Brazil that showed that refined sugar contains less than 1 μg of total plant protein /g refined sugar. The “Reasonable-case” scenario was based on assumption that the expression levels in stalk of newly-expressed proteins were less than 0.1% of total stalk protein. Using these calculated protein intake values from the consumption of sugar, along with the accepted NOAEL levels of the four representative proteins we concluded that safety margins for the “Worst-case” scenario ranged from 6.9 × 10(5) to 5.9 × 10(7) and for the “Reasonable-case” scenario ranged from 6.9 × 10(8) to 5.9 × 10(10). These safety margins are very high due to the extremely low possible exposures and the high NOAELs for these non-toxic proteins. This generalized approach to the safety assessment of highly purified food ingredients like sugar illustrates that sugar processed from Brazilian GM varieties are safe for consumption in representative markets globally. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-04-26 /pmc/articles/PMC5932186/ /pubmed/29755976 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2018.00045 Text en Copyright © 2018 Kennedy, Cheavegatti-Gianotto, de Oliveira, Lirette and Hjelle. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Bioengineering and Biotechnology
Kennedy, Reese D.
Cheavegatti-Gianotto, Adriana
de Oliveira, Wladecir S.
Lirette, Ronald P.
Hjelle, Jerry J.
A General Safety Assessment for Purified Food Ingredients Derived From Biotechnology Crops: Case Study of Brazilian Sugar and Beverages Produced From Insect-Protected Sugarcane
title A General Safety Assessment for Purified Food Ingredients Derived From Biotechnology Crops: Case Study of Brazilian Sugar and Beverages Produced From Insect-Protected Sugarcane
title_full A General Safety Assessment for Purified Food Ingredients Derived From Biotechnology Crops: Case Study of Brazilian Sugar and Beverages Produced From Insect-Protected Sugarcane
title_fullStr A General Safety Assessment for Purified Food Ingredients Derived From Biotechnology Crops: Case Study of Brazilian Sugar and Beverages Produced From Insect-Protected Sugarcane
title_full_unstemmed A General Safety Assessment for Purified Food Ingredients Derived From Biotechnology Crops: Case Study of Brazilian Sugar and Beverages Produced From Insect-Protected Sugarcane
title_short A General Safety Assessment for Purified Food Ingredients Derived From Biotechnology Crops: Case Study of Brazilian Sugar and Beverages Produced From Insect-Protected Sugarcane
title_sort general safety assessment for purified food ingredients derived from biotechnology crops: case study of brazilian sugar and beverages produced from insect-protected sugarcane
topic Bioengineering and Biotechnology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5932186/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29755976
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2018.00045
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