It’s time India has a conversation about ethics of gene editing
http://www.hindustantimes.com/ opinion/it-s-time-india-has-a- conversation-about-ethics-of- gene-editing/story- ihB3o3DbZEvLeXVGdcYZYN.html
TV Padma is a science journalist based in New Delhi
The views expressed are personal
It’s time India has a conversation about ethics of gene editing
It is unclear whether and how much Indian science policy analysts and academies are addressing the grey areas of technical and socio-political implications of gene editing technologies. Discussions, if any, seem confined to closed scientific circles, and are yet to spill into public discourse. Indian research institutions also need to create the required framework for ethically responsible research.
With
recent news that doctors in California edited the genes of a patient
with Hunters syndrome in what was described as the world’s first
experimental attempt at changing faulty genetic material in a human,
genome editing is fast moving from the labs to clinics and companies.
India
too is readying for genome editing – a technique in which scientists
use ‘molecular scissors’ to snip a faulty gene and repair it or replace
with a correct one. This opens up possibilities for its use in plant and
animal breeding; medicine, public health, and development biology at
the practical level; and designer babies and lean or even micro pigs as
pets at the exotic. Private companies have entered the fray for its
commercial potential to treat inherited genetic disorders, cancers and
neurodegenerative diseases.
But scientists worldwide have also
begun to grapple with emerging ethics, regulation, biosafety and
biosecurity implications of the technology; and are struggling to draw
the fine line between not impeding basic science research and defining
what are societally-acceptable applications. The co-creator of gene
editing, Jennifer Doudna from University of Berkeley, told a recent
conference of science journalists in the US that she did not anticipate
the rapidity with which it would spread. Then she had a nightmare – that
Hitler wanted to use it – which is when she started looking at the
thorny ethical and regulatory issues.
It is unclear whether and
how much Indian science policy analysts and academies are addressing the
grey areas of technical and socio-political implications of gene
editing technologies. Discussions, if any, seem confined to closed
scientific circles, and are yet to spill into public discourse. Indian
research institutions also need to create the required framework for
ethically responsible research.
Most geneticists see it as an extension of previous genetic
modification technologies — and posing, at most, issues of technology.
The department of biotechnology’s (DBT) 1989 guidelines foresaw genome
editing as part of a range of genetic modification technologies. That
said, India’s track record in allaying fears over GM crops is not
exemplary, nor are its science academies proactive on policy issues.
Despite its claims that regulation was in place when GM cotton was first
approved for release in India in 2002, GM cotton was reportedly
illegally sown in Gujarat even before its approval. India’s own GM
mustard may have its merits, but some biotechnologists’ arguments that
it should be released because that Indians are, anyway, consuming
imported oil from GM canola and rapeseed does not pass muster.
Indian
regulators also need to address the capacity of the Indian regulatory
system, given the concerns that genome editing could misfire, impacting
unintended organisms, or altering the genome of bona-fide targets in
unintended ways. There is also potential for misuse by private companies
with access to genetic data. There are worries too that citizen
scientists and DIY (do it yourself) groups may tinker with the
technology.
There
are thorny ethical issues – while most support its use in
non-reproductive cells (so that changes are limited to one specific
organism), there is disagreement over its use in human embryos, and on
germline cells which means changes can be passed on to generations.
A
2016 US National Intelligence report described it as a potential ‘dual
use technology’ that could be misused by some groups in biowarfare. The
report did not specify how or why it is a national security threat, but
subsequent reports by other agencies described how gene editing could be
misused to manipulate human pathogens, make vaccines ineffective,
create neurotoxins or release drug-resistant microbes as part of bio
warfare.
Of particular concern are ‘gene drives’ or selection of
genes for specific traits, which changes the dynamics of inheritance by
favouring one set of genes, and alter ecological balances.
Even as
Indian biotechnologists embark on the research, it would be wise to
learn from the GM cotton experience and initiate a broader dialogue and
foster public trust and understanding. As with all emerging technologies
that interface science with society, there is no need to throw the baby
out with the bathwater.
TV Padma is a science journalist based in New Delhi
The views expressed are personal
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