After years of
detailed study and analysis, the Food and Drug Administration has concluded
that meat and milk from clones of cattle, swine (pigs), and goats, and the
offspring of clones from any species traditionally consumed as food, are as
safe to eat as food from conventionally
bred animals. This
conclusion stems from an extensive study of animal cloning and related food
safety, culminating in the release of three FDA documents in January 2008: a
risk assessment, a risk management plan, and guidance for industry.
Researchers have been
cloning livestock species since 1996, starting with the famous sheep named
Dolly. When it became apparent in 2001 that cloning could become a commercial
venture to help improve the quality of herds, FDA's Center for Veterinary
Medicine (CVM) asked livestock producers to voluntarily keep food from clones
and their offspring out of the food chain until CVM could further evaluate the
issue.
FDA Studies Cloning:
For more than five
years, CVM scientists studied hundreds of published reports and other detailed
information on clones of livestock animals to evaluate the safety of food from
these animals. The resulting report, called a risk assessment, presents FDA's
conclusions that cloning poses no unique risks to animal health, compared to
the risks found with other reproduction methods, including natural mating
the composition of
food products from cattle, swine, and goat clones, or the offspring of any
animal clones, is no different from that of conventionally bred animals
because of the
preceding two conclusions, there are no additional risks to people eating food
from cattle, swine, and goat clones or the offspring of any animal clones
traditionally
consumed as food
FDA issued the risk
assessment, the risk management plan, and guidance for industry in draft form
for public comment in December 2006. Since that time, FDA has updated the risk
assessment to reflect new scientific information that reinforces the food
safety conclusions of the draft.
"Our additional
review only serves to strengthen our conclusions on food safety," says
Stephen F. Sundlof, D.V.M., Ph.D., Director of FDA's Center for Food Safety and
Applied Nutrition. "Meat and milk from cow, pig, and goat clones, and the
offspring of any animal clones, are as safe as food we eat every day."
FDA's concern about
animal health prompted the agency to develop a risk management plan to decrease
any risks to animals involved in cloning. FDA also issued guidance to clone
producers and the livestock industry on using clones and their offspring for
human food and animal feed.
What Is a Clone?
"Clones are
genetic copies of an animal," says Larisa Rudenko, Ph.D., a Molecular
Biologist and Senior Adviser for biotechnology in CVM. "They're similar to
identical twins, but born at different times." Cloning can be thought of
as an extension of the assisted reproductive technologies that livestock
breeders have been using for centuries, such as artificial insemination, and
more recently, embryo transfer and in vitro fertilization.
Animal cloning has
been around for more than 20 years. Most cloning today uses a process called
somatic cell nuclear transfer:
Scientists take an
egg from a female animal (often from ovaries at the slaughterhouse) and remove
the gene-containing nucleus.
The nucleus of a cell
from an animal the breeder wishes to copy is added to the egg.
After other steps in
the laboratory take place, the egg cell begins to form into an embryo.
The embryo is
implanted in the uterus of a surrogate dam (female parent), which carries it to
term and delivers it like her own offspring.
Clones may allow
farmers to upgrade the quality of their herds by providing more copies of their
best animals—those with naturally occurring desirable traits, such as
resistance to disease, high milk production, or quality meat production. These
animal clones are then used for conventional breeding, and their sexually
reproduced offspring become the food-producing animals.
What Cloning Means to
Consumers:
FDA has concluded
that cattle, swine, and goat clones, and the offspring of any animal clones
traditionally consumed as food, are safe for human and animal consumption.
Food labels do not
have to state that food is from animal clones or their offspring. FDA has found
no science-based reason to require labels to distinguish between products from
clones and products from conventionally produced animals.
The main use of
clones is to produce breeding stock, not food. These animal clones—copies of
the best animals in the herd—are then used for conventional breeding, and the
sexually reproduced offspring of the animal clones become the food-producing
animals.
Due to the lack of
information on clone species other than cow, goat, and pig (for example,
sheep), FDA recommends that other clone species do not enter the human food
supply.
(Source:U. S. Food and Drug Administration) Date Posted: January 15, 2008)
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