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转基因植物及其衍生食品和饲料的安全性与营养评估:动物饲养试验的作用

Safety and nutritional assessment of GM plants and derived food and feed: the role of animal feeding trials.

出版信息

Food Chem Toxicol. 2008 Mar;46 Suppl 1:S2-70. doi: 10.1016/j.fct.2008.02.008. Epub 2008 Feb 13.

Abstract

In this report the various elements of the safety and nutritional assessment procedure for genetically modified (GM) plant derived food and feed are discussed, in particular the potential and limitations of animal feeding trials for the safety and nutritional testing of whole GM food and feed. The general principles for the risk assessment of GM plants and derived food and feed are followed, as described in the EFSA guidance document of the EFSA Scientific Panel on Genetically Modified Organisms. In Section 1 the mandate, scope and general principles for risk assessment of GM plant derived food and feed are discussed. Products under consideration are food and feed derived from GM plants, such as maize, soybeans, oilseed rape and cotton, modified through the introduction of one or more genes coding for agronomic input traits like herbicide tolerance and/or insect resistance. Furthermore GM plant derived food and feed, which have been obtained through extensive genetic modifications targeted at specific alterations of metabolic pathways leading to improved nutritional and/or health characteristics, such as rice containing beta-carotene, soybeans with enhanced oleic acid content, or tomato with increased concentration of flavonoids, are considered. The safety assessment of GM plants and derived food and feed follows a comparative approach, i.e. the food and feed are compared with their non-GM counterparts in order to identify intended and unintended (unexpected) differences which subsequently are assessed with respect to their potential impact on the environment, safety for humans and animals, and nutritional quality. Key elements of the assessment procedure are the molecular, compositional, phenotypic and agronomic analysis in order to identify similarities and differences between the GM plant and its near isogenic counterpart. The safety assessment is focussed on (i) the presence and characteristics of newly expressed proteins and other new constituents and possible changes in the level of natural constituents beyond normal variation, and on the characteristics of the GM food and feed, and (ii) the possible occurrence of unintended (unexpected) effects in GM plants due to genetic modification. In order to identify these effects a comparative phenotypic and molecular analysis of the GM plant and its near isogenic counterpart is carried out, in parallel with a targeted analysis of single specific compounds, which represent important metabolic pathways in the plant like macro and micro nutrients, known anti-nutrients and toxins. Significant differences may be indicative of the occurrence of unintended effects, which require further investigation. Section 2 provides an overview of studies performed for the safety and nutritional assessment of whole food and feed. Extensive experience has been built up in recent decades from the safety and nutritional testing in animals of irradiated foods, novel foods and fruit and vegetables. These approaches are also relevant for the safety and nutritional testing of whole GM food and feed. Many feeding trials have been reported in which GM foods like maize, potatoes, rice, soybeans and tomatoes have been fed to rats or mice for prolonged periods, and parameters such as body weight, feed consumption, blood chemistry, organ weights, histopathology etc have been measured. The food and feed under investigation were derived from GM plants with improved agronomic characteristics like herbicide tolerance and/or insect resistance. The majority of these experiments did not indicate clinical effects or histopathological abnormalities in organs or tissues of exposed animals. In some cases adverse effects were noted, which were difficult to interpret due to shortcomings in the studies. Many studies have also been carried out with feed derived from GM plants with agronomic input traits in target animal species to assess the nutritive value of the feed and their performance potential. Studies in sheep, pigs, broilers, lactating dairy cows, and fish, comparing the in vivo bioavailability of nutrients from a range of GM plants with their near isogenic counterpart and commercial varieties, showed that they were comparable with those for near isogenic non-GM lines and commercial varieties. In Section 3 toxicological in vivo, in silico, and in vitro test methods are discussed which may be applied for the safety and nutritional assessment of specific compounds present in food and feed or of whole food and feed derived from GM plants. Moreover the purpose, potential and limitations of the 90-day rodent feeding trial for the safety and nutritional testing of whole food and feed have been examined. Methods for single and repeated dose toxicity testing, reproductive and developmental toxicity testing and immunotoxicity testing, as described in OECD guideline tests for single well-defined chemicals are discussed and considered to be adequate for the safety testing of single substances including new products in GM food and feed. Various in silico and in vitro methods may contribute to the safety assessment of GM plant derived food and feed and components thereof, like (i) in silico searches for sequence homology and/or structural similarity of novel proteins or their degradation products to known toxic or allergenic proteins, (ii) simulated gastric and intestinal fluids in order to study the digestive stability of newly expressed proteins and in vitro systems for analysis of the stability of the novel protein under heat or other processing conditions, and (iii) in vitro genotoxicity test methods that screen for point mutations, chromosomal aberrations and DNA damage/repair. The current performance of the safety assessment of whole foods is mainly based on the protocols for low-molecular-weight chemicals such as pharmaceuticals, industrial chemicals, pesticides, food additives and contaminants. However without adaptation, these protocols have limitations for testing of whole food and feed. This primarily results from the fact that defined single substances can be dosed to laboratory animals at very large multiples of the expected human exposure, thus giving a large margin of safety. In contrast foodstuffs are bulky, lead to satiation and can only be included in the diet at much lower multiples of expected human intakes. When testing whole foods, the possible highest concentration of the GM food and feed in the laboratory animal diet may be limited because of nutritional imbalance of the diet, or by the presence of compounds with a known toxicological profile. The aim of the 90-days rodent feeding study with the whole GM food and feed is to assess potential unintended effects of toxicological and/or nutritional relevance and to establish whether the GM food and feed is as safe and nutritious as its traditional comparator rather than determining qualitative and quantitative intrinsic toxicity of defined food constituents. The design of the study should be adapted from the OECD 90-day rodent toxicity study. The precise study design has to take into account the nature of the food and feed and the characteristics of the new trait(s) and their intended role in the GM food and feed. A 90-day animal feeding trial has a large capacity (sensitivity and specificity) to detect potential toxicological effects of single well defined compounds. This can be concluded from data reported on the toxicology of a wide range of industrial chemicals, pharmaceuticals, food substances, environmental, and agricultural chemicals. It is possible to model the sensitivity of the rat subchronic feeding study for the detection of hypothetically increased amount of compounds such as anti-nutrients, toxicants or secondary metabolites. With respect to the detection of potential unintended effects in whole GM food and feed, it is unlikely that substances present in small amounts and with a low toxic potential will result in any observable (unintended) effects in a 90-day rodent feeding study, as they would be below the no-observed-effect-level and thus of unlikely impact to human health at normal intake levels. Laboratory animal feeding studies of 90-days duration appear to be sufficient to pick up adverse effects of diverse compounds that would also give adverse effects after chronic exposure. This conclusion is based on literature data from studies investigating whether toxicological effects are adequately identified in 3-month subchronic studies in rodents, by comparing findings at 3 and 24 months for a range of different chemicals. The 90-day rodent feeding study is not designed to detect effects on reproduction or development other than effects on adult reproductive organ weights and histopathology. Analyses of available data indicate that, for a wide range of substances, reproductive and developmental effects are not potentially more sensitive endpoints than those examined in subchronic toxicity tests. Should there be structural alerts for reproductive/developmental effects or other indications from data available on a GM food and feed, then these tests should be considered. By relating the estimated daily intake, or theoretical maximum daily intake per capita for a given whole food (or the sum of its individual commercial constituents) to that consumed on average per rat per day in the subchronic 90-day feeding study, it is possible to establish the margin of exposure (safety margin) for consumers. Results obtained from testing GM food and feed in rodents indicate that large (at least 100-fold) 'safety' margins exist between animal exposure levels without observed adverse effects and estimated human daily intake. Results of feeding studies with feed derived from GM plants with improved agronomic properties, carried out in a wide range of livestock species, are discussed. The studies did not show any biologically relevant differences in the parameters tested between control and test animals. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

摘要

本报告讨论了转基因植物源食品和饲料安全与营养评估程序的各个要素,特别是动物饲养试验在全转基因食品和饲料安全性及营养测试方面的潜力和局限性。遵循了转基因植物及其衍生食品和饲料风险评估的一般原则,如欧洲食品安全局转基因生物科学小组的指导文件中所述。在第1节中,讨论了转基因植物源食品和饲料风险评估的任务、范围和一般原则。所考虑的产品是转基因植物衍生的食品和饲料,如玉米、大豆、油菜和棉花,通过引入一个或多个编码农艺输入性状(如除草剂耐受性和/或抗虫性)的基因进行改良。此外,还考虑了通过广泛的基因改造获得的转基因植物源食品和饲料,这些改造针对代谢途径的特定改变,以改善营养和/或健康特性,如含有β-胡萝卜素的大米、油酸含量增加的大豆或黄酮类化合物浓度增加的番茄。转基因植物及其衍生食品和饲料的安全性评估采用比较方法,即把食品和饲料与其非转基因对应物进行比较,以识别有意和无意(意外)的差异,随后评估这些差异对环境、人类和动物安全以及营养质量的潜在影响。评估程序的关键要素是分子、成分、表型和农艺分析,以识别转基因植物与其近等基因对应物之间的异同。安全性评估侧重于:(i)新表达蛋白质和其他新成分的存在和特性,以及天然成分水平超出正常变异的可能变化,以及转基因食品和饲料的特性;(ii)转基因植物因基因改造可能出现的无意(意外)影响。为了识别这些影响,对转基因植物及其近等基因对应物进行了比较表型和分子分析,同时对代表植物中重要代谢途径的单一特定化合物进行了靶向分析,如大量和微量营养素、已知的抗营养物质和毒素。显著差异可能表明存在无意影响,需要进一步调查。第2节概述了对全食品和饲料进行安全与营养评估的研究。近几十年来,在辐照食品、新型食品以及水果和蔬菜的动物安全性和营养测试方面积累了丰富经验。这些方法也适用于全转基因食品和饲料的安全性和营养测试。已报道了许多饲养试验,其中将玉米、土豆、大米、大豆和番茄等转基因食品长期喂给大鼠或小鼠,并测量了体重、饲料消耗、血液化学、器官重量、组织病理学等参数。所研究的食品和饲料来自具有改良农艺特性(如除草剂耐受性和/或抗虫性)的转基因植物。这些实验大多未表明暴露动物的器官或组织出现临床效应或组织病理学异常。在某些情况下,注意到了不良影响,但由于研究存在缺陷,难以解释。还对目标动物物种中具有农艺输入性状的转基因植物衍生的饲料进行了许多研究,以评估饲料的营养价值及其性能潜力。在绵羊、猪、肉鸡、泌乳奶牛和鱼类中进行的研究,比较了一系列转基因植物与其近等基因对应物和商业品种的营养物质体内生物利用度,结果表明它们与近等基因非转基因品系和商业品种相当。在第3节中,讨论了可用于食品和饲料中特定化合物或转基因植物衍生的全食品和饲料安全性与营养评估的体内、计算机模拟和体外毒理学测试方法。此外,还研究了90天啮齿动物饲养试验在全食品和饲料安全性与营养测试方面的目的、潜力和局限性。讨论了经合组织单一明确化学品指南测试中描述的单次和重复剂量毒性测试、生殖和发育毒性测试以及免疫毒性测试方法,并认为这些方法足以对包括转基因食品和饲料中的新产品在内的单一物质进行安全性测试。各种计算机模拟和体外方法可能有助于转基因植物源食品和饲料及其成分的安全性评估,例如:(i)通过计算机模拟搜索新蛋白质或其降解产物与已知有毒或致敏蛋白质的序列同源性和/或结构相似性;(ii)模拟胃液和肠液,以研究新表达蛋白质的消化稳定性,以及用于分析新蛋白质在加热或其他加工条件下稳定性的体外系统;(iii)筛选点突变、染色体畸变和DNA损伤/修复的体外遗传毒性测试方法。目前全食品安全性评估的主要依据是针对低分子量化学品(如药品、工业化学品、农药、食品添加剂和污染物)的方案。然而,未经调整,这些方案在全食品和饲料测试方面存在局限性。这主要是因为可以给实验动物投喂定义明确的单一物质,其剂量是预期人类暴露量的非常大的倍数,从而提供了很大的安全边际。相比之下,食品体积大,会导致饱腹感,并且只能以预期人类摄入量的低得多的倍数纳入饮食中。在测试全食品时,由于饮食的营养不平衡或存在具有已知毒理学特征的化合物,实验室动物饮食中转基因食品和饲料的可能最高浓度可能会受到限制。用全转基因食品和饲料进行的90天啮齿动物饲养研究的目的是评估毒理学和/或营养方面潜在的无意影响,并确定转基因食品和饲料是否与其传统对照物一样安全和营养,而不是确定定义明确的食品成分的定性和定量内在毒性。该研究的设计应根据经合组织90天啮齿动物毒性研究进行调整。精确的研究设计必须考虑食品和饲料的性质、新性状的特征及其在转基因食品和饲料中的预期作用。90天动物饲养试验具有很大的能力(敏感性和特异性)来检测单一明确化合物的潜在毒理学影响。这可以从关于各种工业化学品、药品、食品物质、环境和农业化学品毒理学的报道数据中得出结论。可以模拟大鼠亚慢性饲养研究对检测假设增加量的化合物(如抗营养物质、毒物或次生代谢物)的敏感性。关于检测全转基因食品和饲料中潜在的无意影响,少量且低毒潜力的物质在90天啮齿动物饲养研究中不太可能产生任何可观察到的(无意)影响,因为它们将低于无观察到效应水平,因此在正常摄入水平下对人类健康不太可能产生影响。持续90天的实验动物饲养研究似乎足以发现各种化合物的不良影响,这些影响在慢性暴露后也会产生不良影响。这一结论基于文献数据,这些研究通过比较一系列不同化学品在3个月和24个月时的研究结果,调查了在啮齿动物3个月亚慢性研究中是否充分识别了毒理学影响。90天啮齿动物饲养研究并非旨在检测对生殖或发育的影响,除非对成年生殖器官重量和组织病理学有影响。对现有数据的分析表明,对于广泛的物质,生殖和发育影响并非比亚慢性毒性测试中检查的终点更敏感。如果转基因食品和饲料的数据有生殖/发育影响的结构警示或其他迹象,那么应考虑进行这些测试。通过将给定全食品(或其单个商业成分之和)的估计每日摄入量或人均理论最大每日摄入量与亚慢性90天饲养研究中每只大鼠每天平均消耗的量相关联,可以确定消费者的暴露边际(安全边际)。在啮齿动物中测试转基因食品和饲料的结果表明,在无观察到不良影响的动物暴露水平与估计的人类每日摄入量之间存在很大(至少100倍)的“安全”边际。讨论了在广泛的家畜物种中对具有改良农艺特性的转基因植物衍生饲料进行饲养研究的结果。研究未显示对照动物和试验动物在测试参数上有任何生物学相关差异。

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