Ivanov Michail, Buddle Emily A, Ankeny Rachel A
School of Humanities, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, 5005, Australia.
Philosophy Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, 6700 HB, The Netherlands.
Plant J. 2025 Jun;122(6):e70277. doi: 10.1111/tpj.70277.
The development of new gene technologies including gene editing has reinvigorated long-standing global debates about if and how such technologies should be regulated. Many scientists working in agricultural genomics believe that current regulatory approaches are problematic, often emphasizing that the regulatory system is merely a 'bottleneck' that limits research and innovation in crop sciences. The concept of a 'bottleneck' is prominent in discussions in this domain, but we contend that what counts as a 'bottleneck' depends on point of view and the interests and goals of the party that wishes to describe a particular situation as bottlenecked. In this Focused Review, we provide a short account of recent scholarship on gene editing regulation and argue that regulation is an important part of the research development and innovation process that should not merely be viewed as a 'bottleneck.' Regulation permits regulators and diverse publics to engage with research and assess whether the particular application of gene technology is desirable and beneficial beyond the laboratory bench or field. We conclude by providing lessons for scientists working in agricultural genomics, emphasizing the need to move away from visions of 'bottlenecks' and embracing regulation's potential to support the promises associated with agricultural genomics.
包括基因编辑在内的新基因技术的发展,重新引发了全球关于是否以及如何监管此类技术的长期争论。许多从事农业基因组学研究的科学家认为,当前的监管方法存在问题,他们经常强调监管系统仅仅是限制作物科学研究与创新的一个“瓶颈”。“瓶颈”这一概念在该领域的讨论中很突出,但我们认为,什么被视为“瓶颈”取决于观点以及希望将特定情况描述为受阻的一方的利益和目标。在这篇聚焦综述中,我们简要介绍了近期关于基因编辑监管的学术研究,并认为监管是研究发展与创新过程的重要组成部分,不应仅仅被视为一个“瓶颈”。监管使监管机构和不同公众能够参与研究,并评估基因技术的特定应用在实验室台面或田间之外是否可取且有益。我们通过为从事农业基因组学研究的科学家提供经验教训来得出结论,强调需要摆脱“瓶颈”观念,认识到监管在支持与农业基因组学相关的前景方面的潜力。