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Health See other Health Articles Title: Tennessee’s “Lettuce Vaccine” Bill: What You Need to Know About HB1894 Authored by Alexis Baden-Mayer via Organic Consumers Association All of this talk in the mainstream media about the Tennessee legislatures fight against the lettuce vaccine is much ado about nothingbut not because vaccines in our food supply isnt a real threat, as the fact-checkers would have you believe. Edible vaccines might not be approved for the produce aisle yet, but weve known that pharmaceuticals and vaccines are grown in food cropsand are contaminating the U.S. food supplysince 2002 when news broke of the ProdiGene scandal. (More on that below.) Congress made adding drugs to food illegal in 2007. In Section 912 of the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007, Prohibition against food to which drugs or biological products have been added, Congress forbade adding pharmaceuticals, including vaccines, to food unless the FDA has issued a regulation, after notice and comment, approving the use of such drug or such biological product in the food. The FDA never created a process for this, so no pharmaceutical food has ever been commercialized, but many have been tested. Pharmaceuticals and vaccines might not be added to food legally, but they are contaminating food illegally. Even though Congress made adding drugs to food illegal, it continues fund research that could contaminate the food supply. On November 14, 2023, Congressman Thomas Massie (R-KY), got the House to vote unanimously to stop funding transgenic edible plant vaccines [see below], but that prohibition was left out of the new omnibus. So your taxpayer dollars will be funding edible plant vaccines, if the enormous spending bill passes this week, he tweeted on March 4, 2024. Amendment No. 115 Offered by Mr. Massie The Acting CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 115 printed in part B of House Report 118-272. Mr. MASSIE. Madam Chair, I have an amendment at the desk. The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment. The text of the amendment is as follows: At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the following: Sec. __. None of the funds made available by this Act may be used to fund any grant related to any transgenic edible vaccine. The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 864, the gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. Massie) and a Member opposed each will control 5 minutes. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Kentucky. Mr. MASSIE. Madam Chair, I rise in support of my amendment, which states: ``None of the funds made available by this Act may be used to fund any grant related to any transgenic edible vaccine.'' Madam Chair, does the term transgenic edible vaccine sound like something out of a science fiction dystopian novel? Does the term transgenic edible vaccine sound like something out of a horror film? Well, it is not. It is the scientific term that is used for research that we are funding with U.S. taxpayer dollars. This concept that we would inject RNA or DNA into our food supply, that we would encourage plants to grow vaccines within them, and that we would then encourage animals or people to consume these vaccines by consuming the food. Yes, we are funding this, but we should not, and there are several reasons that we should not be funding this. One is, you can't control where the pollen goes from a plant. Many of these experiments happen outside of a greenhouse, outside of controlled facilities. In fact, we saw an incident where a transgenic edible vaccine was being grown in corn many years ago. What happened the next year when they grew soybeans on the same plot where this transgenic edible vaccine was grown? By the way, this vaccine was for pigs. It was to keep them from getting diarrhea. It was never meant for humans. The next year they grew soybeans on that same plot of land, and some of the corn sprouted on its own and was mixed with these soybeans. Five hundred bushels of soybeans were harvested that had to be destroyed because they were commingled. This transgenic edible vaccine that was meant for pigs was commingled with soybeans that could have gone into human food consumption. The offending researchers had to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines. However, do we know if we caught all of the instances of these escapes of this pollen? In fact, this happened not just once, but it happened again and in a different way. The pollen wafted over to a different field, and it pollinated corn in a different field. Over 150 acres of corn had to be destroyed in that instance because they were experimenting with transgenic edible vaccines. In that case, those vaccines were meant for animals. Here recently, however, we have been funding transgenic plant vaccines, edible plant vaccines for human research at University of California, Riverside. They are right now trying to grow spinach and lettuce with the idea that humans would then consume this at a salad bar or something. How do you know the dosage? What does it mean to have informed consent when you don't know what is in your food? What does it mean to have informed consent when you don't know when you are being served medication for dinner? This is such a ridiculous concept that we shouldn't even have to debate it, but here we are. We funded it through the National Institutes of Health, the USDA, and NSF. I will close by saying this: I offered this amendment on the Agriculture appropriations bill to prevent the USDA from funding this type of research. I am offering it on this appropriations bill to prevent it being funded in this appropriations bill, as well. This amendment passed by a voice vote on the Agriculture appropriations bill. I hope that we will see the wisdom in this amendment today and pass this also with unanimous support. Madam Chair, I yield back the balance of my time. The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. Massie). The amendment was agreed to. What we need from our state legislators are bills to ban open-air field trials of pharma crops. Unfortunately, this Tennessee bill, HB1894, does nothing about this. Heres the full text: BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE: SECTION 1. Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 53-1-102(14), is amended by designating the existing language as subdivision (A) and adding the following as a new subdivision (B): (B) Drug also means food that contains a vaccine or vaccine material; SECTION 2. Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 53-1-102, is amended by adding the following as a new subdivision: ( ) Vaccine or vaccine material means a substance intended for use in humans to stimulate the production of antibodies and provide immunity against disease, prepared from the causative agent of a disease, its products, or a synthetic substitute, treated to act as an antigen without inducing the disease, that is authorized or approved by the United States food and drug administration. SECTION 3. This act takes effect upon becoming a law, the public welfare requiring it. This nothing burger of a bill has been used as an excuse for corporate-controlled media fact-checkers to tell us we have nothing to worry about. The truth is that, because of field-tests of genetically engineered crops, including pharma crops, vaccines are contaminating our food supplyand have been since 1992. This first made the news when the ProdiGene scandal (that Congressman Massie referenced above) broke in 2002. A corn crop genetically engineered by ProdiGene to produce a vaccine for pigs contaminated 500,000 bushels of Nebraska soybeans worth $2.7 million. The year after the GMO pig vaccine corn was grown, the same land was used to grow soybeans for human consumption. The soybeans were harvested and sent to the grain elevator before it was discovered that the GMO pig vaccine corn had grown like a weed amongst the soybeans and contaminated the whole lot. The same season, a similar thing happened in Iowa, where 155 acres of corn grown growing next to a plot of ProdiGenes GMO pig vaccine corn was contaminated by windblown pollen. The ProdiGene contamination incidents were said to involve a vaccine for a bacteria-induced diarrhea that infects pigs, but the company was also engineering corn to produce an HIV vaccine and a blood-clotting agent. At the time, ProdiGene had received 85 test permits for experimental open-air trials of genetically engineered biopharmaceutical and chemical crops for planting in at least 96 locations. ProdiGene received a $6 million investment from the Governors Biotechnology Partnership, funded by Monsanto and chaired by Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack. Vilsack, who is currently President Joe Bidens Agriculture Secretary and also served in that role for 8 years in the Obama-Biden Administration, didnt want any restrictions placed on experimental pharma crops. Vilsack said, We should not overreact and hamstring this industry. That his was reaction to the biggest food companies trade lobby, the Grocery Manufacturers Association, when they pleaded with him to protect food crops from pharma crops. ProdiGene is still conducting open-air field trials of pharma crops under a new name, the Applied Biotechnology Institute, but with the same leadership. CEO John A. Howard is still all about plant-based oral vaccines which he says will increase convenience for the consumer. He currently sells: TrypZean, Cellobiohydrolase & Manganese Peroxidase Grown in corn, TrypZean was the first large-scale protein product from transgenic plant technology. It is a synthetic version of trypsin, an enzyme found in the small intestine that digests protein molecules by cutting long chains of amino acids into smaller pieces. Cellobiohydrolase and manganese peroxidase are other synthetic versions of trypsin that the Applied Biotechnology Institute has engineered corn to produce. Trypsins amino acid slicing capacity makes it very useful in genetic engineering. The Applied Biotechnology Institute advertises their synthetic trypsin for use in cell cultures, as well as vaccine and insulin manufacture. A 2014 article published in the Monterey County Weekly, Monterey County is poised to get its first GM crop: corn for pharmaceuticals, quipped that TrypZean resembles cocaine more than corn. Avidin Avidin is the protein found in raw egg white, which combines with biotin and hinders its absorption. The Applied Biotechnology Institute has engineered a GMO version of avidin into corn. According to the abstract of Commercial Plant-Produced Recombinant Avidin, a paper published by John Howard in 2014: Recombinant egg white avidin was the first recombinant protein product manufactured and sold from a plant system. Recombinant avidin is functionally equivalent to chicken avidin, including its binding activity to biotin. This recombinant protein was used to demonstrate that plants cannot only be used to express animal proteins but these could be purified economically to produce a competitive product. Recombinant avidin was also in ground corn meal that was fed to mice to demonstrate that the protein can survive the digestive system and elicit antibodies when orally delivered in the corn matrix. Thus, avidin demonstrated the utility of the plant production system in general as well as its utility as a delivery system for oral vaccines. Endocellulase Endocellulase is an enzyme required to break down cellulose and is useful to the biofuel industry. The Applied Biotechnology Institute has engineered a GMO version of endocellulase into corn, as explained in John Howards 2011 paper, Manipulating corn germplasm to increase recombinant protein accumulation. The most vocal opponents of corn engineered to break down quickly into ethanol are the North American Millers Association. When Syngenta got a GMO ethanol corn they called Enogen approved in 2011, the millers warned that it would only take one kernel of Enogen corn mixed with 10,000 kernels of food corn to ruin the food processing abilities of food corn. Contamination was inevitable. By 2017, Enogen contamination was a regular occurrence forcing farmers to destroy tens of thousands of bushels of corn. It is also suspected to be the reason masa flour produced tamales that were gooey, fell apart and even made some people sick. Brazzein Brazzein is a protein found in the oubli fruit that is up to 2,000 times sweeter than sugar. The Applied Biotechnology Institute has engineered a GMO version of brazzein into corn, as explained in John Howards 2005 paper, Expression of the sweet protein brazzein in maize for production of a new commercial sweetener. Aprotinin Aprotinin is a protein found in the bovine pancreas that has been marketed by Bayer and now Nordic Group in its natural form for use in cardiac surgery to minimize bleeding and reduce the need for transfusion. The drug was removed from the worldwide market in 2007 after studies an increased risk of death with aprotinin compared with other blood clotting agents, but it has since been reapproved for use. It was studied as a COVID treatment, but didnt produce favorable results. A GMO version of aprotinin has been engineered into corn, as explained in this 2014 article edited by John Howard, Production of Pharmaceutical Grade Recombinant Native Aprotinin and Non-oxidized Aprotinin Variants Under Greenhouse and Field Conditions. Hepatitis B Booster Vaccine The Applied Biotechnology Institute has engineered a Hepatitis B booster vaccine into corn, as this 2012 paper by John Howard explains, Production of highly concentrated, heat-stable hepatitis B surface antigen in maize. Have the Applied Biotechnology Institutes GMO pharma corn experiments contaminated the human food supply? No one knows. Nothing changed after the ProdiGene scandal. There are no protections against pharma crops contaminating food crops, and if youre a farmer, theres no way to know if your neighbors are growing them. Virginia Tech used to maintain a database of U.S. GMO field trials, including pharmaceutical crops, but that was taken down in 2017. Today, the U.S. Department of Agricultures Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) provides very little information to the public. The page on Release Permits for Pharmaceuticals, Industrials, Value Added Proteins for Human Consumption, or for Phytoremediation, that is linked from the APHIS website is blank, but if you do an internet search, another page with the same name and a table comes up. According to that table, in 2024, pharmaceutical-producing corn, rice and sunflowers are being grown by the Applied Biotechnology Institute, Edison AgroSciences, Mazen Animal Health and Ventria Bioscience, in California, Kansas and Missouri. APHIS wont tell us exactly what kinds of pharmaceutical and vaccines are being grown in these crops. They consider that CBI (confidential business information). Heres a list of pharma crops gleaned from online searches, including examples from outside the U.S. Make sure to scroll all the way to the end to learn how National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci kicked off the edible vaccine era back in 1998 with a human trial of a potato with E. coli spliced into it: Uzbekistans Tomato COVID Vaccine (January 11, 2024)- Uzbek scientists have created an edible COVID-19 vaccine tomato called TOMAVAC. They spliced the gene encoding the spike protein of the coronavirus into the genome of tomato cells. The tomatoes producing the spike protein have been tested on volunteers and animals. Edible COVID Vaccines for Wild, Farmed & Companion Animals (December 13, 2023)- PlantPharm BioMed, Ltd. has been awarded more than $900,000 by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (USDA APHIS) to produce edible vaccines that will allow wild animals to self-vaccinate, farmed animals to be vaccinated through their feed, and companion animals to be given vaccine treats. The edible vaccines will be produced using the companys proprietary production platform for plant-based vaccines using plants as vaccine factories. The company has previously grown Hepatitis B vaccine in plants that were provided orally in a successful human clinical trial, and several other plant-based biopharma products. PlantPharm has identified 42 vaccines and 550 pharmaceuticals that can be genetically engineered into plants. Spirulina Malaria Vaccine (January 26, 2023)- Mice vaccinated with spirulina engineered to express a malaria parasite protein were protected from infection, setting the stage for future clinical trials. What first impressed me about spirulina was that people could eat it. Its an alga, and its just a bioreactor for the vaccine. But most bioreactors, you cant eat it. Nobodys going to give you cake of other bacteria and say, Why dont you eat this? said scientist Sean Murphy of the University of Washington. His research was conducted in collaboration with Lumen Bioscience. Tomato Colorectal Cancer Vaccine (June 13, 2022)- Korean scientists fed tomatoes engineered to express a colorectal carcinoma (CRC)-associated antigen to mice. Fish Factory Farms Want Edible Plant-Based Vaccines (May 18, 2022)- Factory farms raising fish are plagued an estimated annual mortality of 10 percent and more than $10 billion in losses per year globally. Rather than adopt more sustainable and humane animal welfare standards, they want to try to prevent fish diseases with plant-based edible vaccines. Canadian Lettuce COVID Vaccine (May 9, 2022)- Before striking success with lettuce, scientists at the University of Ottawa tested a variety of edible plants including arugula, Choho hybrid greens, collard greens, cucumber, pepper, radish, spinach and tomato. They finally got lettuce to express the spike protein and chose that as their best candidate for an edible vaccine. Fraunhofer USA and AeroFarms Growing ACE-2 Proteins in Plants for Anti-COVID Gum (May 4, 2022)- Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania developed an experimental chewing gum that used these ACE-2 proteins as a trap for coronavirus particles in saliva. The ACE-2 was grown in plants and powderized to add to the gum. Medicago Gets Plant-Based COVID Vaccine Approved in Canada (March 1, 2022)- Medicago synthesized genetic material from SARS-CoV-2 and inserted it into a soil bacterium that efficiently infects plant cells. The transformed plants produced virus-like particles (VLPs) as they grow. The VLPs were then harvested, purified, and used to make vaccines. Medicago had its COVID vaccine candidate ready in March 2020, less than a month after the company gained access to the viruss genome. Lettuce and Spinach mRNA Vaccines (September 16, 2021)- University of California, Riverside, is turning edible plants like lettuce into mRNA vaccine factories under a $500,000 grant from the National Science Foundation. Ideally, a single plant would produce enough mRNA to vaccinate a single person, said Juan Pablo Giraldo, an associate professor in UCRs Department of Botany and Plant Sciences who is leading the research, done in collaboration with scientists from UC San Diego and Carnegie Mellon University. We are testing this approach with spinach and lettuce and have long-term goals of people growing it in their own gardens, Giraldo said. Farmers could also eventually grow entire fields of it. A Tomato Engineered to Produce a Parkinsons Drug (December 9, 2020)- Researchers in the UK engineered a tomato to produces L-Dopa, a dopamine precursor used to treat symptoms of Parkinsons Disease. Lettuce Engineered to Express IGF-1 (March 2020)- University of Pennsylvania researchers developed a lettuce variety that expresses human insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), which is used to treat muscle disorders and may help heal bone fractures. Too many studies investigating edible vaccines and growing pharmaceuticals in food crops have been published to list them all here, but it all started with
A Potato Spliced with E. coli (April 30, 1998)- National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci celebrated the first edible vaccine trial that tested a potato genetically engineered to produce E. coli on human volunteers. Edible vaccines offer exciting possibilities for significantly reducing the burden of diseases like hepatitis and diarrhea, particularly in the developing world where storing and administering vaccines are often major problems, he said. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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