The
Top 10 New Organisms of 2007
1.
Ashera GD hypoallergenic cat
Lifestyle
Pets has created a cat it calls the Ashera GD, which has been genetically engineered
to be hypoallergenic. The high-tech blend of exotic cat varieties doesn't come
cheap: This kitty in the window retails for $27,000 -- nothing to sneeze at. The
ultra-rich around the world, however, don't mind the price tag. Six of the cats
sold in December, three of them in the company's best market: Russia. Next year,
expect a transgenic cat, which will remain kitten-size throughout its life.
2.
Butanol-producing E. coli
Genetic
engineering is getting so easy, even a kid can do it. A team of students from
the University of Alberta, "the Butanerds," competed in the International
Genetically Engineered Machines competition, creating an E. coli strain that produces
butanol fuel (albeit rather inefficiently). The Butanerds have competition from
a host of well-funded startups, like Synthetic Genomics and LS9, which are trying
to genetically modify single-celled organisms to create the fuels of the future.
3.
Artful fluorescent tadpoles
At
an Ohio State art show earlier this year, Russian artist Dmitry Bulatov presented
his genetically engineered tadpoles, which glow red and green. Bulatov, the curator
of the Kaliningrad Branch of the National Centre for Contemporary Art in Russia,
is one of a handful of artists around the world using biotechnology to create
art. The field is controversial, because it involves experimenting with living
things without a medical or therapeutic purpose. Bulatov edited a collection of
essays on these issues called Biomediale: Contemporary Society and Genomic Culture.
4.
Insulin-producing lettuce
In
July, a University of Central Florida researcher announced he had genetically
modified lettuce heads that produce insulin. They could be transformed into time-release
capsules for people with diabetes, to help them maintain blood-sugar levels without
regular injections.
5.
Super CO2-absorbing trees
With
global warming all over the news in 2007, many schemes have been proposed for
taking greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere. Trees already do the world an admirable
service sequestering carbon dioxide, but scientists at the Oak Ridge National
Laboratory in Tennessee are also genetically modifying poplar trees to increase
the amount of carbon that the trees can store.
6.
Rapid vaccine-making button mushrooms
In
November, Darpa-funded Pennsylvania State University researchers unveiled a new
method for rapidly producing vaccines: genetically engineered button mushrooms.
Pharming, using plants as chemical factories, is beginning to catch on as a cheap
way to synthesize drugs. Within a few years, the Penn State scientists say their
'shrooms will be able to make 3 million doses of vaccine in 12 weeks. Rapid-response
vaccine-making could come in handy in case of a bioterror attack or bird-flu outbreak.
7.
Glow-in-the-dark cats
Photographs
of cats genetically engineered by South Korean scientists to glow red when exposed
to UV light made headlines around the world. What most news stories didn't mention
was the scientific potential for fluorescent creatures: The animals' glow acts
as a "green light" that lets scientists know that their genetic transformations
of other, non-glowing genes have worked.
8.
Cancer-fighting Clostridium bacteria
Surgery,
chemotherapy and radiation treatment mean that a cancer diagnosis is no longer
always a death sentence. But certain oxygen-starved parts of tumors are still
difficult to reach with the old methods. Enter the Clostridium family of bacteria.
Injected into the body, they grow and multiply only in the oxygen-poor parts of
cancer tumors. In September, scientists in the Netherlands showed they could arm
Clostridium bacteria with therapeutic protein genes, essentially creating search-and-destroy
tumor missiles.
9.
Schizophrenic mice
July's
news that Johns Hopkins researchers had created schizophrenic mice was a surprise,
even to scientists who regularly create genetically altered mice to model human
diseases. In recent years, we've seen very big mice, fearless mice, Rain Man mice
and a host of others. But the schizophrenic experience of hallucinations, delusions
of grandeur and paranoia seemed somehow distinctly human. However, scientists
recently identified a single gene called DISC1 as a major schizophrenia risk factor,
leading to the creation of these mice, which lack the gene. Anatomical examinations
revealed similarities between the mice's brains and those of human patients. The
mice also revealed behaviors -- trouble finding food, agitation in open fields
-- that researchers say parallel human schizophrenic activities.
10.
Yeast with poison-sensing rat genes
Temple
University doctors announced in May that they'd genetically modified a strain
of yeast to glow green in the presence of DNT, an ingredient in dynamite. The
scientists used rat olfactory genes to sense the chemical and switch on fluorescent-protein
producing genes. Biosensors might be better than man-made sensors for applications
like detecting nerve gas, because they are cheap to produce.