杏吧原创

Non-addictive CRISPR-edited tobacco could help eliminate smoking

A gene-edited tobacco plant with near-zero nicotine could boost plans to eliminate smoking by making cigarettes non-addictive
Tobacco field
Growing low-nicotine tobacco could help people stop smoking
Description:zakir hossain chowdhury/Barcroft Media via Getty

A gene-edited tobacco plant聽created using the CRISPR technique has the lowest ever amount of nicotine. It could boost聽efforts to reduce nicotine in聽cigarettes to non-addictive levels, as the US plans to do.

Felix Stehle and Julia Schachtsiek at the Technical University of Dortmund in Germany used CRISPR to disable聽six enzymes involved in聽the production of nicotine in聽the tobacco plant. They started with a聽strain that usually contains 16 milligrams of nicotine per gram of dry tobacco, but their gene-edited version has just 0.04 milligrams of聽nicotine per gram 鈥 a reduction of 99.7 per cent.

It is almost undetectable, says Stehle.

Low-nicotine cigarettes are just聽as dangerous as normal ones聽because other substances damage the lungs and cause cancer. However, such cigarettes prevent people becoming addicted and help them give up, according to a 2015 report by聽the World Health Organization (WHO).

Trials of cigarettes with very low nicotine levels show that existing smokers don鈥檛 smoke more to compensate. 鈥淭hat was a surprise to people,鈥 says Alan Boobis at Imperial College London, one of the authors of the WHO report.

The report proposed reducing nicotine levels in cigarettes to non-addictive levels to eliminate smoking worldwide. That proposal was never officially adopted as聽policy, says Boobis, but he hopes聽the WHO will review it.

Meanwhile, some individual countries are pursuing this approach. In March 2018, to force manufacturers to reduce nicotine in all cigarettes.

鈥淎pproximately 5聽million additional adult smokers could quit smoking within one year of implementation,鈥 the then US Food and Drug Administration commissioner Scott Gottlieb said聽at the time. By 2100, more than 33聽million people in the US would have avoided becoming regular smokers, the FDA said.

Before Stehle and Schachtsiek鈥檚 work, the lowest level of nicotine in any tobacco was 0.4 milligrams per gram. This is in a strain created by using conventional, non-CRISPR genetic engineering.

Even this level of nicotine could still be addictive, the WHO report noted. 鈥淚t would be worth testing a lower nicotine content cigarette,鈥 says psychiatrist Dorothy Hatsukami at聽the University of Minnesota, another author of the WHO report.

Stehle did approach one big tobacco company, but those he dealt with weren鈥檛 interested in聽the CRISPR tobacco. 鈥淢aybe they聽are not interested in selling nicotine-free cigarettes because they are less addictive,鈥 he says.

However, Stehle says the pair鈥檚 work isn鈥檛 patentable, meaning anyone could use the same approach to make their own low-nicotine tobacco strains. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really easy,鈥 he says.

Very-low-nicotine cigarettes are quite different to the cigarettes that used to be labelled as 鈥渓ight鈥 or 鈥渓ow tar鈥. These cigarettes are made from normal tobacco 鈥 they just have holes in the filter to dilute the smoke in each puff. There are also a wide range of cigarettes sold as 鈥渘icotine-free鈥 that are made from plants other than tobacco.

Plant Biotechnology Journal

Topics: smoking