Andartificialselectionthroughbreeding, orcontrollingwhichplantsreproducewithwhich, canleadtodramaticresultsinjust a fewgenerations, comparedtonaturalselectionsmillionsofyears.
Forexample, around 4,000 yearsago, farmersintheMediterraneantook a leafyweedandbreditwithvarietiestheyacquiredthroughtrade, encouraginganarrayofdesirabletraits.
WhilebiologistsdomakeGMOsin a lab, thewaytheydoitisactuallysortofnatural.
Theyuseorganismsthathavenaturallyevolved a waytogeneticallymodifyplants.
Likeagrobacterium, agroforshort, is a typeofbacteriathatcanmakeGMOs.
Whenagroinfects a plant, itinsertsitsowngenesintotheplant's DNA.
Thosegenesbasicallyinstructtheplanttoproduce a bighouseandlotsoffoodfortheagro.
Butscientistsfiguredouttheycouldremovetheagro's geneticinstructionandreplaceitwith a differentgeneticinstruction, onethatmakes a plantresistanttodiseaseorproducemorenutrients.
ButwecantellittochopupplantDNAinsteadortheDNAofotherorganisms, whichallowsustouseCRISPRas a super-precisegeneeditor.
Basically, itletsuschange, add, orremovegenes.
Thismayseemlikenewfangledtechnology, butitturnsoutwe'vebeeneatingGMOsfor a verylongtime, likethousandsofyears.
Let's gototheThoughtBubble.
WelcometotheInternationalPotatoCenter, headquarteredinLima, Peru, whosevisionis a healthy, inclusive, andresilientworldthroughrootandtubersystems.
I needthaton a T-shirt.
In 2015, scientistsatthecenterwereexaminingsweetpotatoDNAsequenceswhentheystumbleduponsomegenesthatweredistinctlyun-potato-like, genesfromagrobacterium.
Atfirst, theteamthoughttheagrogenesinthesweetpotatoesmighthavebeenfrom a recentinfection.
There's alsopolitics, economics, culture, environmentaleffects, and a lotmore.
Forexample, if a largecorporationpatents, thereforeowns, a particularstrainofgenetically-modifiedseeds, thatcanhaveharmfulfinancialeffectsonsmallfarmerswhohavetopayforlicensestoplanttheseedseachyear.