Genetically Modified Tomato Study Provides More Evidence of GM Food Safety


A new study comparing genetically modified (GM) and conventional tomatoes lends further support to the pro-GM food movement. Cornell University scientists found no significant biochemical differences between the two.
Led by Cornell professor Owen Hoekenga, the researchers extracted roughly 1,000 biochemical metabolites from a group of tomatoes that had been genetically modified to ripen more slowly. Then they compared the metabolic profile of these GM tomatoes to those of unmodified modern and heirloom tomato varieties.
Aside from the GM tomatoes differing in metabolites related to fruit ripening, as they were designed to, there were no significant biochemical difference between the GM and other tomatoes. The results, published in The Plant Genome, challenge the growing belief that GM foods are inherently less nutritious than conventional counterparts.

The findings suggest little or no accidental biochemical changes due to the genetic modification process, Hoekenga said. He hopes the research—which can be adapted and applied to any plant or crop—will prove a "useful way to address consumer concerns about unintended effects" with GM foods.
For more on GMO food safety, see Ronald Bailey's dismantling of five persistent anti-biotech lies.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
GM foods aren't bad because they're unsafe! They're bad because of corporate profits!
That took like two minutes to post. Weird. I guess the squirrels are up early.
They're bad because my faith-based viewpoint says they are.
GM is bad because of leprechauns.
Its like my Irish great-grandmother used to say: "I don't believe in leprechauns, but they're out there!"
Just as long as they keep their hands off my Jersey tomatoes.
But seriously, I can't see how they could do any worse than California tomatoes.
OK - let's try again:
GM food isn't safe until GM fixes those faulty ignition switches!!
/GM on GM crime
I like the play of one alt-text against the other. Nice touch.
Someone linked to a post about "which 7 beers you should stop drinking". They turned out to be mostly ones which have GM corn. I disregarded their list.
You drink beers with corn in them?
I make a couple light pilsners using corn during the winter to enjoy in the summer.
Corn should be reserved for whiskey.
Corn goes into pigs and cows, not alcohol.
Oh, now you've done it! Now the paleotarians are going to show up to rant about grass-feeding.
Silly paleos. Corn is grass.
I don't think we feed them the fibrous parts, bud.
Because I don't think I could get away with distilling my own booze without word getting to the wrong people, I'll settle for lightening up a few lagers with corn.
I'm not going to drink many of these very frequently, but that's not because it's got GM ingredients.
Turns out it was actually 8, not 7. Not sure if we should really give them the clicks though.
Organics.org? I can feel the smug from here.
Reason number 32 why I fucking hate scientishist people telling me that I'm anti-science for not towing their lion.
Genetically modified tomatoes. Isn't that how "Attack of the Killer Tomatoes" started out?
When did the Koch Brothers buy Cornell?
One of my friends is a libertarian PhD student there working on 3D printing. Anarchy!
I most of the health issues with GMO products are on the grain end of things. My reading on the subject has indicated that when the grains are modified to be more resistant to insects this often means increasing the various natural anti-nutrients already in the grains. These anti-nutrients can cause issues in certain people with a genetic predisposition towards autoimmune disease.
GM tomatoes are indistiguishable from ordinary tomatoes.
Aside from the tendency to eat people, that is.
I will say that GM tomatoes, at least ones from my local grocer don't taste nearly as good.
How to find the ways of dyna glo offset smoker with good ways of masterbuilt propane smokers and how it must be good.
It is good when we can get for best deals on black friday smoker for sure.