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Biotech firm buys Tonga's gene pool
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- Subject: Biotech firm buys Tonga's gene pool
- From: "Gill Lacroix" <gill.lacroix@foeeurope.org>
- Date: Wed, 22 Nov 2000 11:27:14 +0100
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- Organization: FoE Europe
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11/22/00 AUSTRALIA: BIOTECH FIRM BUYS TONGA'S GENE
POOL.
By VANESSA WILLIAMS in Melbourne.
AN AUSTRALIAN biotech company
headed by Melbourne Football Club president Joseph Gutnick has secured exclusive
rights to the entire gene pool of the people of Tonga. Autogen Limited will use
the genetically unique DNA of Tongans in its hunt for drugs to treat diabetes,
cardiovascular disease, hypertension, cancers and ulcers.
The research, based
on finding links between diseases and particular genes, could make the company
hundreds of millions of dollars if it led to drugs being commercialised.
The
collaboration is the second of its kind in the world, following the licensing of
the genes of Iceland's population to an international consortium including
German pharmaceutical company Hoffmann-La Roche.
Autogen is also negotiating
the same deal with other Pacific nations in a move that could make it the only
company allowed to perform genetic studies on the entire Polynesian race.
But
it is claimed the Tongans, who number 110,000, have not been told of the deal
which was signed last week. Mr Gutnick is Autogen's chairman and managing
director.
The company's director of research and development, Professor Greg
Collier, said yesterday the deal would bring jobs and a better-funded health
system to Tongans.
A research laboratory on Tonga's main island would be
built next to the country's only hospital, which was government-owned. Patients
at the hospital would be requested to donate blood to Autogen, Professor Collier
said.
The blood would be used to extract DNA from which to form genetic
pedigrees of family members in the hunt for disease-causing genes.
Professor
Collier denied the company was practising "bio-piracy" and said that it had
followed ethical guidelines set down by the World Health Organisation.
"The
Tongan Government will get royalties if anything comes of it, there will be more
jobs and the population will get any drugs that come of the research for free,"
he said.
Patients would be asked for their full, informed consent before
samples were taken.
Autogen will begin collecting DNA samples from Tonga late
this year or early 2001. The DNA of Tonga and other Polynesian nations are
valuable to biotech companies because they are more genetically isolated than
other populations, where families are made up of people of different ethnic
backgrounds.
"Tonga has a lot of history in their family groupings; they know
who is related to whom," Professor Collier said.
But like most Polynesians,
as they became more exposed to the Western culture and diet, Tongans began to
die of Western diseases.
(C) 2000 Advertiser Newspapers Limited.
ADVERTISER (ADELAIDE) 22/11/2000 P2
Gill Lacroix
Biotechnology
Coordinator
Friends of the Earth Europe
T. 32-2-542.0182, F.
32-2-537.5596
"Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual
power. We have guided missiles and misguided men". (Martin Luther
King, Jr.)