The creatures are known as
"extremophiles," and they earn the name: They live in toxic Superfund cleanup
sites, boiling deep-sea rift vents, volcanic craters and polar glaciers -- some
of the planet's harshest environments.
These single-celled creatures owe their hardiness to
genes, and that has drawn the attention of a few biotech companies. The
companies train the genes to mass produce industrial-strength enzymes for such
products as better detergents, cleaner chemicals and more effective DNA
fingerprints.
Such "bio-prospecting" efforts have huge potential
for good. They just might make hazardous waste cleanup more affordable, reduce
pollution and make better medicines if the microbes' genetic durability can be
exploited and controlled.
But tough questions are being raised as well -- about
the morality of allowing private companies to patent and profit from Mother
Nature.
The extremophile candidates are numerous. There's
Deinoccus radiodurans, dubbed Conan the Bacterium by its legions of fans because
it withstands 10,000 times the amount of radiation that would kill a human.
Found on radiated food, it has a unique ability to repair broken DNA.
In Chile's moonlike Atacama desert -- one of Earth's
driest spots -- lives another extremophile scientists say could give them clues
to what life might look like on Mars.
And the Pentagon's research arm, the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency, is sponsoring experiments on genetically engineering
extremophiles to extend the shelf life of blood-clotting platelets in extreme
conditions. The idea is to help treat battlefield wounds.
Objections to such work often come from activists who
complain that Third World countries aren't properly compensated for microbes
extracted from their deserts, mountains and sea shores.
"The concern with bio-prospecting is that the people
who consider themselves to be the stewards of the biodioversity in a region
often aren't consulted or are ignored," said Beth Burrows of the Edmonds
Institute, a environmental nonprofit based in Edmonds, Wash.
Native Hawaiians are angry over a deal between the
University of Hawaii and a biotechnology company to share in potential profits
gleaned from lava sludge. Now the Hawaiian Legislature is considering a
moratorium on the transfer or sale of extremophiles found on public lands so
environmental and profit-sharing issues can be worked out.
Antarctica is governed by an international treaty
that vows to keep the continent open and free to scientists dedicated to
peaceful pursuits. But some 92 patents have been filed in the United States and
another 62 in Europe that claim ownership of biological property found
there.
While such patent applications appear to be legal,
"some scientists active in Antarctica worry about whether outright commercial
exploitation and patents are within the spirit of the treaty," said Sam
Johnston, who co-wrote a report on the subject for the United Nations this
year.
The Edmonds Institute sued the National Park Service
in 1997 after it gave San Diego-based Diversa Corp. commercial rights to
prospect for extremophiles in the fabled hot springs of Yellowstone National
Park. The prospecting, involving fees and royalties paid to the government, was
ultimately approved by a judge on the condition that an extensive environmental
review be completed.
The park service has defended the deal _ which
remains on hold pending the review _ as a way for it to profit on scientific
research without disrupting the park's environment. Four decades ago, the park
service wasn't so financially savvy when a University of Wisconsin researcher
discovered the extremophile Thermus aquaticus in a Yellowstone
hotspring.
Today, that bacterium provides a key enzyme --
polymerase -- used for polymerase chain reaction, better known as PCR, a Noble
Prize-winning DNA fingerprinting technique used widely by crime labs, hospitals
and university researchers.
Yellowstone doesn't receive any income from sales of
the PCR enzyme, now a key tool in the $300 million-a-year DNA fingerprinting
business.
The companies involved say that without the ability
to patent extremophiles, they can't make good on the many promises of this area
of biotechnology.
David Estell, a researcher at Genencor International
Inc., said bio-prospecting requires the collecting of just a few samples, which
hardly disturbs the environment.
Genencor is one of the few profitable biotechnology
companies in existence, earning $13 million in the first quarter of 2004 on $94
million in revenue.
Genencor has the genetic material of 15,000 strains
of microbes stored in deep-freeze in Palo Alto and the Netherlands. It already
has 11 industrial products on the market, and is using living material --
enzymes and proteins, rather than fossil fuels -- to develop cleaner and cheaper
ways of making industrial chemicals.
For instance, Genencor takes a gene that gives a
microbe alkaline resistance and uses it to create enzymes for laundry detergent.
One enzyme is used in Tide detergent, another is used to give jeans a faded
look.
Both are produced by extremophiles found thriving in
highly alkaline lakes in East Africa and Kenya. The extremophile genes
responsible for making these enzymes are genetically engineered into commonplace
bacteria, which are then coaxed to grow by the trillions in giant brewers' vats
at Genencor's nine factories around the world.
"The goal," Estell said, "is make proteins do
something they've never done before."