The future of Genetic engineering with weed

bursto

Well-Known Member
firstly i'm not a fan of GMO,:-( but I've been wondering for a few days now after watching un natural selection on netflix.

where the future of weed will go, if using the CRISPR method is now so easy and you can splice in anything you want like glowing mice etc..

what would be the best things that could be achieved by genetic engineering with our favorite plant :weed:

obviously they would try to get to ridiculous THC or CBD levels or engineer weed that is mite proof or mold proof, glow in the dark or sterile weed

i'm kinda out of ideas after that, what is the next great thing that is most likely to be coming our way?

or what other organisms DNA, could be spliced into weed?
 
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Bongoloid

Well-Known Member
firstly i'm not a fan of GMO,:-( but I've been wondering for a few days now after watching un natural selection on netflix.

where the future of weed will go, if using the CRISPR method is now so easy and you can splice in anything you want like glowing mice etc..

what would be the best things that could be achieved by genetic engineering with our favorite plant :weed:

obviously they would try to get to ridiculous THC or CBD levels or engineer weed that is mite proof or mold proof, or glow in the dark or sterile weed

i'm kinda out of ideas after that, what is the next great thing that is most likely to be coming our way?

or what other organisms DNA, could be spliced into weed?
The hemp part of it is way more important than the recreational, maybe they will engineer a perennial cannabis plant that grows as big as maple and save the planet. Depends on where the money is.

 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
For the most part you currently hear nothing but opposition from cannabis growers regarding GMO weed. My guess is that as soon as someone comes out with BT cannabis seeds like BT corn many of those that have been railing against possible GMO weed and are growing outside will have no problem growing BT weed if it protects against pests. People are against things until it benefits them.
 
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Drop That Sound

Well-Known Member
What if they modified some type of algae or simple organism to grow THC resins. Possibly even via artificial photosynthesis, without any light? There is a lot of talk about artificial photosynthesis lately... What if a strain could be modified to grow in low or even no light. Some crazy true albino looking cannabis flowers only, growing out of some weird hyperbolic fusion chamber looking netpot, with feed tubes pumping in acetate mixtures..
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
There used to be a gum they sold at headshop's back in the day for cotton mouth. I forget what it was called but it was like 0.5¢ a piece. It was just really sour from citric acid. Everyone always used to carry around Visine for the red eye.
 

HGCC

Well-Known Member
I would welcome some cotton mouth, I am trying to drink more water lately and it is just so unenticing.

Not sure how worth it it would be to GMO some weed, maybe hemp like that guy mentioned or if people opt to run a full field of outdoor to process into extracts. In terms of flower, idk...I see that as a market along the lines of wine or fancy beer, I don't think GMO would make for a more conneseur level smoking experience. Seems more like it would be geared towards a pack of joints made by philip morris and a case of bud light* from the gas station.

*I see what I did there.

Would not be opposed to giving something with artificially high levels of thc-v (or whatever rare cannibinoid) a try.
 

Fallguy111

Well-Known Member
I think gmo will eventually be used to make plants that produce nonviable pollen and seeds. Then use gmo to produce hype strains that can't be used for breeding and then of course eventually one or two companies will own the pipeline for these genetics.
 

Fallguy111

Well-Known Member
Tinfoil hat time. Use this genetic engineering technology to produce viruses that can wipe out competition. If I was in charge of a company that planned on taking a large chunk of this industry the evil side of me may do something like this. Thankfully we have a solid government that will use regulations to prevent their large donors from doing something like this.
 

bursto

Well-Known Member
found this from ages ago...in dutch passion

cannabis could be genetically modified in a way which would selectively favour production of certain cannabinoid compounds. Natural marijuana produces over 85 different cannabinoid compounds of which THC is the most abundant. Cannabinoids are the only compounds that work in conjunction with the human cannabinoid receptors. Sooner or later people will understand the precise role of each of the cannabinoid family and that will allow a second generation of cannabis medicines to be created. These they will use selective groups of cannabinoids or even individual ones, for highly specific medical purposes.

I expect the pharmaceutical companies will invest heavily to genetically engineer a cannabis strain that yields ultra high levels of the whole spectrum of cannabinoid chemicals. The aim will be to extract and isolate them into individual cannabinoids on an industrial scale using thousands of tons of bud. Once individual cannabinoids are isolated I expect they will find their way into pills for very specific medical purposes. This is the best way for pharma companies to remove the ‘threat’ of homegrown weed, they will simply say that their preparations are more effective because they are more sophisticated.

and this from nature.com

Commercial interest in these strategies is picking up. In 2018, for example, Canopy Growth Corporation in Smiths Falls, Canada — the largest legal cannabis company in the world — paid more than US$300 million in cash and shares to acquire Ebbu, a small company in Evergreen, Colorado, that had developed one of the earliest platforms for manipulating the cannabis genome with the gene-editing system CRISPR–Cas9. And in April, Zenabis, a cannabis producer based in Vancouver, Canada, agreed to purchase 36 tonnes of almost-pure, bacterial-made CBD from medical-cannabis company Farmako in Frankfurt, Germany — the first deal of its kind for biosynthetic cannabinoids.

David Kideckel, a cannabis analyst with financial-services company AltaCorp Capital in Toronto, Canada, describes genetic engineering as a “disrupter” that promises to take a centuries-old agricultural practice into the biotechnology era, with the resulting ripples being felt throughout the cannabis sector worldwide. When it comes to producing cannabis extracts, plants could be supplanted by microbes, and a greater range of cannabinoids could become available for use in medical and recreational products.

If that happens, the iconic cannabis leaf would no longer accurately represent where the active ingredients come from. Instead, a stainless steel bioreactor might be more apt.

Cooking up cannabinoids

Part of the appeal of ditching greenhouses for bioreactors boils down to cost. Currently, 1 kilogram of high-quality CBD extracted from plants sells for a wholesale price of more than $5,000. A deal in 2018 between Ginkgo Bioworks, a synthetic-biology company in Boston, Massachusetts, and Cronos Group, a Toronto-based cannabis producer, outlines a plan to manufacture pure CBD and other cannabinoids for less than $1,000 per kg in yeast.
 
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