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November
13, 2003
Genomics
Forrestal Auditorium
Remarks by Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham
Good morning.
Let me begin by welcoming Dr. Craig Venter,
who is, I am sure, familiar to everyone here
today … and Dr. Hamilton Smith, a Nobel
Prize winner and Dr. Venter’s collaborator
on the project we are going to discuss here
today.
Let me also welcome their colleagues from the
Institute for Biological Energy Alternatives,
to the Department of Energy. I had the chance
to visit your lab earlier this year, so I am
please to be able to host you this morning.
We are also joined by Undersecretary Bob Card,
and the Director of the Office of Science, Ray
Orbach.
Thank you all for joining us.
Just three days ago, at the National Press Club,
I announced the Department’s 20-year roadmap
for future science facilities … facilities
that will ensure American primacy in science
and technology well into the 21st Century.
Taken together, this prioritized list of 28
facilities and upgrades, will lead to more world-class
science, greater technological innovation, and
advance American competitiveness.
This is our blueprint for DOE science …
and to a large extent it is a blueprint for
American science, as well.
And a significant piece of our scientific tradition
here at the Department concerns advancing the
frontiers of biological science. Our facilities
plan will do that, as will the work by Craig
Venter and his team that we are here today to
discuss.
I am pleased to announce an extraordinarily
exciting development that is a direct outgrowth
of a successful effort that began 17 years ago
when the Department of Energy decided to map
the human genome.
As a result of years of scientific research
by many dedicated individuals, scientists today
possess the entire DNA sequences, or genomes,
for life forms ranging from human beings to
the most basic single-celled microbes.
Armed with this knowledge, scientists at the
Department of Energy believed that it would
be possible to alter microbes, by changing their
genomes, and create organisms with the biological
abilities to produce hydrogen, accelerate environmental
clean up, and mitigate the long-term impacts
of climate change through sequestering carbon
dioxide.
So just over a year ago, the Department of Energy’s
Office of Science partnered with Dr. Craig Venter,
a leader in the effort to map the human genome,
and awarded the Institute for Biological Energy
Alternatives a three-year, $3 million grant
to reconstruct a bacterial genome from commercially
available DNA strands.
Because this pilot effort showed such promise
so quickly, I traveled to Rockville, Maryland
last April to tour Dr. Venter’s facilities
and announce an additional $9 million grant
for research to understand microbial communities
better and to develop new, biological methods
to capture carbon dioxide and produce hydrogen.
The success of this research thus far has been
nothing short of amazing.
And today we are here to announce a critical
accomplishment along this groundbreaking research
journey.
Dr. Venter and his team from the Institute for
Biological Energy Alternatives have successfully
created a phage, a harmless microscopic life
form that infects bacteria, by stitching together
commercially available genetic materials …
approximately 6,000 DNA bases in size.
This is a remarkable achievement for two reasons:
First, unlike the vast majority of genomic research
which starts with an existing organism and tweaks
it to become more useful, Dr. Venter created
this phage from scratch. Second, he and his
team did this with almost perfect accuracy …
in just a few days… instead of the months
previously required.
Although he has produced a phage and not our
ultimate goal, a microbe that is 100 to 1,000
times larger, this tremendous accomplishment
brings us closer to our goal of developing those
microbes that can be used to address vital Energy
Department missions.
While we are not at the end of this research
journey, this is a remarkable achievement.
So just imagine, in the not-too-distant future,
a colony of specially designed microbes living
within the emission-control systems of a coal-fired
power plant, consuming its pollution …
and its carbon dioxide … makes fossil
fuels as clean an energy source as hydropower.
Or consider the possibility of employing microbes
to radically reduce polluted waters or to reduce
the toxic effects of radioactive waste.
Let me give you one simple example illustrating
that these dreams are not scientific fantasy.
Our researchers have mapped the genome of a
strange microbe, or bug, that can live quite
happily in an environment with one million times
the radiation a human cell could tolerate.
It’s been affectionately nicknamed “Conan
the Bacterium” by the press.
Now that we have sequenced this bug, we are
ready to turn it to our own uses.
Our scientists have already shown that it is
possible, using the work being pioneered by
the Department of Energy and Dr. Venter, to
combine Conan’s radiation resistance properties
with the capabilities of other microbes. The
result is a new radiation-resistant microbe
that can eat organic solvents like those found
at many contaminated Energy Department sites.
We have had great successes with Conan in the
laboratory thus far, and are developing a far
better understanding of how that little bug
can be resistant to so much radiation—an
asset that may prove valuable for a whole range
of uses.
Biological tools like this can also be developed
for nuclear waste clean-up – creating
a powerful tool that can deliver huge savings
in time and money.
We can make specialized microscopic bugs that
eat carbon dioxide, others that can get trees
to grow in barren soil and hostile climates,
and create hydrogen for tomorrow’s fuel
cell vehicles.
The benefits of our microbial research are very
real.
And as we push the frontiers of scientific discovery,
we are looking at all the benefits that will
flow from this research, including those that
extend far beyond Department of Energy missions.
For example, this research can yield important
benefits:
• in medicine, by enabling the development
of better vaccines and safer strategies for
gene therapy;
• in agriculture, through improved crop
yields, better disease resistance, and improved
strategies for combating agricultural diseases;
• and even in homeland security, by providing
an enhanced ability to detect and defeat potential
biothreat agents.
The potential for this research to revolutionize
our future is enormous.
Human beings have always been explorers –
always striving to discover new things and investigate
new frontiers to expand our horizons and improve
our lives.
It’s been that way for all of human history
– from the very earliest days of developing
tools and harnessing the properties of fire,
up until today, as sophisticated technologies
allow us to peer outward to the cosmos or inward
to unlock the mysteries of the atom and the
tiniest, most fundamental building blocks of
life itself.
This microbial research – looking at the
most basic molecular-level process of nature
-- offers tremendous promise for a safer, stronger,
healthier and more secure world.
In fact, I am so optimistic about the success
of our mission, and the benefits that will flow
from it, that I am creating a special subcommittee
of the Energy Department’s Biological
and Environmental Research Advisory Committee
to recommend ways and accelerate this research
and identify the full range of potential benefits,
not only in our energy missions, but in other
areas of vital importance to all mankind.
This committee will be composed of the best
minds in the field. I have appointed Dr. Ray
Gesteland, Vice President for Research and Professor
of Genetics at the University of Utah, to chair
this committee and I have ask him report to
me with their recommendations by March 12, 2004.
I look forward to their findings.
The Department of Energy launched our Genomes
to Life program in July 2002 to develop new
knowledge about how microorganisms can benefit
all of us in ways that go beyond medical applications.
The success of that program exceeded our wildest
expectations.
Today, we are continuing that journey of discovery
as we explore opportunities to apply the fruits
of the human genome program to a vast array
of new purposes.
The research results we celebrate today stand
on the shoulders of discoveries achieved precisely
because the Department of Energy was willing
to take the risk and begin a program in gene
sequencing nearly two decades ago.
We are proud of that tradition and legacy.
We believe that our current Genomes to Life
research investments offer enormous promise
for meeting the energy and security challenges
of this nation.
Thank you. It is now my pleasure to introduce
Dr. Craig Venter.
After his remarks, Dr. Venter and I will be
glad to stay for a few minutes and answer questions.
Press Release R-03-265
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