The most familiar GMO crops are those which have genes
added to provide resistance to a herbicide, or to fight some disease or pest. The anti-GMO people argue this is messing with mother nature, when you add a gene to corn which comes from some other organism, and that such messing is dangerous. I don't agree, but I can understand why someone might think that way.
But now comes a
report that Chinese scientists have genetically modified wheat to improve its resistance to powdery mildew. What strikes me is the method used:
deleting genes that encode proteins that repress defenses against the mildew. To me, this undermines the anti-GMO argument--you aren't creating a Frankenstein's monster by combining parts from different organisms, you're simply streamlining an organism.
I suspect few anti-GMO types will agree with me.
[Update: this was a very early use of what is now familiar to most: CRISPR. I give myself kudos for seeing this and noting the difference with standard genetic modification so early. Sept. 10, 2018]