Tag: low nicotine

  • Aiming Low

    Aiming Low

    Photo: Taco Tuinstra

    Producing tobaccos with ‘minimally addictive’ levels of nicotine presents significant challenges for breeders and growers.

    By Stefanie Rossel

    In recent years, several countries have been considering mandates for manufacturers to reduce nicotine in combustible tobacco to “minimally addictive levels”—that is, under 0.5 mg/g. By decreasing the habit-forming ingredients, the thinking goes, cigarettes will become less attractive and consumption will decrease.

    A webinar organized by Coresta on Dec. 5, 2023, highlighted the current understanding of LNT production capabilities as well as the successes and failures of applied research in the areas of genetics and agronomy.

    Ramsey Lewis, a university faculty scholar at North Carolina State University in Raleigh, North Carolina, USA, spoke about the opportunities offered by modified plant genetics to reduce tobacco nicotine levels. A standard cigarette filler contains 15 mg to 25 mg of nicotine per gram or 1.5 percent to 2.5 percent, he noted; the World Health Organization recommends a 35-fold reduction, which corresponds to 0.4 mg/g or 0.04 percent of nicotine.

    Nicotine is the most abundant alkaloid in tobacco, accounting for 90 percent to 95 percent of the alkaloid content. As alkaloids are natural plant products, nicotine levels in a tobacco variety depend on genetics and the environment. In the U.S. Nicotiana tabacum collection, there are several lower nicotine species. A decrease in nicotine, however, means an increase in nornicotine, a carcinogenic tobacco-specific nitrosamine.

    Lewis described various low nicotine genetics experiments his team had conducted in 2023, where different known nicotine-expressing genes had been inactivated. While a transgenic approach got them close to a 0 mg nicotine content, the plants in the field were dramatically reduced. In addition, the LNT was high in nornicotine, and its cured leaf quality was altered—both side effects that regulatory authorities wouldn’t accept, Lewis explained. His experiments, which also included a greenhouse trial, showed altered gene expression and altered physiology in low-nicotine plants.

    Plants are living things and complex, Lewis pointed out, which results in several issues for tobacco growers and buyers of low-nicotine tobacco. At present, there are only a small number of commercially available varieties, which means that if LNT was suddenly mandated in a market, the regulation could practically not be translated into action.

    Nicotine is also the natural defense mechanism of tobacco plants. The lower its content, the more the plant is susceptible to disease and insect pests. Lower nicotine also results in lower yields and higher production costs. In addition, Lewis predicted global issues with the “new breeding methodology” and problems with co-mingling. He also raised the question of what should be done with tobacco containing more than 0.4 mg/g of nicotine.

    An Ambitious Target

    Anna Malpica, breeder and R&D manager of Bergerac Seed and Breeding (BSB), a seed company owned by the French growers’ association, introduced her organization’s breeding programs for low-nicotine and ultra-low nicotine tobacco varieties and evaluated the impact of lower alkaloid lines on plant defense. BSB focuses entirely on practical breeding projects. Being based in Europe, the company uses non-GMO and non-gene-editing techniques in its programs. For LNT, the breeder target is to achieve reduced and stable nicotine levels with an industrial variety.

    Nicotine is synthesized exclusively in tobacco roots, transported to leaves and stored in the leaf cell vacuole to protect the plant when it is stressed. The biggest stress for the plant occurs during topping, which is done to reduce the dry matter production in the leaves and improve the plant’s quality. The genome sequence of tobacco provides a large inventory of structural and regulatory genes involved in the now well-known and described nicotine pathway, Malpica related. Researchers benefit from ever more precise studies that quantify the influence of the production environment and the crop management on the nicotine rates in tobacco leaves.

    In its plant breeding strategies for low-nicotine and ultra-low nicotine flue-cured (FC) tobaccos, BSB resorts to three key raw matter sources: a germplasm collection including wild tobaccos with nicotine levels of 0.01 mg/g to 3.97 mg/g; U.S. FC historical lines; and short-cycle, ripening breeding lines originating from North Europe. The shorter the plant cycle, the less nicotine accumulation is observed in the plant, she noted.

    BSB creates large segregating populations from the best seeds, applying strong selection pressure oriented on nicotine rates. It also secures and selects yield quality and some target resistance genes. The objective is to obtain low-nicotine varieties with nicotine levels under the company’s threshold of 10 mg/g. For its ultra-low nicotine breeding programs, BSB adds lines with mutations as initial donor material. The company is capable of breeding very-low nicotine lines with a controlled average nicotine rate of under 1 mg/g. A look at BSB’s low-nicotine breeding activities between 1997 to 2023 revealed that the threshold of 0.4 mg/g has not been reached yet in BSB’s usable lines, though.

    In 2023, the company investigated the impact of low-nicotine breeding on yield, quality and plant defense in a trial using burley, dark and FC varieties. On average, no decrease of yield was observed in the low-alkaloid (LA) varieties. BSB says it has been able to compensate for the genetic yield decrease of the LA lines by population breeding. This, however, could not make up for the lower quality, which on average declined by 24 percent. The lowest nicotine level was obtained in an XC stalk position with 1.5 mg/g in a burley variety. Higher nicotine varieties were less susceptible to budworms whereas there was no significant impact of the nicotine rate on the plants’ susceptibility to the tobacco flea beetle. The role of nicotine on the plant defense front, researchers presumed, may vary from one insect species to another.

    In conventional breeding, Malpica concluded, low nicotine levels of 5 mg/g to 15 mg/g can be obtained with conventional breeding and adapted agronomical practices. They are available from BSB as commercial varieties. Ultra-low nicotine contents of under 0.4 mg/g with acceptable behavior regarding quality and aroma, however, seem difficult to achieve with stability from conventional breeding and are not part of BSB’s portfolio yet.

    Time of Topping

    T. David Reed, extension agronomist for tobacco at the Virginia Tech Agricultural Research and Extension Centers, provided a closer look at the agronomic practices impacting nicotine concentration of FC tobacco. He referred to a 2019 study by Henry, Vann and Lewis, which suggested that proposed regulations mandating lower nicotine concentrations in tobacco products would likely require changes in tobacco production while maintaining yield and quality.

    In standard FC tobacco production practices, Reed pointed out, a population of 13,600 plants per hectare to 16,100 plants per hectare is typical. The topping height is between 18 leaves to 22 leaves per plant, and the total number of leaves amounts to around 296,000 per hectare.

    Topping is a standard production practice, and its timing impacts yield and sucker control. When topping is delayed past the early flower stage, a yield loss of 17 kg per hectare per day may occur. With late topping, the cured leaves are thinner and less bodied.

    Regarding fertilization, nitrogen is the most responsive nutrient in terms of tobacco yield and quality. The nitrogen fertilization rate is determined based on soil texture and depth to a clay layer as well as field history. The recommended nitrogen rate is 67 kg to 90 kg per hectare but can be as high as 112 kg/ha.

    While tobacco is relatively drought tolerant, it is responsive to rainfall and irrigation, with too much rain being a more common occurrence. Unlike other crops, such as certain grains or soybeans, tobacco is not as dependent on timely rainfall to produce an adequate yield. Dry conditions paired with high temperatures can impact cured leaf quality and leaf chemistry.

    According to Reed, the number of harvests or primings has decreased in recent years. For most growers, three harvests are typical; some harvest four times. The time from topping to harvest can range from 8 weeks to 14 weeks or more on a given farm.

    Tobacco growers, Reed emphasized, choose their agronomic practices in order to maximize their yield potential of high-quality, marketable tobacco. Leaf chemistry, sugar or nicotine content are not part of their consideration.

    Reed quoted three studies by Caleb Hinkle that investigated plant population, topping time and topping height of low-nicotine FC production practices in field trials in 2019 and 2020 as well as a collaborative Coresta study of the low-nicotine tobacco agronomic production practices task force. Modified production practices with low-nicotine FC varieties, he concluded, did not consistently reduce nicotine to the proposed target levels. While plant population, topping height and nitrogen fertilization rate had minimum impact, delayed topping had a significant effect, with no topping having the greatest impact on nicotine. Not topping tobacco, Reed stressed, is not commercially viable in the U.S. The growing season was a major factor on nicotine levels. Both yield and leaf quality, as currently measured, were significantly lower with low-nicotine flue-cured varieties. Leaf texture and body were altered, which impacts the handling of the cured leaf.

  • Cabbacis Patents Low-Nicotine Pods in Canada

    Cabbacis Patents Low-Nicotine Pods in Canada

    A U.S. federally licensed tobacco product manufacturer focused on harm reduction products announced today that the Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) has issued patents for its pods comprising blends of very low-nicotine tobacco and hemp for use with electronic nicotine-delivery systems (ENDS).

    Canadian Patent No. 3,151,047 was issued to Cabbacis and includes 27 claims which will expire on September 10, 2040. Earlier in 2022, CIPO also issued Patent No. 3,107,796 to Cabbacis for cigarettes comprising blends of very-low-nicotine tobacco and hemp.

    “I am pleased that both types of our products are now patented in Canada, which is one of our early target countries for commercialization,” said Joseph Pandolfino, founder and president of Cabbacis.

    Credit: Feng Yu

    Primary applications of the company’s very low-nicotine cigarettes and vaping pods in development comprising blends of very low-nicotine tobacco and hemp are to assist smokers of conventional cigarettes to smoke less, transition to less harmful tobacco or nicotine products or quit nicotine use altogether, according to a press release.

    Cabbacis’ patent portfolio includes 25 issued patents and various pending patent applications across the United States, Europe, China, Japan, South Korea, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Mexico, Brazil and other countries. The company holds six U.S. patents.

  • Nicotine not an EU target

    Nicotine not an EU target

    The EU Commission has no intention of proposing that the nicotine content of cigarettes should be reduced.

    In a preamble to a question submitted to the Commission before the November meeting of the Conference of the Parties (CoP) to the World Health Organization’s Framework Conference on Tobacco Control, the Italian MEP Alberto Cirio said that among the ‘political options’ on the table at the CoP was a reduction in the nicotine content of tobacco.

    ‘As this is something that can only be achieved, according to the latest scientific research, by treating the dried leaves with chemical additives or by using genetically modified organisms (GMOs), the use of which is not permitted everywhere, the consequences on health and the jobs of those who make a living from growing tobacco are uncertain,’ Cirio said.

    He then asked whether the Commission could clarify:

    1. ‘If it is true that this option is on the table;
    2. ‘If suitable impact assessments have been carried out, as per the “Better law-making” agreement;
    3. ‘What the limits of the negotiating mandate given to the Commission are, or at least if a decision on this matter would fall under its mandate or not.’

    In reply, the Commission said the reduction of the nicotine content of tobacco products was ‘currently not foreseen in the EU’.

    At the CoP meeting the possibilities to reduce the addictiveness of tobacco products were discussed in general terms based on a report prepared for that meeting.

    ‘As a result, it was decided that a meeting involving experts, regulators and stakeholders should be convened to discuss this matter further,’ the Commission said.

    ‘The possibility to reduce the nicotine content of tobacco products was presented at a lunchtime seminar at that session, referring to an advisory note published by the WHO Study Group on Tobacco Products Regulation.

    ‘While Directive 2014/40/EU on Tobacco Products regulates certain aspects of addictiveness in tobacco products (Articles 7.9, 7.11), the Commission has at the moment no intention to propose any additional measures going beyond the scope of Directive 2014/40/EU.’