Journal Article10.1038/81132
Transgenic plants as factories for biopharmaceuticals.
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TL;DR: Transgenic plant-derived biopharmaceuticals, such as glucocerebrosidase, could become much cheaper and more plentiful through production in transgenic plants, making immunization programs in developing countries cheaper and potentially easier to administer.
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Abstract: Plants have considerable potential for the production of biopharmaceutical proteins and peptides because they are easily transformed and provide a cheap source of protein. Several biotechnology companies are now actively developing, field testing, and patenting plant expression systems, while clinical trials are proceeding on the first biopharmaceuticals derived from them. One transgenic plant-derived biopharmaceutical, hirudin, is now being commercially produced in Canada for the first time. Product purification is potentially an expensive process, and various methods are currently being developed to overcome this problem, including oleosin-fusion technology, which allows extraction with oil bodies. In some cases, delivery of a biopharmaceutical product by direct ingestion of the modified plant potentially removes the need for purification. Such biopharmaceuticals and edible vaccines can be stored and distributed as seeds, tubers, or fruits, making immunization programs in developing countries cheaper and potentially easier to administer. Some of the most expensive biopharmaceuticals of restricted availability, such as glucocerebrosidase, could become much cheaper and more plentiful through production in transgenic plants.
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References
Occurrence, fate and effects of pharmaceutical substances in the environment- A review
Bent Halling-Sørensen,S. Nors Nielsen,P.F. Lanzky,Flemming Ingerslev,Hans-Christian Holten Lützhøft,S.E. Jørgensen +5 more
TL;DR: Present knowledge does not reveal if regular therapeutic use may be the source of a substance carried by sewage effluent into the aquatic system, even though clofibrate, a lipid lowering agent, has been identified in ground and tap water samples from Berlin.
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Production of antibodies in transgenic plants
A. Hiatt,R Cafferkey,K Bowdish +2 more
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that production of immunoglobulins and assembly of functional antibodies occurs very efficiently in tobacco and Assembly of subunits by sexual cross might be a generally applicable method for expression of heterologous multimers in plants.
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Immunogenicity in humans of a recombinant bacterial antigen delivered in a transgenic potato.
Carol O. Tacket,Hugh S. Mason,Genevieve Losonsky,John D. Clements,Myron M. Levine,Charles J. Arntzen +5 more
TL;DR: The present study was conducted as a proof of principle to determine if humans would also develop a serum and/or mucosal immune response to an antigen delivered in an uncooked foodstuff.
614
Production of correctly processed human serum albumin in transgenic plants.
Peter Christiaan Sijmons,Bernardus Martinus Maria Dekker,Barbara Schrammeijer,Theo C. Verwoerd,P. J. M. van den Elzen,Andreas Hoekema +5 more
TL;DR: A modified CaMV 35S promoter is used to direct the expression of chimaeric genes encoding human serum albumin in transgenic potato and tobacco plants and secretion of correctly processed HSA that is indistinguishable from the authentic human protein is demonstrated.
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Production of hepatitis B surface antigen in transgenic plants for oral immunization.
TL;DR: Mice fed transgenicHBsAg potato tubers showed a primary immune response that could be greatly boosted by intraperitoneal delivery of a single subimmunogenic dose of commercial HBsAg vaccine, indicating that plants expressing HBs Ag in edible tissues may be a new means for oral hepatitis B immunization.
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