Title: Growth of Inductrial Fermentation Field
1Growth of Inductrial Fermentation Field
- Phase I Biblical ? 1900
- Beer, wine, pickles, cheese, alcohol
- Phase II 1900 ? 1973
- Solvents, organic acids, antibiotics, amino
acids, vitamins, enzymes, insecticides,
nucleotides, coccidiostats, gums, alkaloids,
plant growth factors, animal growth promotants,
SCP, steroids - Mutation, screening, biochemical engineering
- Phase III 1973 ? ?
- Genetic engineering
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4If I were you, Id buy Cetus stock right now
5- Taq polymerase is the most popular of all
reagents requested on NIH grants -
- (Dalton, 1999)
6BIOPHARMACEUTICALS
- 2002 market 31 billion 8 of 390 billion
drug market - 2003 market 40 billion
- 2004 market 55 billion 10 of 550 billion
drug market - 197 products on market
- Clinical entries
- 1995 91 1998 114 2004 800
- 1996 100 1999 132
- 1997 119 2000 137
- Fastest growing Monoclonal Antibodies
- Mainly for cancer
- Market 3- 4 billion
- 13 products
- 160 in clinic
- 2002 FDA approved 20 new products and 15 new
indications - (Robinson, 2002 Mullin, 2003,2004 Sandman,
2005 Maggon, 2005)
7BIOTECH MARKET
(Burrill, 1999 Cunningham, 2002 Gupta Roy,
2002 Mullin, 2004 Schmidt, 2004 Maggon, 2005
Sundman, 2005)
8RECOMBINANT HUMAN INSULIN
- 1994 Market 600 million
- 1995 Market 700 million
- 1997 Market 1 billion
- 2001 Market 2.9 billion
9EPO MARKETS
- 1990 200 million
- 1992 410 million
- 1993 600 million
- 1994 1 billion
- 1995 2 billion
- 1999 3 billion
- 2000 3.5 billion
- 2001 5.7 billion
- 2002 8 billion
- 2004 11.8 billion
-
10- EPO was fortunate choice for AMGENs first
product. - 2004 market 11.8 billion (all companies)
- Market evaluation in 2002 of Amgen 60 billion
- Larger than Pharmacia-Upjohn (50 billion)
- Larger than Schering-Plough (50 billion).
- Approaching Eli-Lilly, Abbott and Wyeth (80-90
billion each). - (Bowden and Crow, 2002 Thayer,
2002 Maggon, 2005)
11RECOMBINANT G-CSF MARKET
- 1991 230 million
- 1993 719 million
- 1995 936 million
- 1999 1.3 billion
- 2001 1.5 billion
- 2004 3.0 billion
12- Human Growth Hormone (HGH)
- Used to be made from pituitary glands of
cadavers - Expensive
- Often contaminated with prions, transmitting
Creutzfeld-Jakob disease - Recombinant HGH from E. coli does not cause
prion disease - Market in 2004 1.8 billion
- (BioPharm Guide 2000 Maggon, 2005)
13Human Growth Hormone
- Expected Sales10 million/year
- 1989 Market 120 million
- 1990 Market 200 million
- 1991 Market 300 million
- 1993 Market 700 million
- 1998 Market 1.1 billion
- Japan 417 million
- USA 335 million
- Europe 332 million
- 1999 Market 1.4 billion
- 2002 Market 1.7 billion
- 2004 Market 1.8 billion
-
(Pranik, 1999 DePalma, 2003 Maggon, 2005)
14Factor VIII
- Blood clotting protein, deficient in
hemopheliacs. - Conventional treatment administration of blood
coagulant products from human plasma. - 60 of hemopheliacs have been infected with HIV,
hepatitis or other diseases. - Approved in 1992.
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16Interferons
- Alpha-
- 70-90 remission in hairy cell leukemia
- 60-70 remission in chronic myeloid leukemia
- 20-40 remission in Kaposis Sarcoma
- Also used for Hepatitis B and C and genital warts
- 1989 world market 125 million
- 1992 world market 800 million
- 1996 world market 1 billion
- 2002 world market 1.4 billion
- Gamma-
- Approved for chronic granulomatous disease in
1990 - Beta-
- Approved for multiple sclerosis in 1993.
- 1995 world market 225 million
- 2002 world market 1 billion
17Monoclonal Antibodies
- In 2000, the largest group of biopharmaceuticals
in industrial development 750 by 250
organizations 35 in phase III clinical trials. - 3 4 billion market in 2003
- Marketed products
- Cancer
- Heart disease
- Transplant rejection
- Early mouse products unsuitable
- Antigenic response
- Had to be humanized by removal of certain
peptide fragments - Made in transgenic mice
- Made in human immune cells
-
(Sedlak, 2000 Baez et al., 2000 Matthews, 2003)
18MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES (mAbs)
- Previously, polyclonal antibodies (pAbs) were
used - Produced by entire immune system of an animal
- Contained various specificities, various
affinities, very variable. - mAbs developed by Georges Kolter and Cesar
Milstein in UK in 1975 by fusing normal
antibody-producing spleen cells from mice with
tumor cells to yield long-lived cell lines
(hybridomas). - Awarded Nobel Prize in 1984 along with Niels
Jerne for his theoretical contribution. - Produced by single cells of immune system
- Mice treated with a single antigen
- Allowed to show immune response
- Spleens removed
- Cells are fused with cells of mouse lymphoma cell
line - Hybridoma cells cloned and screened
- Isolation of cells excreting specific antibody
- Cells humanized by genetic engineering
- By 2002 20 approved (market - 4 billion), 100in
clinical trials - Bring a drug or radioisotope to a target protein
and bind it. - (C. Coty, 2002 A. Loffet, 2002 Pizzi, 2003)
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23BIOCONVERSIONS
- Becoming essential to the fine chemical industry
due to the demand by pharmaceutical and
agrochemical companies for single-isomer
intermediates. - (Rogers, 1999)
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32NEW ENZYME ACTIVITIES BY DIRECTED EVOLUTION
- ß-glucosidase ? ß-galactosidase
- ß-glucuronidase ? ß-galactosidase
- Lipase ? phospholipase
- Indole-3-glycerolphosphate synthetase ?
phosphoribosylanthranilate isomerase - (H. Zhao et al., 2002)
33WHOLE GENOME SHUFFLING
- Increased acid-tolerance of commercial lactic
acid producing Lactobacillus - Tylosin
- Conventional Eli Lilly strain improvement
examining 1 million survivors gave 6-fold
increase over 20 years
34WHOLE GENOME SHUFFLING (cont.)
- WGS in 96 well plates
- mutation
- Wild-type 11 strains
(1.2-1.3x wt.)
22,000 survivors protoplast
fusion
1000
fusants protoplast fusion
7 strains (4-9x
wt.) 7 strains (2-3x wt.) - 1000 fusants
35WHOLE GENOME SHUFFLING (cont.)
- Top strain provided 25 more than best
conventional strain. - Time 1 year
- Total strains 24,000
- (R. Paitnak et al., 2002 Y-X. Zhang et al., 2002)
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