Making cheap proteinbased drugs in plants

1 / 54
About This Presentation
Title:

Making cheap proteinbased drugs in plants

Description:

Making cheap proteinbased drugs in plants – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:56
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 55
Provided by: chris418

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Making cheap proteinbased drugs in plants


1
Plant Factories
Making cheap protein-based drugs in plants
Chris Hawes School of Life Sciences Oxford
Brookes University
2
With loads of help from Prof. Julian Ma, St
Georges Hospital Medical School leader of the
Pharma Planta consortium
3
Who is in favour of GM technology?
Who would eat GM foods?
Who would take a GM medicine?
4
Genetic modification of plants
  • Disease resistance
  • Weed killer resistance
  • Desirable traits -
    ripening, colour, fragrance
  • Nutritional benefits
  • Medical advances

5
The pressures of increasing population
1.7 (70M) per yr 1 billion in 1800, 6 billion
in 2000
Malnutrition and infectious disease are the major
health concerns
6
A MINOR GLOBAL PROBLEM????
800 MILLION PEOPLE DO NOT HAVE ACCESS
TO SUFFICIENT FOOD TO MEET THEIR
NEEDS MALNUTRITION PLAYS A SIGNIFICANT ROLE IN 6
MILLION DEATHS OF CHILDREN AGED UNDER 5 EACH
YEAR
7
CAUSES OF DEATH (WHO)
Population - 6,000,000,000 Total
deaths - 55,965,000 1. Cardiovascular
disease 17,000,000 2. Infectious disease
14,000,000 3. Cancer 7,000,000 4.
Injuries 5,000,000
8
Extended Programme on Immunisation vaccines
Global statistics (WHO)
Tuberculosis Diphtheria Measles Pertussis
Polio Tetanus
8M cases 2M deaths/yr (major cause of death in
HIV) 50,000 cases 4000 deaths/yr 30M cases
777,000 deaths/yr 45M cases 400,000
deaths/yr 2,836 cases in 2000, 537 cases in
2001 164,000 cases 110,000 deaths/yr in Africa
9
75 of the worlds population depends almost
exclusively on plants for treating illnesses
30M children born every year are not adequately
immunised
How do we make vaccines for people who cannot pay?
10
The cost of new pharmaceuticals
  • New pharmaceuticals take on
    average 10-15 years to develop
  • For every 10,000 compounds currently under
    development, only 1 will be approved for sale to
    the public
  • Approx. 1bn (500m) to bring a new medicine
    to the market

11
Vaccine Investment Decisions
Figure adapted from Rappuoli et al., Science, 2002
Vaccines
Social value
Pharmaceuticals
Economic value
  • Disincentives
  • High costs of development
  • Demand for new vaccines at lowest prices

12
Major Problems
Worldwide production capacity is limited not
enough fermentors to grow microbial or animal
cells 4 molecules consume 75 of production
capacity Increasing demand 40 growth per
annum since 1995 Production facilities cost
250-500 million Developing world cannot afford
Western drugs
13
30 of women with breast cancer overexpress the
HER2 receptor (human epidermal growth factor
receptor 2). This is associated with an
aggressive form of disease. Herceptin works by
targeting HER2-overexpressing tumors and blocking
the HER2 receptors. Herceptin is a monoclonal
antibody
40,000 patients in Britain each year, 13,000
eventually die Cost is 21,800 per course of
treatment Herceptin is licensed for late-stage
breast cancer. In HER-2 positive cancer,
Herceptin reduces the risk of disease recurrence
by 46 Not licensed for early stage treatment
14
What is molecular pharming?
The production of recombinant protein-based
pharmaceuticals in transgenic microbes, yeasts,
animals and plants
Best known - insulin
15
Production Systems for rProteins
E. coli yeast
Animal cells
Transgenicplants
16
Phyto-pharming the production of modern
medicines in genetically modified plants. An
unprecedented opportunity to produce valuable
molecules economically and on a massive scale.
17
A genetically modified plant A plant that
contains a gene that has been inserted
artificially. The inserted gene may come from
another plant or a different species and is
called the transgene.
A TYPICAL TRANSGENE
Gene
Terminator
Promoter

Marker gene
18
GM Plants as Green Factories
  • Plants cells work like human cells, and they can
    make complex proteins.
  • Plants are the only feasible production system
    for some proteins that are required at massive
    scale.
  • Cost
  • Oral vaccines

19
Molecular Pharming
Candidate Protein
Introduction
Transgenic Plants
Plant Expression Vector
Structural Gene
Plantation
Pharmaceuticals
Harvest
Extraction Purification
20
Production host plants
Benefits
Limitations
  • Leafy Crops Large amount of biomass Low
    protein stability
  • Seed crops Protein very stable Lower protein
    yields
  • possible food chain
  • contamination
  • Fruit veg Edible Lower protein yields
  • possible food chain
  • contamination
  • Oil containing Containment, ease of
    extraction Lower yield
  • Plants
  • Suspension Containment, batch consistency,
    Running costs
  • cultures GMP production

21
Extraction of MAbs from transgenic plants
Purification of MAbs from plants
22
Extraction of an AIDs (HIV) antibody from tobacco
plants
23
Antibodies a major success story
  • Highly specific
  • Very stable proteins
  • Low toxicity
  • High drug approval rates
  • Injectable, topical and oral applications

24
What is an antibody?
25
Antibodies (secreted by B cells) bind antigens
(antibody generator)
Antigen-antibody complex destroyed by macrophages
in the blood stream
26
Production costs for antibodies
Cost in per gram
Hybridomas (cultured animal cells)
1000 Transgenic animals
100 Transgenic plants
10
27
The global problem of HIV /AIDS
8000 people die every day from AIDS
40M people are infected with HIV
14,000 new infections every day predominantly in
sub-Saharan Africa
Could we produce enough vaccines with our current
facilities for the global community?
28
HIV microbicides are reagents that neutralise
HIV. They can be applied topically in a gel (in
the vagina or rectum) to prevent sexual
transmission of HIV.
Various antibodies have been raised to the HIV
virus coat proteins As part of the Pharma Planta
project we have been working on one HIV
monoclonal antibody called 2G12. It is produced
in tobacco plants or maize seeds
29
Where to target your molecule of interest
  • Chloroplasts - genes not transferred by pollen
    no contamination of crops
  • Oil bodies oleosins are proteins that insert
    into oil body membranes which have a single lipid
    layer. Use oleosin targeting signals to get
    protein of interest to oil body. Harvest by
    floating on water.
  • Endoplasmic reticulum
  • Cell surface outside the cell
  • Vacuole

30
The Plant Secretory Pathway
V
V
N
PM CW
?
ER
GA
N, nucleus ER, endoplasmic reticulum GA, Golgi
stack V, vacuole PM plasma membrane CW, cell
wall
31
Where to target your molecule of interest
Use the secretory pathway
  • Apoplast (outside the cell)

SP
Foreign Gene
  • Endoplasmic Reticulum
  • Vacuole/protein bodies

32
The northern pacific jellyfish, Aequoria
victoria has a fluorescent protein that glows
green with UV or blue light
The protein is known as GREEN FLUORESCENT PROTEIN
or GFP for short. It was first purified in 1962
by Osamu Shimamura
33
The Green Fluorescent Protein has revolutionised
biology
Some uses
  • Monitoring the expression of genes

34
The Structure of a GFP construct
35
Fluorescent Tobacco Plant
Tobacco Plant
36
Antibody heavy chain retained in the endoplasmic
reticulum
37
Antibody light chain in the vacuole
38
Antibody light chain secreted out of the cell
39
A matter of cost
  • Pharmaceutical factories cost 300-500M

40
GM Plants as Green Factories
  • Plants cells work like human cells, and they can
    make complex proteins.
  • Plants are the only feasible production system
    for some proteins that are required at massive
    scale.
  • Cost
  • Oral vaccines

41
Oral immunisation, a better strategy for
vaccination in developing countries.
42
Creating GM Plants for Hepatitis B Vaccine
1. The Hep B surface antigen gene, is
transferred from yeast into a plant cell (potato
is used as a prototype).
2. Potato plants are regenerated from transformed
cells
3. Hepatitis vaccine is correctly expressed by
potato plants
43
Hepatitis B Human Clinical Results
Average mean IgG titers for all volunteers
Milli-International units (anti-HBsAg)
44
Delivering Oral Vaccines by GM plants
  • Molecular Pharming products will not be foods.

45
Major plant vaccines in development - proof of
concept
Tetanus (UK/USA) Measles (Australia) HIV (Pharma
Planta) Hepatitis B (USA) Cholera, E. coli ,
Norwalk virus (USA) Rabies (UK/USA) Rotavirus
(USA) Respiratory syncytial virus (UK)
46
Will plant derived vaccines and medicines be safe?
Health concerns
47
World Health Organisation WHO is not aware of
scientifically documented cases in which the
consumption of these foods has had negative human
health effects
The European Commission .81 projects which have
received a total EU funding of 70M Euros, and
have involved over 400 scientific teams. Research
on GM plants and derived products .has not shown
any new risks to human health or the environment,
beyond the usual uncertainties of conventional
plant breeding. Indeed, the use of more precise
technology and the greater regulatory scrutiny
probably make them even safer than conventional
plants and foods
The Royal Society (UK) consumption of DNA
poses no significant risk to human health and
additional consumption of GM DNA has no effect.
American Medical Association National Research
Council The Academies of Science from 7
nations US Food and Drug Administration Organisati
on for economic co-operation and development
(OECD) The Society of Toxicology
48
SAFETY
49
MEDICINAL SAFETY
All pharmaceuticals undergo a rigorous series of
safety tests. They are also produced in an
approved and regulated manner (Good Manufacturing
Practice).
Pharmaceuticals produced in plants will be
subject to the same regimes used for all drugs
and medicines.
There is no reason why medicines produced in GM
plants should be any different in terms of
safety, to other recombinant medicines. These
include GM bacteria GM yeast and GM hamster cells
that are currently used to manufacture human
insulin, the hepatitis vaccine and herceptin.
50
Genetic containment
Physical or geographic containment
51
Contained cultivation security and control
Southern Spain
  • Large (200 acre) greenhouses are commonly used
    for horticulture

52
Genetic identification of GM medical crops
  • Potatoes
  • - Clonally propagated
  • - Cooking inactivates proteins under food use
    conditions
  • - Use male sterile plants

Tomatoes - Use seedless varieties or ensure
seedless production with plant hormone
application - utilize colorless line for
identity preservation
53
A biotechnology solution to GM seed identification
Expression of a recombinant HIV MAb in maize is
linked to expression of a fluorescent
marker (jellyfish red fluorescent protein)
54
Development of pharmaceuticals in GM plants
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)