Title: Biotechnology
1 Lecture 12 misc and ELSI
- Policy, public safety, research and Frankenfood
- Ag and biotech updates
- New drugs from biodiversity/
- Ethics and politics, and religion
- Antibiotics, biotechnology and molecular
biotechnology - Patents/Ethics
- de novo life/Synthetic Genomics
2 Asilomar Conference on Recombinant DNA
- 1972 Berg Lab experiment designed to clone SV40
fragments into lambda - Then to introduce into E. coli, which is a human
pathogen (this part not completed) - one concern is that escaped recombinant might
generate cancer in hosts - Concerns about potential biohazards, a group of
researchers sent letter to NAS - Convened committee to review in 1974
- Recommended an international conference and to
halt on-going expts
- Photo http//www.californiacoastline.org/cgi-bin/
image.cgi?image1081modesequentialflags0
3 Asilomar Conference on Recombinant DNA
- Feb 75 organized by Paul Berg
- 140 professionals including (mostly) biologists,
lawyers and physicians - Discuss potential biohazards and regulation of
biotechnology - Draw up voluntary guidelines to ensure the
safety of recombinant DNA technology - Prior, due to potential safety hazards,
scientists worldwide had halted experiments - using recombinant DNA technology
- Photo http//www.visitasilomar.com/
4 Asilomar Conference on Recombinant DNA
Principles guiding how to conduct recombinant DNA
technology expts 1. Containment should be made
an essential consideration in the exptl design 2.
Effectiveness of the containment should match
the estimated risk as closely as
possible Suggested use of biological barriers to
limit the spread of recombinant DNA Vectors that
were able to grow in only specified
hosts Physical containment hoods, limited access
or negative pressure labs Good microbiological
practices to limit organism escape Education and
training of all personnel
- Photo http//nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemist
ry/articles/berg/index.html
5 Immediate sanctions
- Strange case of the virus that was miscloned
- Sci Apr 3, 1981 page 27
- UCSD. IKennedy. Cloned Semliki Forest virus
- Class 3 agent (smallpox class), depending on
conditions of use and - geographical location of the laboratory
- Usually produces only a mild fever in man and has
caused only one death - Done Jan (or March/April) 1980
- Trying to beat the competition before the start
date? - PI first said it was a case of sabotage, then
considers cross-contamination when - shipped from Univ of Warwick, from where he
moved - Was repeating the fingerprint when his students
felt the Chairman should be notified - a procedure then but not now 1981 in
violation of the NIHs - recombinant DNA guidelines.
- The cloning violation was perhaps of no great
- significance compared with the fact that
Kennedy had, - for whatever reason, come to lose the trust
of his colleagues. - No record of MOU filed with IBC
6 Frankenfood
- Mar-Apr2000 Mother Jones (Bill McKibben).
Muggles in the Ozone - RE Last winters protest in Seattle
- .it was the most significant protest in America
- since the waning days of Vietnam
- Sometimes it seemed as if no two protestors were
holding the same sign
- Photo http//www.cpinternet.com/mbayly/facesofre
sistance2.htm - http//www.motherjones.com/commentary/power_plays/
2000/03/mckibben.html
7 Agriculture and molecular biotech update
- Proposed ban on genetically modified corn in
Europe - Nov 23, 2007
- EU environmental officials have determined that
two kinds of GM corn could harm butterflies - Affect food chains and disturb life in rivers and
streams - Environment commissioner contends GM corn could
affect certain butterfly species - larvae of the monarch behave differently than
other larvae. - Ban on sale seeds made by DuPont-Pioneer, Dow
Agrosciences and Syngenta - Aug07 protest in France against GM crops
- Modified corn grown in US for years
- 2005 European Food Safety Authority, based in
Parma - Ruled the products were unlikely to harm human
and animal health or the environment - Crops grown using GM corn already imported into
several European countries, including - France and Germany, and used to feed cows and
chickens
8 Agriculture and molecular biotech update
- Reuters, 10/25/07
- European Union authorized imports of four GM
crops - 27 national markets for next 10 years
- Three are corn, two hybrids, and one is sugar
beet - None to be grown in Europe
- Imported as food and animal feed
- Corn and one hybrid by Pioneer/Hi-Bred Intl
(DuPont) - Others by Monsanto, and Monsanto and German KWS
SAAT
9 Biotech foods, processed
- LATimes, 10/22/07 Biotech foods are still hard
to swallow - More than 70 of processed foods such as flour,
cereal, chips - and cookies contain biotech ingredients
- Second-generation
- Hypoallergenic peanuts, vitamin-rich rice,
folate-rich tomatoes, calcium-filled potatoes - Originally, goals were
- Crops that did not rot, spoil, die from frost
- Boost harvests, feed the hungry and fortify the
malnourished - Frankenfoods man-made aberrations
- But, mostly found in processed foods via corn,
soy and canola - Used to withstand herbicides and to resist pests
- Exception virus-resistant papaya from Hawaii
10 Biotech foods
- LATimes, 10/22/07 Biotech foods are still hard
to swallow - GM vs conventional breeding
- 1991 cold-tolerance gene from flounder into
tomato for frost-resistant failed - But 60 US corn contain Bt gene, against European
corn borer - 90 soy has genes from other bacteria for
herbicide resistance - Lemaux, UCB, sorghum- African crop, increase
amino acids, vitamin and mineral content - 2000 daffodil genes into rice, with 23x beta
carotene, vitA - 1990s FDA new allergens created
- 1996 Brazil nut gene into soybean to be more
nutritious but triggered nut allergies - 2000 Starlink corn contained protein that may be
an allergen, made its way into food chain -taco
shell - Allergies when heard about it, but no link proven
11 Finding new drugs, antibiotics, (anti-cancer
cells)
- It's a simple proposition A medicine is merely
a compound that repels or kills or somehow
interferes - with the organisms and processes of disease.
- In short, it is chemistry. Medicines from
aspirin to penicillin are natural chemicals
harnessed - for the benefit of countless millions of
humans. - (LATimes 5/18/06. JBalzar Neptunes Medicine
Chest)
12 Biodiversity Gold in Yellowstones Microbes
- Yellowstone Parks steam vents and Hot Springs
- Unique microbes extremophiles
- Implications in medicine, agriculture and energy
(basic research), (biotechnology) - 1966 TBrock gathered samples of gt80C organisms
from pink algae and microbial mats of Lower
Geyser Basin - Thermus aquaticus to ATCC available for 35
- Taq-based technology sold to Hoffman-LaRoche for
300M - Annual sales today of licenses and equipment run
over 200M - 2006 new species of bacterium that produces
chlorophyll - Unique grasses around hot springs, with symbiosis
with heat-tolerant fungus (drought-resistant
plants) - 1998 research-sharing agreement with Diversa
Corp. bio-prospecting - Disputed by non-profit groups as bio-piracy
- TBrock Yellowstone didnt get any money from
it. I didnt get any money, either, and Im not
complaining. - The Taq culture was provided for public
research use, and it has given great benefit to
mankind.
13 Harvesting from the oceans, biodiversity
- W Fenical, Scripps Institute of Oceanography (Ctr
for Marine Biotech and Biomed)/University of
California - Founded Nereus Pharmaceuticals
- 1983 Carribean sea whip (Bahamas)
- anti-inflammatory and analgesic metabolites,
pseudopterosin - cosmetic rights to Estee Lauder
- 94-95, amount UCs top ten royalty earners
_at_680,000 - First time, a scientifically proven marine
product - UCSB as treatment for wounds, countering
reactions swelling and inflammation to allow
faster healing - Due to pharmaceutical potential and cosmetic
applications, we have been active in the
development of - biotechnological production methods of the
pseudopterosins. - SalA, anti-cancer drug from deep sea floor
bacterium testing for blood and bone cancers - NPI-0058, anti-cancer drug from seaweed fungus
testing for aggressive tumors in lung, breast and
pancreas - 13 other compounds in trials 2001, DNA of
bacteria from sampling of sea floor- no hits with
GenBank
14 Finding new drugs Nereus
15 Approving new drugs
- morning after pill designed to prevent
pregnancy if taken within 72hrs - approved by science panel for OTC
- approved by two senior FDA officials
- overruled by FDA chief, then acting/then
permanent (finally, left) - Lester Crawford
- circumventing normal practices to delay
indefinitely drug approval for further study - nonpartisan congressional inquiry Nov05,
- unusual involvement of the commissioners
office - Should be based on medical science, eg, data and
efficacy not politicized - Similar worry for Guardisil, 2006
- (WAPost 5/25/06)
16 Infectious diseases, epidemics
17 Infectious disease vs vaccines (one approach)
((vs antibiotics))
- Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
- http//pathmicro.med.sc.edu/lecture/vaccines.htm
18 Infectious diseases which is more
dangerous/scary?
- One is graphic, one is not- at the beginning
- 11/29/07 msnbc New deadly strain of Ebola
emerges - 12/3/07 msnbc Outbeak is still ongoing
- Democratic Republic of Congo 51 infected, 16
dead (31) - Analysis show it is a previously unknown strain
- Last major Congo outbreak in 1995 killed 245
people - 2000 Uganda killed gt170 people
- Ebola virus first emerged in 1976, simultaneous
outbreaks in Sudan and Zaire - Zoonotic virus hemorrhagic fever
- Four identified strains, Zaire, Sudan, Reston,
Cote dIvoire (1 case) - Zaire strain killed 80 (-90?) Sudan killed 50
- Incubation period of 15 days
- No treatments
- wikipedia
- http//images.google.com/imgres?imgurlhttp//www.
nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/images/ency/fullsize/
17160.jpgimgrefurlhttp//www.nlm.nih.gov/ - medlineplus/ency/imagepages/17160.htmh320w400
sz18tbnid-DFyXPEyexIBTMtbnh99tbnw124prev
/images3Fq3Debola26um - 3D1start1saXoiimagesctimagecd1
19 Complex disease, complex solution
- One is graphic, one is not- at the beginning
- Consumption
- John Henry Doc Holliday. Aug 14, 1851- Nov 8,
1887 - 1866 mother died of TB
- 1872 started dentistry practice
- Diagnosed with TB (not known to be contagious-
just fatal), - given a few months to live
- Moved to drier warmer southwest US
- Changed lifestyle, more violent. but
- Died in bed of TB
- Wikipedia photo http//www.trainweb.org/chris/o
pt0015.jpg
20 Complex disease, complex solution
- One is graphic, one is not- at the beginning
- TB bacilli doubling time days or weeks, growth
within cells - May or may not cause symptoms
- Common to be infected with dormant bacteria and
never become sick - Current treatment 40-yr old drug regime
- Combination of 4-6 antibiotics taken over 6-9
months - MDR-TB, resistance to at least two of first-line
anti-TB drugs - Second-line drugs taken over 1-2 year period
- If treatment disrupted, then could develop
- XDR-TB strains
- First identified in Spring 06, XDR-TB is
resistant to gt 3 of the six classes - of second-line drugs leaving XDR-TB virtually
untreatable - Diagnosis of TB through sputum smear exam, in use
for 125 years (not optimal)
- http//www.ngpharma.com/pastissue/article.asp?art
271778issue225 photo wikipedia
21 Pulmonary tuberculosis re-emerging
- May 29, 2007 US seeks fliers possibly exposed
to rare TB - (11/28/07 msnbc none of 250 passengers tests
positive) - (11/28/07 msnbc "I feel like I've always felt,"
Speaker said Tuesday. "I feel fine.) - Quarantine order was first since US govt
quarantined patient with smallpox in 1963 - TB spread through air, affecting lungs, killing
2M people per year - TB rate in US had fallen to low of 13,767 in
2006 affecting 4.6 per 100,000 US - Second generation drugs isoniazid and rifampin
(-gt multidrug-resistant, MDR) - (XDR extensively drug-resistant)
- Global concerns in the Jet Age
- 2007 Mexican citizen travels between US and
Mexico despite TB diagnosis
22 Pulmonary tuberculosis Global concerns
- Oct 18, 2007 WATimes Mexican citizen travels
between US and Mexico despite TB diagnosis - Highly contagious form, MDR-TB
- Crossed US border 76x, multiple domestic flights
in past year - Customs and Border Protection agency warned 4/16
Homeland Security six weeks to send alert - PS, used different names
23 Drug-resistant tuberculosis pandemic
- MDR-TB and XDR cases growing among minority and
people born outside US - 2005 CDC tallied 14,097 TB cases in US, with 124
as MDR TB - 1993 to 2006, 49 cases in US 0.5M in world as
XDR - Treatment for XDR case averages 500,000,
exceeding 2M - WHO XDR TB reported in 37 countries
- South Africa KwaZulu-Natal province outbreak
XDR TB killing 52/53 patients with AIDS in 25d - Pandemic?
- Globally, 96 of all TB treatable with the four
drugs in std regime - (former Soviet Union, some countries showing
MDR-TB up to 20) - (Russia, China, India and SAfrica worst-hit with
MDR/XDR at 60 of worlds cases) - (reminiscent of pre-antibiotic era of 1943)
- Globally, 4 are MDR
24 Drug-resistant tuberculosis society/ethics
- msnbc 4/2/07 Involuntary detention,
Quarantine - Drug-resistant TB raises ethical dilemma
- Phoenix county hospital, jail cell 27-yr old TB
patient in cell with negative pressure
ventilation system - not charged with a crime, but locked up
indefinitely due to extensively drug-resistant
XDR-TB - Virtually untreatable, court ordered lock-up
because did not heed instructions to wear a mask
in public - unfair to be treated this way
- (lived in Russia for 15 years, returned to US
last year after diagnosis) - said he realizes now that he endangered the
public. - I thought Id come to a country where Id
finally be treated like a person, and bam, here I
am. - US in 2006 had 13,767 reported cases of TB
- 2007 Texas has placed 17 into an involuntary
quarantine facility - Some run out of options and need to be
quarantined for the rest of their lives - One lived 8 years in SC before dying of TB
escaping once from home detention - should detain people if they are uncooperative
Were on the verge of taking what was a - Curable disease, one of the best known diseases
in human endeavors, and making it incurable. - RUpshur, Joint Centre for Bioethics/ UToronto
- Same ethical dilemma generations ago with leprosy
and smallpox - Now, XDR-TB, drug-resistant staph infections,
pandemic flu
25 Drug-resistant M. tuberculosis comparative
genomics
- 11/20/07 msnbc
- Broad Institute/MIT
- Sequenced genomes of XDR-TB and MDR
(multidrug-resistant) TB, other strains - Found a few mutations which may explain
drug-resistance - Mycobacterium tuberculosis infects up to 2B
people - Most have latent or inactive infections
- 2005 8.8M became infected 1.6M died of it
- Estimated 500k have MDR-TB
- XDR-TB kills 85 of afflicted
- Can take weeks to diagnose standard TB or MDR or
XDR strains
26KILLER BUG ATE MY FACE
- flesh-eating bacteria -necrotizing fascitis
- Streptococcus pyogenes
- Destruction of skin and muscles via toxins
(virulence factors) - Fast-spreading infections mortality rate 30
rare public in 1990s - Treatment includes IV penicillin, vancomycin and
clindamycin - Including aggressive debridement, amputation
- Oct06 EMBO Journal. EHanski. Mechanism of
protein blocking immune system signals - Mouse model SilCR turned off in M14 virulent
strain add back to mouse and survivable - SilCR down-regulates ScpC which destroys host
IL-8 - 2004 rarer more serious form observed, as a
strain of Staphylococcus aureus - Resistant against methicillin
- Super Strep appeared in Ohio and Texas in 92/93
in 140 people - 12 hrs to incapacitate most, and caused 3 days of
high fevers mortality at 10
- Wikipedia photo http//commtechlab.msu.edu/site
s/dlc-me/news/ns195dis1.html
27 Antibiotic-resistant staph infection
- Oct 07. Reuters. New strain of strep emerges
as major US infection - Major cause of childhood infections. But even
drug-resistant versions can be killed with right
antibiotics - Should be aware and switch antibiotics for
children with severe infections who do not
respond quickly - Type of Steptococcus pneumonia, strain 19A,
causing 40 of pneumococcal infections in
children - 15 resistant to ceftriaxone use vancomycin
- Also, increasing numbers of infections with
drug-resistant superbugs - JAMA Oct07 methicillin-resistant Staph aureus,
MRSA, killed 18,650 in 2005 and - made 94,360
seriously sick - Mortality rate exceeds
HIV/AIDS for 2005 - MRSA outbreak killing one caused 21 VA schools to
close in Oct - amednews.com CDC report in recent weeks,
deaths of preschooler in NH 11-yr old in MS - 12-yr old in NY and 17-yr old in VA.
Pittsburgh nine football players in one school
with MRSA - There is still a group of doctors who dont
culture in the interest of costs. - MRSA is part of the bigger problem, accounting
for only 10 of health care-associated
infections - C. difficile, Acinetobacter (returning from
Iraq), Klebsiella -gt all with multidrug-resistance
- Return to the pre-antibiotic era
28 Antibiotic-resistant staph infection Mouse model
- 10/17/07 WAPost Drug-resistant Staph germs toll
is higher than thought - (CDC report/JAMA)
- 11/11/07 msnbc
- Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, MRSA
- First-line antibiotics, eg penicillin family
- Previously associated with health care facilities
(HA-MRSA) and immunocompromised individuals - Recent cases, aggressive strain,
community-acquired MRSA or CA-MRSA - Severe infections and deaths of otherwise healthy
people - CA-MRSA secretes a peptide that causes immune
cells, neutrophils, to burst - Genes for the peptides found in both MRSA and
CA-MRSA but expressed more in CA-MRSA - Mouse and human blood 5 min exposure causes
neutrophils to flatten and show signs of membrane - damage. After 60 min, many cells had
disintegrated completely - (MOtto, et al. Nature Med Nov07) specifically
identifying a factor which seemingly makes - CA-MRSA more pathogenic than HA-MRSA
- Only 14 of MRSA are CA-MRSA, recent months have
been found in schools, including
29 Antibiotics biotechnology
- Nature May06. Merck Pharma
- Problem Rapid resistance to existing
antibiotics recent emergence of superbugs - One potential solution Biodiversity, eg, screen
soil from South Africa - Streptomyces platensis
- platensimycin
- Approach test extracts with bacterium with
genetic defect in metabolic pathway - not targeted by current
antibiotics - 250,000 extracts
- mice infected with problematic strain of
Staphylococcus aureus
30 Antibiotics biotechnology
- Grace Yim
- Graphics Fan Sozzi
31 Antibiotics biotechnology
- Problem Rapid resistance to existing
antibiotics recent emergence of superbugs - Paradigm shift from due to spontaneous random
mutation to - Horizontal gene transfer
- Misuse of antibiotics
- Underuse of antibiotics
- Farmyard biotech use of antibiotics
- Natural products and natural selection
- Public health and sewage treatment
- Grace Yim
- Graphics Fan Sozzi
32 Antibiotics biotechnology
- Problem Rapid resistance to existing
antibiotics recent emergence of superbugs - 1944 General clinical use of penicillin
- Five years ago (ca. 2000), 150 drugs, with new
ones every 8-10 years, but - many hit similar targets
- Grace Yim
- Graphics Fan Sozzi
33 Penicillin Natural Products
- Ancient Greece, India- molds and plants to
treat infection China- moldy bean curd on cuts - 1929. AFleming, Penicillium mold must have an
antibacterial substance - Isolated and named active substance, penicillin,
from halo of inhibition of bacterial growth - around a contaminant blue-green mould on a
Staphylococcus plate culture. - Unsuccessful attempts to recruit chemist to
synthesize for mass production - HWFlorey et al (1938)/Moyer, Coghill, Raper
(1941-3)/JKane, Pfizer scientists (1941-4) - Large quantities of pharmaceutical-grade
penicillin
34 Methicillin Synthetic Products
- Organic chem synthesis
- Narrow spectrum beta-lactam antibiotic of the
penicillin class - Beecham 1959
- Previously used to treat susceptible
Gram-positive, particularly S. aureus - Inhibits cell wall synthesis
- Competitively inhibits transpeptidase,
cross-links D-Ala-Ala, as a structural analog
35 Vancomycin Natural Products
- Glycopeptide drug of last resort
- Last-line antibiotic for serious Gram-positive
infections - Strong effect on Gram-positive, Streptococci,
Staphylococci and C. difficile - Resistant to penicillin and cephalosporin
- Effect on MRSA (S. aureus)
- Resistance will result in return to era of fatal
bacterial infections - 1990s-2000s VISA, vancomycin-intermediate S.
aureus - VRSA, vancomycin-resistant S. aureus
vancomycin-resistant C. difficile - First isolated by ECKornfeld _at_Eli Lilly, from
soil sample collected from the - interior jungles of Borneo by a missionary
- Fast-tracked approval FDA in 1958, due to
penicillin-resistance
36 Vancomycin Optimization
- H-MJungJ-KLee, et al. 2007. Biotech Prod
Process Engr. Optimization of culture
conditions and - scale-up to pilot and plant scales for
vancomycin production by Amycolatopsis
orientalis - High vancomycin producing strain, previoulsy
Streptomyces isolated from Borneo soil
37 Vancomycin Optimization
- H-MJungJ-KLee, et al. 2007. Biotech Prod
Process Engr. Optimization of culture
conditions and - scale-up to pilot and plant scales for
vancomycin production by Amycolatopsis
orientalis - From lab scale at 7L to pilot scale 300L to plant
scale 5,000L
38 Vancomycin Optimization
- H-MJungJ-KLee, et al. 2007. Biotech Prod
Process Engr. Optimization of culture
conditions and - scale-up to pilot and plant scales for
vancomycin production by Amycolatopsis
orientalis - From lab scale at 7L to pilot scale 300L to plant
scale 5,000L
39 Drugs of last resort antibiotics
- Drugs used only when all other options are
exhausted - Antibiotics, antivirals or chemotherapy agents
- Have most potent effects and/or are drugs for
which no or very few strains are known - Usually withheld to prevent development of
resistance or due to unpleasant side effects - Amikacin aminoglycoside antibiotic that binds
to 30S ribosomal subunit - Imipenem IV beta-lactam antibiotic, developed
1985 Broad spectrum Gorilla-cillin - Linezolid synthetic antibiotic, first of
oxazolidinone class inhibits protein synthesis
initiation - Vancomycin glycopeptide antibiotic cell wall
inhibitor
40Patents, and enforcement
- A patent is a set of exclusive rights granted by
a state to an inventor or his assignee - for a fixed period of time in exchange for a
disclosure of an invention - A patent is not a right to practice or use
invention. - A patent provides the right to exclude others
from making, using, selling, offering - for sale, or importing the patented invention
for the term of the patent - Agreement to share the details of the invention
with the public - PCR and real-time PCR Filed June 1998
- 3/29/04 MJ Research filed for bankruptcy court
protection - 4/19/04 Applied Biosystems and Roche Molecular
Systems win patent infringement - litigation against MJ Research, Inc and its
principals, Michael and John Finney - Awarded damages of 19.8M plus enhancement of
damages, including legal fees, since - several infringements were found to be willful,
ie doubled - 4/4/05 MJ Research, a division of Bio-Rad, to pay
additional 15M in damages, totaling 35M - 2/13/06 Settled with Bio-Rad Labs
41Patents based on biotechnology
- LATimes 11/28/07
- Dr. JRCade, Gatorade
- Professor of medicine and physiology research on
kidney and liver disease, - diabetes, hypertension and schizophrenia
- 1965 Developed for U of Florida, Gainsville
football team to stay hydrated - Inspired multimillion-dollar sports beverage
industry - 2006 Gatorade held more than 80 of 7.5B/yr US
sports drink market - World-wide sales in the billions
- Since 1973, UF collected gt150M for its 20 share
of royalties - From a comment that a player was not urinating
during football practice - Loss of 10 pounds of sweat, eg carbohydrates and
electrolytes - Collected and analyzed sweat
- Water, salt, sugar and phosphate (to metabolize
sugar) - Later, lemon juice and artificial sweetener to
make palatable (from wife) - As interest in the drink spread, Cade offered
his patent rights to the University - of Florida. The school turned him down but
later engaged in a protracted court - battle over royalty rights and struck a deal
in 1973.
42Patents based on biotechnology and human extracts
- USA vs Europe vs Asia
- 1907 First patent of chemical based on human
extract- adrenaline - 1923 Insulin
- Organism patent (none before 70s)
- 1972 Chakrabarty/General Electric Co.,
Pseudomonas metabolizing crude oil - Diamond vs Chakrabarty genetically engineered
bacteria, not naturally occurring - Gene-related patents
- 1993 SmithKline Beecham bought 125M stake in
Human Genome Sciences Inc. - Identified 40,000 genes and gene fragments
- Incyte, HGS, Celera, Sequana, etc.
43Patents based on human extracts and biotechnology
- Patients can hinder the scientific process by
limiting research and increasing the cost. - John Moore vs the Regents of the University of
California - Hairy-cell leukemia at UCLA Medical Center
(DGolde) - Abnormal WBCs bearing hair-like projections
- Potentially fatal form of cancer enlarged spleen
from 7oz to 22 lbs - Treatment with chemotherapy
- Splenectomy-gt T-lymphocyte cell line, patented
1981. - Spleen cells produced unusual blood protein that
might be used to develop an anti-cancer agent. - Court ruled Moore had no rights to profit from
commercialization of anything developed - from his discarded body parts.
44Patents based on human extracts
- Titles of patents Guaymi woman from Panama
- Hagahai man from Paupua New Guinea
- Two dwellers of the Solomon Islands
- Swedish company patented a gene from a person of
an isolated village in Italy - 1990s. Panama. Blood samples collected from
Guaymi people - Developed cell lines attempted to patent
- Withdrew patent application, Nov06, return cell
line to the Guaymi - Cell line still for sale at the ATCC.
- One side
- 2,300 to process a sample vs salary of a Guaymi
at lt80/yr - Ethical questions- creating medicines that help
human beings to avoid suffering, dying - Another side
- patent a genetic trait of the Guaymi and profit
from their biological inheritance - Pat Mooney, Rural Advancement Foundation
International, 1993 - Guaymi tribe was surprised to discover they
ed. were invented - Two American men listed as inventors -gt
actually, patented a virus - endogenous virus that stimulates antibody
production- might be useful in HIV and leukemia
research
45Fallout
- Origin stories can clash with DNA data
- threatening a view some indigenous leaders see
as vital to preserving their culture - could also jeopardize land rights and other
benefits based on notion lived in a place - since the beginning of time.
- What if it turns out youre really Siberian and
then, oops, your health care is gone? - Dr D Barrett, co-chairman of the Alaska Area
Institutional Review Board, sponsored - by Indian Health Service, a federal agency.
- (SWells) Genographic Project I dont think
humans at their core are ostriches. Everyone - has an interest in where they come from.
- But, indigenous leaders point to centuries of
broken promises.if came from elsewhere, could - undermine their moral basis for sovereignty
and chip away at their collective legal claims. - NGs GP is unlike earlier HG Diversity Project,
condemned by some groups as biocolonialism
because - some scientists may have profited from the
genetic data that could have been used to develop
drugs
46Patents based on plant extracts
- Warfarin, brand name coumadin
- Anticoagulant, as vitamin K antagonist inhibits
vitK reductase, which recycles oxidized vitK - UWisconsin, named for Wisconsin Alumni Research
Foundation - Synthetic derivative of coumarin, found in many
plants, esp sweet clover, - lower levels in licorice and lavender
- Originally developed as rat poison
- 1920s outbreak of previously unrecognized
disease of cattle in northern US and Canada - Dying of uncontrollable bleeding from minor
injuries or drop dead of internal hemorrhage - with no signs of external injury
- 1921 FSchofield cattle ingesting moldy silage
from sweet clover, Sweet clover poisoning - 1940 KPLink and HCampbell at UW anticoagulant
substance was coumarin - 1951 attempted suicide recovery medical use
- 1952 registered for use as rodenticide in US
WARF granted the patent
47Patents based on plant extracts Development of
chemical synthesis pathways and/or engineered
microbes
- Demand for artificial sweeteners will be over 1B
by 2010 - Brazzein is 2,000x sweeter than sucrose, tastes
like sucrose - 54 AAc, peptide sequenced 1994
- Above, MFariba et al. effects of mutations
- UWisconsin patent on brazzein, a sweetener
isolated from Cameroon sweet plant Joublie - USPatent 5326580. Disclosed herein is a protein
sweetener that has been isolated from - Pentadiplandra brazzeana Baillon. The sweetener
is thermostable, lysine rich, and has a - relative long lasting taste. Also disclosed is
a recombinant host capable of producing the - sweetener in large quantities.
- Engineered bacteria to produce brazzein, so
Camerooneans cannot make money - selling plant products
- ABerlecBStrukelj, et al. 2006. ApplMicrobiol
and Biotech. Expression of the sweet-tasting - plant protein brazzein in E. coli and L.
lactis a path toward sweet lactic acid bacteria - Neem tree insecticidal properties, 1995. 29
foreign patents - Ecuador Amazonian sacred plant, ayahuasca used
in traditional healing and visionary rituals
48 Eradicating a species, or two
- Smallpox eradication
- 1956 WHO
- Late 1960s strategy to include mass vaccination
- 1977 last natural case in Somalia
- 1978 medical photographer (et al) near virology
lab - 1980 official eradication
- Polio eradication
- On-going
- http//pathmicro.med.sc.edu/lecture/vaccines.htm
- http//www.polioeradication.org/casecount.asp
49 Synthetic genomics
- The Challenge
- Chemical synthesis of life in the lab
- HUrey, SMiller, LOrgel organic chem synthesis
from inorganics - Wohlers synthesis of urea, 1828
- Pasteur Spontaneous generation disproved in
1864 - Khorana Synthesis of 207bp gene for Tyr
suppressor tRNA in 1979 - Synthesis of self-replicating functional genome
- The Rationalizations
- Basis for understanding minimal cellular life
- Approaches to production of energy,
pharmaceuticals and textiles - ex, fixing CO2 from atmosphere to produce
methane, used for other fuels
50 Chemical synthesis of an infectious virus
- JCello, APaul, EWimmer. Sci02. Poliovirus
synthesis de novo - Small non-enveloped RNA virus
- ssRNA at 7,440 nucleotides
- Contains five different macromolecules
- Capsid polypeptides VP1-4 and VPg
- Synthesize with overlapping oligonucleotide
segments, 400-600 nucleotides - With VPg replaced by T7 RNA Pol
51 Synthetic Biology synthesis of an infectious
virus
- Synthesis of poliovirus in the absence of a
natural template - Oligonucleotide segments (400-600 bases) annealed
and enzymatically extended, and ligated - Full-length cDNA is assembled to represent entire
genetic information of poliovirus as DNA (RNA
genome) - cDNA into infectious viral RNA by T7 RNA
transcriptase - Seed HeLa cell-free extract replicates to form
progeny virions - EWimmer. EMBO Reports. July06
52 Chemical synthesis of an infectious virus
- Entire genome cloned onto a plasmid
- Easier manipulation
53 Chemical synthesis of an infectious virus Prove
it
- Products of in vitro translation and proteolytic
processing - HeLa cell-free extract
- 35S methionine-labeled
- control
- wt PV1
- sPV1 cDNA
- Plaque phenotypes
- generated in HeLa cell-free extract
- sPV1 RNA
- wt PV1 RNA
54 Chemical synthesis of an infectious virus
- Biological characterization
- presence and absence of antibody
- polyclonal against types 1 and 2 poliovirus
- PLD50 paralysis or death in 50 inoculated mice
- -gt Results possible to synthesize an
infectious agent by in vitro chemical-biochemical
- means solely by following instructions from a
written sequence
55Optimizing synthetic genome construction
- HOSmithJCVenter, et al. PNAS 2003. Generating
a synthetic genome by whole genome - Assembly phi X174 bacteriophage from synthetic
oligonucleotides _at_5,386 bases - Accurate assembly of 5-6kb genome
- Rapid 14 days start to finish
- Synthetic genome had a lower infectivity than
natural DNA - Fully infectious virion recovered after
electroporation into E. coli - Propose to assemble larger genomes by joining
separately assembled 5-6kb genomes - 60x to give minimal cellular genome lt--
- waited for independent bioethics
56 de novo life minimal genomes
- 1999 Minimal prokaryotic genome
- based on random whole genome transposon
mutagenesis - Inactivated one gene per cell
- 300 essential genes for self-replicating
cellular life described
57 Synthetic genomics bacterium
- CLartigueJCVenter, et al. Sci07 Genome
transplantation in bacteria changing one
species to another - Change Mycoplasma capricolum into Mycoplasma
mycoides Large Colony (LC) - Small organisms lacking cell wall
- Antibiotic marker to select for new genome
de-proteinated new chromosome - Transplant after several generations, lose old
phenotype and gains new - 2D PAGE, protein sequencing blue-linked
LC-specific Ab stains - Proof of principles in synthetic genomes
- Ultimate goal of synthetic organisms
- Mary Shelley. 1818. Frankenstein
- http//www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/07062
8232413.htm
58 de novo life bacterium
- Artificial organism
- Insights into origins, workings and essence of
life - New opportunities to exploit living organisms
- (The Telegraph 6/29/07)
59 Inner life of a Cell
- Multi-disciplinary basic research (many
fields), recombinant DNA and - biotechnology, technology (computational and
technical), and visual arts - Cellular Visions The Inner Life of a Cell
- What can character animators learn from those who
render microscopic worlds in 3D? Plenty. - By Beth Marchant
- July 20, 2006 Source Studio Daily
- The Inner Life of a Cell, an eight-minute
animation created in NewTek LightWave 3D - and Adobe After Effects for Harvard biology
students. - http//www.studiodaily.com/main/searchlist/6850.ht
ml