Title: Trends in Biotechnology
1 appliedbiotech.org
2THE CHALLENGES OF COMMERCIALIZING PLANT
BIOTECHNOLOGY PRODUCTS
3PROTEINS USED TODAY
- Therapeutics
- Vaccines
- Specialty chemicals
- Detergents
- Food processing
- Pulp and paper processing
- Feed enhancers
4LIMITATIONS FOR PROTEIN PRODUCTS
-
- Specificity
- Cost of production
- Energy to change status quo
5POTENTIAL FOR OTHER USES
- Protein therapeutics/antibodies
- Oral vaccines
- Replace chlorinated compounds for pulp, paper and
textile industries - Replace caustic agents used in cellulose
degradation and adhesive agents
6PRODUCTION PLATFORMS
- Synthetic
- Size-limited to small peptides
- Cost-proportional to size
- Microbial
- Very desirable cost
- Downstream processing limitations
- Animals
- Human pathogens raise concern
- Expensive for cell cultures
- Plants ?
7 POTENTIAL BENFITS FROM PLANTS PRODUCTION
- Cost
- Low input cost
- Volume easily scaled
- Low capital equipment requirements
- Added value
- Many options to address protein specific
expression problems - Cellular processing
- Toxicity
8PROCESS
- Concept
- Proof of Principle
- Commercialization
- Sustainability
9CHALLENGES
- Technical
- Regulatory
- Economic
- Industry acceptance
- Customer acceptance
- Public acceptance
10PROOF OF PRINCIPLE
- Can plants express protein of interest?
- Can plants make functionally equivalent proteins?
- Can proteins be extracted/purified from plants?
- Will they work in the application of interest?
11BASIC VECTOR
12PLANT TISSUES
13PLANT CELL
14PROTEIN SPECIFIC EXPRESSION
- Factors
- Protein stability
- Interaction within cellular compartment
- Interaction with host tissue
- Interference with non-target tissue
15OPTIMIZATION FOR PROTEIN ACCUMULATION
16EXPRESSION IMPROVEMENTS
-
- Establishing Germline Importance
- Cellular targeting High
- Tissue targeting High
- Event High
- Promoter Strength High
- Codon preferences Medium/High
- Leader Sequence Standard
- Termination Sequence Standard
-
17CORN TRANSFORMATION PROCESS
Timeline 0 months 2 months 5 months 7-9
months
embryos
callus
embryo germination
T0 plants
selection
shoots
18EXPRESSION IMPROVEMENTS
- Optimizing Germplasm Individual
- Improvements
- Line selection 50X
- Copy number 5X
- Multiple alleles 4X
- Maize variants 5X
- Hybrid Production 4X
- Cumulative Total Observed UP TO 100X
19APROTININ
- Protease Inhibitor
- Derived from Bovine Pancreas and Lung
- M.W. 6511 Da
- Applications
- Therapeutic
- Animal Cell Culture
- Research Reagent
- Reduces blood loss and hospital stay
- Plant source could give an ample supply with
reduced fears of human pathogens (e.g.. Mad Cow
Disease)
20SDS-PAGE OF CORN-PRODUCED AND NATIVE APROTININ
Native
Corn-produced
1 ug
1 ug
2.5 ug
2.5 ug
21APROTININ FROM CORN COMPARED TO NATIVE SOURCE
Commercial Aprotinin 6573.28
Corn-produced Aprotinin 6574.33
6000
7000
Mass (Da)
22APROTININ SEQUENCE
23APROTININ CHARACTERISTICS
24 TRYPSIN
- Protease
- Native Source Bovine pancreas
- Applications
- Cell culture reagent
- Research reagent
- Bioprocessing (e.g. insulin)
- Digestive aid
- Detergent
- Food processing
- Plant source may provide a supply
with reduced fears of human pathogens
25 TRYPZEAN KM DETERMINATION
26LACCASE
- Redox enzyme
- Native Source white rot fungi
- Applications
- Adhesives
- Bleaching agent
- Detoxification agent
- Problem- not easily expressed in other systems
- Plant source may provide a supply
with reduced fears of caustic agents
27EXPRESSION OF LACCASE IN MAIZE EMBRYO
28AVIDIN - PROPERTIES
- Native Source Chicken egg whites
- Homotetramer molecular weight 67,200
- Subunit molecular weight 16,800
- Isoelectric point 10
- Glycoprotein
- Assay Binding of 1 biotin per subunit
29PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
30TOXICITY
- Avidin - sequestered in cell wall
- Aprotinin localized in seed tissue rich in
protease inhibitors - Trypsin - expressed as pro-enzyme and localized
in seed tissue rich in protease inhibitors - Laccase High oil lines and embryo expression
31PLANT-BASED ORAL PRODUCT
Cost of Traditional Cost Utilizing Plant
Orally Injectable Product Delivered Product
Raw material
Misc.
Misc.
Lower cost of raw material
Labor for injections
Purification
Cost savings
Low temperature storage and transport
Needles, syringes
32TRAVELERS DISEASELT-B (B subunit of the
heat-labile toxin of ETEC)
- Enterotoxigenic strains of E. coli
- Similar to cholera causes diarrhea
- Endemic to developing countries
- 650 million cases annually
- 800 thousand deaths annually
- 20 of travelers contract disease
- Current vaccine inactivated bacteria Ct-B
- Can plant source be used for oral delivery?
33HUMAN CLINICAL TRIAL
IgA IgG
Ig Titer
Lt-B Oral Inoculations
Pre Post
Pre Post
34TRANSMISSIBLE GASTROENTERITIS VIRUS
Swine disease in young pigs
which can lead to mortality Make transgenic
corn with S protein
35DISEASE SEVERITY INDEX
Clinical Severity Index total clinical score
values divided by the total number of pig days.
TGEV-2 Oragen Technologies Veterinary Resources
36All sows were vaccinated initially with
commercial TGEV vaccine 35 and 14 days before
farrowing they were boosted
37INDUSTRIAL FEEDSTOCK ADDED VALUE
- Direct delivery reduces downstream processing
- Add value beyond protein
- Collect by-product credits
38BIOMASS CONVERSION Maize Crop
Grain Endosperm
Germ
Stover Chemical Pretreatment
Cellulose suitable for enzyme degradation
Containing Cellulases
Currently used For ethanol production
Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates
Fermentation
ETHANOL
39COMMERCIALIZATION
- Can the product meet specifications for
- Commercial Efficacy
- Cost of production
- Capital cost
- Within an acceptable time frame
- Regulatory guidelines
- Beyond what currently exist
- Can the product provide a reasonable ROI?
40CAN THIS BE ECONOMICALLY COMPETITIVE?
- Raw materials cost lt100 times that of eggs
- Amount of mass needed for purification lt10 times
that of eggs - Grain can store protein for years without loss of
activity - No threat of contamination
41TECHNOLOGY CURVE
42WHICH PLANTS ?
- Growing and Harvesting
- Recombinant Protein Yield
- Confinement Requirements
- Geographic Limitations
- Seasonal Limitations
- Mechanical or hand labor
- Temperature Sensitivity
- Time Sensitivity
- Transport and Storage
- Temperature Sensitivity
- Protein Stability in Tissue
- Tissue Processing
- Stability
- Biomass Quantity
- Extraction
- Purification
- Interfering agents
- cGMP
- Final Product Specifications
- Allergens
- Toxins
- Antinutritionals
43DIFFERENT PLANT CHARACTERISTICS
44ADDED VALUE
- Plant provides additional product safety features
- Plant material adds value as a feedstock, food or
feed independent of the transgenic protein - Plant material offers applications not otherwise
possible
45BEST PLANT PLATFORM
- No one perfect solution
- Depends on application and protein
- When cost and volume are major factors the only
current option is a modified commodity crop
46 COMMERCIALIZED PRODUCTS
- Avidin
- Gus
- Trypsin
- Aprotinin
47SUSTAINABILITY
- Scientific Community
- Industry
- Public
48SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY
- Much of the basic science still unknown
- Recent work in genomics, proteomics and
metabolomics has just begun to be applied to gene
expression - Potential to raise expression levels more than
10-fold from best cases today - Potential to control gene expression in new ways
49INDUSTRY ACCEPTANCE
- ROI
- Products meet customer expectations
- Cost benefit is realized
- Demonstrated reliable supply
- Demonstrated regulatory path
- Demonstrated products on the market
50PUBLIC ACCEPTANCE
- Customer Acceptance
- Benefits gt Cost
- Public Acceptance
- Benefits gt Risks
51SAFETY/RISK ASSESSMENT
- Science based
- Similar to what is used for other regulated
products - Accepted by industry, regulatory agencies,
special interest groups and public
52REGULATIONS FOR MAIZE
- GRAS status for maize
- Confinement for transgenic maize
- Physical isolation
- Temporal isolation
- Genetic sterility
- Handling
- Identification markers
- Completely separated from agricultural products
53Hazard Quotient
Cumulative Intake Reference Dose
Hazard Quotient
54SAFETY/RISK ASSESSMENT OF APROTININ PRODUCED IN
MAIZE
- Worst case - no containment
- Adjacent farmer segregates crop which goes
directly to food - Hazard Quotient
- 1 million times below no effect level
- Amount needed for 1 dose as an antigen
- 350 tacos
- 350 bowls of cereal
- Best case more than 1 million times this amount
with confinement practices
55PERCEPTIONS
56ACCEPTANCE OF ANY NEW TECHNOLOGY
- Do we get a choice?
- Do we understand the technology?
- Do we see direct benefits?
57BIOLOGICS FROM PLANTS
- What is the new concept ?
- Obtaining drugs from plants?
- De Materia Medica by Discorides in 78 A.D.
described 600 plants to have medicinal properties
58 - Obtaining drugs from an uncontained
non-controlled source? - 12 million units of blood used for human health
products - Use of transgenic plants?
- 167 million acres of transgenic plants grown last
year
59 - Use of food organisms to produce biologics?
- 100 million eggs used to make vaccines
- Yeast for bread, beer and biologics
- Regulatory guidelines?
- NIH, FDA and USDA guidelines
60CONCLUSIONS
- Protein products are an environmentally friendly
and safe alternative to many current practices
used today - Cost is a limiting factor for implementing
specific products - Plants offer options over other systems
- Technology and applications are growing rapidly
- Many plant platforms to choose from - each with
different characteristics that can contribute to
final product - First commercial protein products now on the
market - Public perceives biologics from plants as a new
concept
61CONCLUSIONS
- Public perceives biologics from plants as a new
concept - General concept is not new
62EVOLUTION OF PHARMACEUTICAL PRODUCTION
USE ALL METHODS
63Acknowledgments
- Stephen Streatfield
- Kamesh Pappu
- Carol Drees
- Elena Delgado
- Brain Vu
- Elizabeth Hood
- Ian Tizzard
- K.C. Donnely
- Bruce Lawhorn
- Mike Horn
- Donna Delaney
- Susan Woodard
- Joseph Jilka
- Michele Bailey
- Barry Lamphear
- Richard Clough
- John Clemmons
- Carol Tacket
- Mark Welter