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Growing Human Antibodies in Algae is an Inexpensive and Fast Route to Large-Scale
Production, Say Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute
La Jolla, CA. January 15, 2003 - A group of scientists at The Scripps Research
Institute (TSRI) have used algae to express an antibody that targets herpes virus,
describing the work in an upcoming issue of the journal Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences.
This antibody could potentially be an ingredient in an anti-herpes topical
cream or other anti- herpes treatments, but more importantly the algae expression
technology that the TSRI team used could facilitate production of any number
of human antibodies and other proteins on a massive scale.
"This is a fast, new, effective way to make human therapeutic proteins," says
TSRI Associate Professor Stephen P. Mayfield, Ph.D., who conducted the research
with Research Associate Scott E. Franklin, Ph.D., and TSRI President Richard
A. Lerner, M.D.
Significantly, the researchers were able to produce the antibody at a much
lower cost than has been achieved in the past. In fact, they say they can now
make antibodies, soluble receptors, and other proteins so much more cheaply that
an entire new class of therapeutics may become accessible.
"You can't make [a drug] if the time and expense is such that you have to
sell that drug for hundreds of thousands of dollars," says Mayfield. "This has
to be the way we make drugs in the future."
From Pond Scum to Pharmacy Shelf
Also called immunoglobulins, antibodies are proteins produced by immune cells
that are designed to recognize a wide range of foreign pathogens. After a bacterium,
virus, or other pathogen enters the bloodstream, antibodies target antigens - proteins,
carbohydrate molecules, and other pieces of the pathogen - specific to that
foreign invader. These antibodies then alert the immune system to the presence
of the invaders and attract lethal "effector" immune cells to the site of infection.
Antibodies can also be useful as therapeutics for a number of human diseases
ranging from rheumatoid arthritis to leukemia. Likewise, there are many other
human proteins that could potentially be used as drugs.
In fact, there may be over 200 proteins that could potentially be new anti-cancer,
anti- inflammatory, anti-arthritis compounds, says Mayfield. As an example, an
anti-IgE antibody, termed Omalizumab, has already shown great efficacy in human
clinical trials for the treatment of allergic rhinitis and asthma. Unfortunately,
the costs of producing the antibody, coupled with the relatively small amounts
which can be produced with current technologies, has severely limited its availability.
In cases where scientists want to make an abundance of proteins, they often
turn to the simplest expression system - bacteria. However, this does not
work for large, complicated proteins like antibodies because bacteria do not
have the machinery to assemble them into the correct structure. So large proteins
are usually produced through an expensive and complicated process involving the
fermentation of mammalian cells.
Algae may offer a cheaper and easier way to produce the proteins. Since algae
grow naturally and use carbon dioxide from the air as a carbon source and sunlight
as an energy source, whole ponds - tens of thousands of liters - of the
algae can be grown once they are modified to produce the protein of interest.
"The scale on which you can grow these algae is enormous," notes Franklin.
Modifying the algae to produce proteins entails inserting a gene into the
genome of the chloroplast, the organelles within the alga cell that converts
sunlight and carbon dioxide into plant matter. The algae then express and assemble
the antibodies within the chloroplasts, which can later be purified, intact.
Now that the researchers have established the fundamental technology, they
are looking at applying it to any number of proteins and receptors.
"We think we can now put in pretty much any gene that we want and have it
express," says Mayfield.
The article, "Expression and assembly of a fully active antibody in algae," authored
by Stephen P. Mayfield, Scott E. Franklin, and Richard A. Lerner, is available
online at: http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abst
ract/0237108100v1 and will be published in the journal Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences on January 21, 2003.
This work was supported by funds from Sea Grant, the National Institutes
of Health, and Syngenta Corporation.
For more information contact:
Jason Bardi
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.9254
Fax: 858.784.8118
jasonb@scripps.edu
Copyright © 2003 TSRI. All rights
reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium with out express
written permission of TSRI is prohibited.
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