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Wiley InterScience

Plant Biotechnology Journal

Plant Biotechnology Journal

Volume 5 Issue 4, Pages 511 - 525

Published Online: 9 May 2007

Journal compilation © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd


Plant Biotechnology Journal is published by Wiley-Blackwell in association with the Society for Experimental Biology (SEB) and the Association of Applied Biologists (AAB).
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Field production and functional evaluation of chloroplast-derived interferon-α2b
Philip A. Arlen 1 , Regina Falconer 1 , Sri Cherukumilli 1 , Amy Cole 1 , Alexander M. Cole 1 , Karen K. Oishi 2 and Henry Daniell 1,*
  1 Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, University of Central Florida, Biomolecular Science, Building #20, Room 336, Orlando, FL 32816-2364, USA
  2 Chlorogen, Inc., 893 North Warson Road, St. Louis, MO 63141, USA
  * Correspondence (fax 407-823-0956; e-mail daniell@mail.ucf.edu)
Copyright © 2007 The Authors
Journal compilation © 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
antitumour • antiviral • gene containment • molecular 'pharming' • plant-made cytokine

ABSTRACT

Type I interferons (IFNs) inhibit viral replication and cell growth and enhance the immune response, and therefore have many clinical applications. IFN-α2b ranks third in world market use for a biopharmaceutical, behind only insulin and erythropoietin. The average annual cost of IFN-α2b for the treatment of hepatitis C infection is $26 000, and is therefore unavailable to the majority of patients in developing countries. Therefore, we expressed IFN-α2b in tobacco chloroplasts, and transgenic lines were grown in the field after obtaining United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (USDA-APHIS) approval. Stable, site-specific integration of transgenes into chloroplast genomes and homoplasmy through several generations were confirmed. IFN-α2b levels reached up to 20% of total soluble protein, or 3 mg per gram of leaf (fresh weight). Transgenic IFN-α2b had similar in vitro biological activity to commercially produced PEG-Intron™ when tested for its ability to protect cells against cytopathic viral replication in the vesicular stomatitis virus cytopathic effect (VSV CPE) assay and to inhibit early-stage human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. The antitumour and immunomodulating properties of IFN-α2b were also seen in vivo. Chloroplast-derived IFN-α2b increased the expression of major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC I) on splenocytes and the total number of natural killer (NK) cells. Finally, IFN-α2b purified from chloroplast transgenic lines (cpIFN-α2b) protected mice from a highly metastatic tumour line. This demonstration of high levels of expression of IFN-α2b, transgene containment and biological activity akin to that of commercial preparations of IFN-α2b facilitated the first field production of a plant-derived human blood protein, a critical step towards human clinical trials and commercialization.


Received 14 January 2007; revised 26 February 2007; accepted 2 March 2007.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-7652.2007.00258.x About DOI

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