Literature DB >> 11131009

Transgenic animal bioreactors.

L M Houdebine1.   

Abstract

The production of recombinant proteins is one of the major successes of biotechnology. Animal cells are required to synthesize proteins with the appropriate post-translational modifications. Transgenic animals are being used for this purpose. Milk, egg white, blood, urine, seminal plasma and silk worm cocoon from transgenic animals are candidates to be the source of recombinant proteins at an industrial scale. Although the first recombinant protein produced by transgenic animals is expected to be in the market in 2000, a certain number of technical problems remain to be solved before the various systems are optimized. Although the generation of transgenic farm animals has become recently easier mainly with the technique of animal cloning using transfected somatic cells as nuclear donor, this point remains a limitation as far as cost is concerned. Numerous experiments carried out for the last 15 years have shown that the expression of the transgene is predictable only to a limited extent. This is clearly due to the fact that the expression vectors are not constructed in an appropriate manner. This undoubtedly comes from the fact that all the signals contained in genes have not yet been identified. Gene constructions thus result sometime in poorly functional expression vectors. One possibility consists in using long genomic DNA fragments contained in YAC or BAC vectors. The other relies on the identification of the major important elements required to obtain a satisfactory transgene expression. These elements include essentially gene insulators, chromatin openers, matrix attached regions, enhancers and introns. A certain number of proteins having complex structures (formed by several subunits, being glycosylated, cleaved, carboxylated...) have been obtained at levels sufficient for an industrial exploitation. In other cases, the mammary cellular machinery seems insufficient to promote all the post-translational modifications. The addition of genes coding for enzymes involved in protein maturation has been envisaged and successfully performed in one case. Furin gene expressed specifically in the mammary gland proved to able to cleave native human protein C with good efficiency. In a certain number of cases, the recombinant proteins produced in milk have deleterious effects on the mammary gland function or in the animals themselves. This comes independently from ectopic expression of the transgenes and from the transfer of the recombinant proteins from milk to blood. One possibility to eliminate or reduce these side-effects may be to use systems inducible by an exogenous molecule such as tetracycline allowing the transgene to be expressed only during lactation and strictly in the mammary gland. The purification of recombinant proteins from milk is generally not particularly difficult. This may not be the case, however, when the endogenous proteins such as serum albumin or antibodies are abundantly present in milk. This problem may be still more crucial if proteins are produced in blood. Among the biological contaminants potentially present in the recombinant proteins prepared from transgenic animals, prions are certainly those raising the major concern. The selection of animals chosen to generate transgenics on one hand and the elimination of the potentially contaminated animals, thanks to recently defined quite sensitive tests may reduce the risk to an extremely low level. The available techniques to produce pharmaceutical proteins in milk can be used as well to optimize milk composition of farm animals, to add nutriceuticals in milk and potentially to reduce or even eliminate some mammary infectious diseases.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11131009      PMCID: PMC7089244          DOI: 10.1023/a:1008934912555

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transgenic Res        ISSN: 0962-8819            Impact factor:   2.788


  126 in total

Review 1.  Exploiting antibody-based technologies to manage environmental pollution.

Authors:  B Harris
Journal:  Trends Biotechnol       Date:  1999-07       Impact factor: 19.536

2.  Control of organ-specific demethylation by an element of the T-cell receptor-alpha locus control region.

Authors:  B Santoso; B D Ortiz; A Winoto
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2000-01-21       Impact factor: 5.157

3.  Germline transformation of the silkworm Bombyx mori L. using a piggyBac transposon-derived vector.

Authors:  T Tamura; C Thibert; C Royer; T Kanda; E Abraham; M Kamba; N Komoto; J L Thomas; B Mauchamp; G Chavancy; P Shirk; M Fraser; J C Prudhomme; P Couble; T Toshiki; T Chantal; R Corinne; K Toshio; A Eappen; K Mari; K Natuo; T Jean-Luc; M Bernard; C Gérard; S Paul; F Malcolm; P Jean-Claude; C Pierre
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2000-01       Impact factor: 54.908

4.  Transcriptional enhancers act in cis to suppress position-effect variegation.

Authors:  M C Walters; W Magis; S Fiering; J Eidemiller; D Scalzo; M Groudine; D I Martin
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  1996-01-15       Impact factor: 11.361

5.  Position-independent and copy-number-related expression of a goat bacterial artificial chromosome alpha-lactalbumin gene in transgenic mice.

Authors:  M G Stinnakre; S Soulier; L Schibler; L Lepourry; J C Mercier; J L Vilotte
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1999-04-01       Impact factor: 3.857

6.  Dramatic growth of mice that develop from eggs microinjected with metallothionein-growth hormone fusion genes.

Authors:  R D Palmiter; R L Brinster; R E Hammer; M E Trumbauer; M G Rosenfeld; N C Birnberg; R M Evans
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1982-12-16       Impact factor: 49.962

7.  Production of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator in the milk of transgenic mice.

Authors:  P DiTullio; S H Cheng; J Marshall; R J Gregory; K M Ebert; H M Meade; A E Smith
Journal:  Biotechnology (N Y)       Date:  1992-01

8.  The effect of various introns and transcription terminators on the efficiency of expression vectors in various cultured cell lines and in the mammary gland of transgenic mice.

Authors:  D Petitclerc; J Attal; M C Théron; M Bearzotti; P Bolifraud; G Kann; M G Stinnakre; H Pointu; C Puissant; L M Houdebine
Journal:  J Biotechnol       Date:  1995-06-21       Impact factor: 3.307

9.  Remodeling of mouse milk glycoconjugates by transgenic expression of a human glycosyltransferase.

Authors:  P A Prieto; P Mukerji; B Kelder; R Erney; D Gonzalez; J S Yun; D F Smith; K W Moremen; C Nardelli; M Pierce
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1995-12-08       Impact factor: 5.157

10.  Preferential, cooperative binding of DNA topoisomerase II to scaffold-associated regions.

Authors:  Y Adachi; E Käs; U K Laemmli
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  1989-12-20       Impact factor: 11.598

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  52 in total

Review 1.  'Molecular farming' of antibodies in plants.

Authors:  Stefan Schillberg; Rainer Fischer; Neil Emans
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  2003-02-18

2.  The potential benefits of insulators on heterologous constructs in transgenic animals.

Authors:  Patricia Giraldo; Sylvie Rival-Gervier; Louis-Marie Houdebine; Lluís Montoliu
Journal:  Transgenic Res       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 2.788

Review 3.  Fish can be first--advances in fish transgenesis for commercial applications.

Authors:  Halina M Zbikowska
Journal:  Transgenic Res       Date:  2003-08       Impact factor: 2.788

4.  Fish as bioreactors: transgene expression of human coagulation factor VII in fish embryos.

Authors:  Gyulin Hwang; Ferenc Müller; M Aziz Rahman; Darren W Williams; Paul J Murdock; K John Pasi; Geoffrey Goldspink; Hamid Farahmand; Norman Maclean
Journal:  Mar Biotechnol (NY)       Date:  2004-04-29       Impact factor: 3.619

Review 5.  Application of inducible and targeted gene strategies to produce transgenic fish: a review.

Authors:  A Rocha; S Ruiz; A Estepa; J M Coll
Journal:  Mar Biotechnol (NY)       Date:  2004 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 3.619

6.  Haematococcus as a promising cell factory to produce recombinant pharmaceutical proteins.

Authors:  Amir Ata Saei; Parisa Ghanbari; Abolfazl Barzegari
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2012-06-26       Impact factor: 2.316

Review 7.  The transgenic animal platform for biopharmaceutical production.

Authors:  L R Bertolini; H Meade; C R Lazzarotto; L T Martins; K C Tavares; M Bertolini; J D Murray
Journal:  Transgenic Res       Date:  2016-01-28       Impact factor: 2.788

8.  Fish eggs as bioreactors: the production of bioactive luteinizing hormone in transgenic trout embryos.

Authors:  Tetsuro Morita; Goro Yoshizaki; Makito Kobayashi; Shugo Watabe; Toshio Takeuchi
Journal:  Transgenic Res       Date:  2004-12       Impact factor: 2.788

9.  High-level expression of single-chain Fv-Fc fusion protein in serum and egg white of genetically manipulated chickens by using a retroviral vector.

Authors:  Masamichi Kamihira; Ken-ichiro Ono; Kazuhisa Esaka; Ken-ichi Nishijima; Ryoko Kigaku; Hiroyuki Komatsu; Takashi Yamashita; Kenji Kyogoku; Shinji Iijima
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2005-09       Impact factor: 5.103

10.  Renal tubule-specific expression and urinary secretion of human growth hormone: a kidney-based transgenic bioreactor growth.

Authors:  Xinhua Zhu; Jin Cheng; Liwei Huang; Jin Gao; Zhong-Ting Zhang; Joanne Pak; Xue-Ru Wu
Journal:  Transgenic Res       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 2.788

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