| Literature DB >> 24977145 |
Daniel Tusé1, Tiffany Tu2, Karen A McDonald2.
Abstract
Production of recombinant biologics in plants has received considerable attention as an alternative platform to traditional microbial and animal cell culture. Industrially relevant features of plant systems include proper eukaryotic protein processing, inherent safety due to lack of adventitious agents, more facile scalability, faster production (transient systems), and potentially lower costs. Lower manufacturing cost has been widely claimed as an intuitive feature of the platform by the plant-made biologics community, even though cost information resides within a few private companies and studies accurately documenting such an advantage have been lacking. We present two technoeconomic case studies representing plant-made enzymes for diverse applications: human butyrylcholinesterase produced indoors for use as a medical countermeasure and cellulases produced in the field for the conversion of cellulosic biomass into ethanol as a fuel extender. Production economics were modeled based on results reported with the latest-generation expression technologies on Nicotiana host plants. We evaluated process unit operations and calculated bulk active and per-dose or per-unit costs using SuperPro Designer modeling software. Our analyses indicate that substantial cost advantages over alternative platforms can be achieved with plant systems, but these advantages are molecule/product-specific and depend on the relative cost-efficiencies of alternative sources of the same product.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24977145 PMCID: PMC4058100 DOI: 10.1155/2014/256135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Recombinant butyrylcholinesterase (rBuChE) design premises and key assumptions.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| General assumptions for the facility | |
| rBuChE production level | 25 kg rBuChE/year (bulk) |
| rBuChE doses per year | 62,500 doses/year at 400 mg/dose |
| Downstream Recovery/purification yield | 20% |
| Annual operating days | 330 days |
| rBuChE production in plants following infiltration/incubation | 125 kg rBuChE/year |
| Batch cycle time (time between start of new infiltration batches) | 7 days |
| Batches per year | 47 |
| Base case rBuChE expression level | 500 mg/kg FW at ~7 days after infiltration |
| Facility lifetime | 15 years |
| Depreciation | Straight line over 10 years, 5% direct fixed capital salvage |
| Working capital | 30 days of labor, materials, utilities, waste treatment |
| Lab/QC/QA costs | 2% of total labor costs for plant growth and agroinfiltration sections, 15% of total labor costs for recovery and purification section |
| Start-up/validation costs | 5% direct fixed capital |
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| Assumptions for indoor plant growth section | |
| Mass per plant at 5 weeks | 0.02 kg FW/plant |
| Tray size | 4 ft × 4 ft |
| Number of plants per tray | 256 |
| Tobacco seed cost | $0.001/seed |
| Age at infiltration | 4 weeks |
| Total number of plant batches in inventory | 5 batches (just seeded, 1 wk old, 2 wk old, 3 wk old, 4 wk old—ready to infiltrate, 5 wk old—infiltrated, incubated and ready to harvest) |
| Total number of plants in inventory | ~1.3 million |
| Total plant growth area | 83,320 ft2 total, or 10 levels with 8,332 ft2 footprint |
| LED fixture costs | $40/ft2 plant growth area (including capital cost factors for plant growth area as shown in |
| LED energy costs | 20 W/ft2 |
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| Assumptions for | |
| Agro “loading”—mass of recombinant | 0.00001 kg dry weight (dw) bacteria/kg FW plant biomass |
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| 2.6 g dw/L = 0.0026 kg dw/L |
| Inoculum density used in seed train | 1% V/V |
| Dilution factor between agroinfiltration solution and agrobacterial production fermentor | 78 |
| Percent weight change in plant tissue following vacuum agroinfiltration | 30% |
| Trays processed per vacuum chamber (30 ft) per day | 336 trays/chamber/day |
| “Excess” | 87% of total infiltration solution |
| Incubation time for infiltrated plants | ~7 days |
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| Assumptions for the rBuChE recovery and purification section | |
| Overall yield in downstream processes | 20% |
| Harvesting rate | 3 trays/minute |
| IEX chromatography | |
| Binding capacity | 20 mg/mL |
| Resin cost | $1,839/L |
| Number of reuse cycles | 100 |
| Affinity chromatography | |
| Binding capacity | 3 mg/mL |
| Resin cost | $10,000/L |
| Number of reuse cycles | 30 |
Capital cost factors for rBuChE case study.
| Capital cost factors | ||||||
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| Estimated based on PC (listed equipment PC plus unlisted equipment PC) | ||||||
| Unlisted equipment | 0.2 listed purchased equipment cost | |||||
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| Direct costs | Plant growth | Agroproduction/infiltration | rBuChE recovery/purification | |||
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| Piping | 0.1 | PC | 0.35 | PC | 0.35 | PC |
| Instrumentation | 0.2 | PC | 0.4 | PC | 0.4 | PC |
| Insulation | 0.01 | PC | 0.03 | PC | 0.03 | PC |
| Electrical facilities | 0.1 | PC | 0.1 | PC | 0.1 | PC |
| Building | 0.2 | PC | 0.45 | PC | 3 | PC |
| Yard improvement | 0.15 | PC | 0.15 | PC | 0.15 | PC |
| Auxiliary facilities | 0.1 | PC | 0.4 | PC | 0.4 | PC |
| UE installation | 0.5 | UEPC | 0.5 | UEPC | 0.5 | UEPC |
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| Engineering | 0.25 | DC | 0.25 | DC | 0.25 | DC |
| Construction | 0.35 | DC | 0.35 | DC | 0.35 | DC |
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| Contractors fee | 0.05 | DC + IC | 0.05 | DC + IC | 0.05 | DC + IC |
| Contingency | 0.1 | DC + IC | 0.1 | DC + IC | 0.1 | DC + IC |
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PC: purchase cost; DC: direct cost; IC: indirect cost; UEPC: unlisted equipment purchase cost; DFC: direct fixed capital; TCI: total capital investment.
rBuChE facility cost summary (in millions of US dollars).
| Plant growth |
| Recovery/purification | Totals | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total capital investment | $16.1 | $19.6 | $56.7 | $92.4 |
| Annual operating costs | $2.8 | $0.89 | $10.9 | $14.6 |
| Annual operating costs | $4.3 | $4.5 | $20.7 | $29.5 |
rBuChE production cost summary (in US dollars).
| Plant growth |
| Recovery/purification | Totals | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost per dose | $45 | $14 | $175 | $234 |
| Percentage of cost | 19.2 | 6.0 | 74.8 | 100.0 |
| Cost per dose | $70 | $72 | $332 | $474 |
| Percentage of cost | 14.8 | 15.2 | 70.0 | 100.0 |
Figure 1Indoor growth of Nicotiana benthamiana plants.
Figure 2Agrobacterial growth, vacuum infiltration, and incubation.
Figure 3Downstream processing: recovery and purification of rBuChE.
Open field cellulase manufacturing design premises and key assumptions.
| Parameter | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Cellulosic ethanol facility assumptions | ||
| Cellulosic ethanol facility capacity | 61 million US gallons/year | Humbird et al., 2011 [ |
| Cellulosic feedstock | 700,000 metric tonnes (dry) corn stover per year, 2,000 metric tonnes/day | Humbird et al., 2011 [ |
| Land area required for corn stover feedstock | 2,034,000 hectares/year | Humbird et al., 2011 [ |
| Annual operating hours | 8,410 hours/year | Humbird et al., 2011 [ |
| Conversion | 87 gallons ethanol/metric tonne corn stover @76% conversion | Humbird et al., 2011 [ |
| Enzyme loading | 20 mg enzyme “protein mixture” per gram cellulose in feedstock (2% wt/wt) | Humbird et al., 2011 [ |
| Enzyme mixture required | 4,100,000 enzyme “protein mixture” | Humbird et al., 2011 [ |
| Cellulase enzyme required | 2,870,000 kg/year | About 2% higher than in Klein-Marcuschamer et al., 2012 [ |
| Cellulase in enzyme mixture | 70.0% total soluble protein | Calculated from above |
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| Base case tobacco agronomic and cellulase enzyme production assumptions | ||
| Base case tobacco biomass production | 130 metric tonne fresh weight (FW)/ha year | |
| Mass of a full grown tobacco plant growth | 1.0 kg fresh weight (FW)/plant | |
| Number of plants per hectare | 130,000 plants/hectare | Calculated |
| Tobacco seed cost | $0.001/seed | |
| Tobacco growth cycle | 82 days from seed to induction, harvest at 7 days after induction spray | |
| Tobacco planting season (US Midwest/South) | Late March to late October | |
| Land reuse during growing season | Based on a total of 127 plant batches per year, land recycling can start with batch 94, so land requirement is only 0.74 of that required if no land was reused | Calculated |
| Tobacco production cost | $1,000/hectare | |
| Number of tobacco batches per year | 127 batches/year | Calculated |
| Cellulase expression level | 4 g cellulase/kg FW tobacco at 7 days after induction, with 2 applications of ethanol induction solution | Werner et al., 2011 [ |
| Land area required | 5,519 hectares/year | Calculated |
| Tobacco land area required as a fraction | 0.27% | Calculated |
| Ethanol induction | Foliar application of aqueous solution of 2.5% (v/v) ethanol, 2 applications using ground irrigation/sprinklers (central pivot, traveler, or side roll), at 500 L/hectare | |
| Cost of ethanol for induction | $0.73/kg | Humbird et al., 2011 [ |
| Percentage of ethanol drawn off | 0.12% | Calculated |
| Capital cost of ethanol spray | $2,223/hectare |
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| Annual operating cost of ethanol spray | $988/hectare year |
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| Base case assumptions for plant-based cellulase production facility | ||
| Construction period | 12 months | Klein-Marcuschamer et al., 2012 [ |
| Start-up period | 18 months | Klein-Marcuschamer et al., 2012 [ |
| Project lifetime | 25 years | Klein-Marcuschamer et al., 2012 [ |
| Income tax rate | 40% | Klein-Marcuschamer et al., 2012 [ |
| Working capital | 30 days of labor, raw materials, utilities, waste | Klein-Marcuschamer et al., 2012 [ |
| Start-up cost | 5% direct fixed capital investment, not depreciable | Klein-Marcuschamer et al., 2012 [ |
| Depreciation | Straight line over 10 years, salvage value 5% direct fixed capital | Klein-Marcuschamer et al., 2012 [ |
| Unlisted equipment | 5% of the major purchased listed equipment | Klein-Marcuschamer et al., 2012 [ |
Capital investment and operating costs for manufacturing of cellulases in field-cultivated plants (in 2013 US dollars).
| Plant-based cellulase production process | Fungal-based cellulase production process | |
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| Total capital investment (millions of US dollars) | $11.5 | $81.5 |
| Total annual operating costs per unit of cellulase production (millions of US dollars) | $20.0 | $29.9 |
| Unit production cost ($/kg cellulase) | $6.98 | $10.6 |
Figure 4Process operations in the manufacture of cellulases in tobacco biomass.
Figure 5Cost of cellulase enzymes as a function of plant biomass.