| Literature DB >> 26635832 |
Mohammad T Waheed1, Hammad Ismail1, Johanna Gottschamel2, Bushra Mirza1, Andreas G Lössl3.
Abstract
Infectious diseases pose an increasing risk to health, especially in developing countries. Vaccines are available to either cure or prevent many of these diseases. However, there are certain limitations related to these vaccines, mainly the costs, which make these vaccines mostly unaffordable for people in resource poor countries. These costs are mainly related to production and purification of the products manufactured from fermenter-based systems. Plastid biotechnology has become an attractive platform to produce biopharmaceuticals in large amounts and cost-effectively. This is mainly due to high copy number of plastids DNA in mature chloroplasts, a characteristic particularly important for vaccine production in large amounts. An additional advantage lies in the maternal inheritance of plastids in most plant species, which addresses the regulatory concerns related to transgenic plants. These and many other aspects of plastids will be discussed in the present review, especially those that particularly make these green biofactories an attractive platform for vaccine production. A summary of recent vaccine antigens against different human diseases expressed in plastids will also be presented.Entities:
Keywords: biopharmaceuticals; cost-effective vaccines; developing countries; infectious diseases; molecular farming; plant-based vaccines; plastids
Year: 2015 PMID: 26635832 PMCID: PMC4646963 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2015.01005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Diagrammatic presentation of constituents of expression cassette along with their respective expression levels for vaccine antigens. Combinations of similar insertion sites, promoters, regulatory elements and terminators are shown in one color. SM, selection marker; RE, regulatory elements; UTR, untranslated region; psbA, psbA gene; TpsbA, Terminator of psbA gene; rrn16, rrn 16 gene; T7g10, leader sequence of gene 10 of the lambda phage T7; rbcL, rbcL gene; TrbcL, Terminator of rbcL gene; TrrnB, Escherichia coli rrnB terminator; TSP, total soluble protein; TLP, total leaf protein.
Different vaccine antigens against human diseases expressed via plastid genome since 2011.
| Dengue epitope region of E protein of DENV domain I and II (Dengue fever) | Lettuce | Not reported | Cross reaction of antibodies from the sera of dengue patients | Maldaner et al., |
| Dengue-3 serotype capsid complete premembrane (prM) and truncated envelope (E) protein prM/E (Dengue fever) | Lettuce | Not reported | Not tested | Kanagaraj et al., |
| Mutated human papillomavirus (HPV)-16 oncoprotein E7 (cervical cancer) | Not reported | Vaccination in mice with algae extracts showed high level of E7-specific antibodies but low activation of E7-specific CD8+ cells | Vlasák et al., | |
| Mutated, attenuated E7 oncoprotein (E7GGG), alone or as a fusion with affinity tags (His6 or FLAG) (cervical cancer) | 0.12% of total soluble protein (TSP) | Induction of specific anti-E7 IgGs and E7-specific T-cell proliferation detected in C57BL/6 mice vaccinated with total Chlamydomonas extract and with affinity-purified protein | Demurtas et al., | |
| E7 translationally fused with β-glucuronidase | Tobacco | GUS-E7 showed expression between 30 and 40 times higher than previously reported for unfused E7 (0.1% of TSP) | Not tested | Morgenfeld et al., |
| Modified HPV-16 L1 gene fused with glutathione-S-transferase (GST) GST-L1_2xCysM (cervical cancer) | Tobacco | Not detected | Not tested | Hassan et al., |
| Synthetic gene encoding a C4V3 recombinant protein (HIV) | Tobacco | ~25 μg/g of fresh weight | Plant-derived C4V3 has elicited both systemic and mucosal antibody responses in BALB/c mice, as well as CD4+ T cell proliferation responses | Rubio-Infante et al., |
| Multiepitopic protein (Multi-HIV) carrying several neutralizing epitopes from both gp120 and gp41 (AIDS) | Tobacco | Protein accumulation levels up to 16 μg/g of fresh tobacco biomass | Multi-HIV protein was able to elicit humoral responses in mice when orally administered | Rosales-Mendoza et al., |
| HIV-1 capsid protein p24 alone and in fusion with the negative regulatory protein Nef (p24-Nef) (AIDS) | Tobacco | P24 up to ~4% and p24-Nef up to ~40% of TSP | Subcutaneous immunization with purified chloroplast-derived p24 elicited a strong antigen-specific serum IgG response. Oral administration of a partially purified chloroplast-derived p24-Nef fusion protein, used as a booster after subcutaneous injection with either p24 or Nef, also elicited strong antigen-specific serum IgG responses | McCabe et al., |
| Rotavirus VP6 gene (gastroenteritis) | Tobacco | >15% of total leaf protein (TLP) | Not tested | Inka Borchers et al., |
| Cholera toxin subunit B (CTB) fused with acid alpha glucosidase (GAA) CTB-GAA (Cholera, Pompe disease) | Tobacco | Between 0.13 and 0.21% of TLP | CTB-GAA fusion protein significantly suppressed immunoglobulin formation against GAA in Pompe mice | Su et al., |
| CTB fused with | Tobacco Lettuce | Maximum expression was 7.5% of TSP in mature tobacco leaves for CTB-ESAT-6 | Hemolysis assay with purified CTB-ESAT6 protein showed partial hemolysis of red blood cells confirming the functionality of ESAT-6 | Lakshmi et al., |
| Major membrane protein I (mmpI) from | Tobacco | Not reported | Not tested | Hassan et al., |
| EspA and Tir/Intimin antigens from enterohemorrhagic | Tobacco | Up to 1.4% of TSP | Upon oral administration of tobacco plant leaves high IgG and IgA specific antibodies were detected in serum and feces of mice | Karimi et al., |
| Domain IV of | Tobacco | 5.3% of TSP | Antibody titers of >104 were induced upon intraperitoneal (ip) and oral immunizations with plant derived PA(dIV). Mice challenged with | Gorantala et al., |
| Anthrax protective antigen (PV) (Anthrax) | Tobacco | 2.5–4% of TSP | Intraperitoneal and oral immunization with plant PA in murine model indicated high serum PA specific IgG and IgA antibody titers. Oral immunization experiments demonstrated generation of immunoprotective response in mice | Gorantala et al., |
| 0.5 and 0.2% of TSP, respectively | Antibodies to algae-produced Pfs25 were bond to the surface of | Gregory et al., | ||
| 0.09% TSP | Algae produced CtxB-Pfs25 elicited CtxB-specific serum IgG antibodies and both CtxB- and Pfs25-specific secretory IgA antibodies | Gregory et al., | ||
| Tobacco | 0.1–0.2 μg/g fresh weight | Human seropositive samples reacted with chloroplast-derived SAG1, oral immunization in mice elicited significant reduction of the cyst burden | Albarracín et al., | |
| Tobacco | 0.2% of total protein | Oral immunization with chlGRA4 resulted in a decrease of 59% in the brain cyst load of mice compared to control mice. ChlGRA4 immunization elicited both mucosal immune responses | Yácono et al., | |
| Sexual stage antigenic surface protein Pfs48/45 antigen of | Not reported | Not tested | Jones et al., | |
| Human proinsulin (A, B, C peptides) containing three furin cleavage sites fused with CTB (CTB-PFx3) (Diabetes type-1) | Tobacco Lettuce | 47% of TLP in tobacco 53% of TLP in lettuce | Oral delivery of unprocessed proinsulin bioencapsulated in plant cells or injectable delivery into mice showed reduction in blood glucose levels similar to processed commercial insulin | Boyhan and Daniell, |
| Human proinsulin gene fused with protein A (Diabetes type-1) | Tobacco | 0.2% of TSP | Not tested | Yarbakht et al., |
| Exendin-4 (EX4) fused with CTB (Diabetes type-2) | Tobacco | 14.3% of TLP | Upon oral delivery in mice CTB-EX4 stimulated insulin secretion similar to the intraperitoneal injection of commercial EX4 | Kwon et al., |