| Literature DB >> 28554196 |
Abstract
Plant expression systems have been developed to produce anti-cancer vaccines. Plants have several advantages as bioreactors for the production of subunit vaccines: they are considered safe, and may be used to produce recombinant proteins at low production cost. However, several technical issues hinder large-scale production of anti-cancer vaccines in plants. The present review covers design strategies to enhance the immunogenicity and therapeutic potency of anti-cancer vaccines, methods to increase vaccine-expressing plant biomass, and challenges facing the production of anti-cancer vaccines in plants. Specifically, the issues such as low expression levels and plant-specific glycosylation are described, along with their potential solutions.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Glycosylation; Plant expression system; Recombinant protein; Subunit vaccine; Vaccine
Year: 2017 PMID: 28554196 PMCID: PMC5499611 DOI: 10.4062/biomolther.2016.126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomol Ther (Seoul) ISSN: 1976-9148 Impact factor: 4.634
Fig. 1.Plant N-glycosylation pathway and its profile of cancer vaccine expressed in plants. (A) Glycosylation processing pathway in plant (modified from Jamal ). (B) The comparative amount of plant-derived colorectal cancer antigen GA733-FcK protein expression level and the ratio of Golgi/endoplasmic reticulum-type glycans along with growth periods (modified from Lim ).
Cancer vaccines expressed in plants
| Target/Antigen/Strategy | Host plant | Transformation platform | Immunogenicity/efficacy (development status) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor-associated colorectal cancer antigen: Fused to Fc high mannose type glycan | Stable | Induced anti-cancer IgGs (pre-clinical) | ||
| Prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) antigen: Fused to IgM Fc | Stable | Induced anti-PAP IgGs (pre-clinical) | ||
| Tumor-associated colorectal cancer antigen | Transient | Serum in vaccinated mice inhibited colorectal tumor in nude mice (pre-clinical) | ||
| Human papilloma virus 16 L1/L2 chimaeras | Transient | Not tested | ||
| Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL) | Transient | Induced immune responses (Phase II) | ||
| E7 oncoprotein from human papilloma virus 16 | Transient | Induced E7-specific IgG and prevented tumor development | ||
| Her2 protein | Transient | Induced anti-Her2 antibody including trastuzumab-like activities | ||
| Plant virus particle-based cancer immunotherapy | Transient | Activated TLR7 and Induced high levels of protective antibody | ||
| MUC1-based plant vaccine for breast cancer | Transient | Induced anti-MUC1 serum antibodies |
Advantages of various systems for expressing recombinant proteins (modified from Raskin )
| Host | Advantages of recombinant protein expression in various systems | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||
| Speed | Operating cost | Capital cost | Glycosylation | Multimeric assembly | Folding | Safety | Scalability | |
| Bacteria | + + + | + + | + + | + | + | + | + + | + |
| Yeast | + + | + + | + | + | + | + | + + | + + |
| Insect cell culture | + + + | + + | + | + | + + | + | + | + + |
| Plant | + + | + + + | + + + | + + | + + | + + | + + + | + + + |
| Mammalian cell culture | + | + | + | + + | + + | + + + | + | + |
| Transgenic animal | + | + | + + | + + + | + + + | + + | + | + + |