Use of biotechnology in pharmaceutical manufacturing
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Contents
Human Insulin
Human Growth Hormone
Human Blood Clotting Factors
Prior to the development and FDA approval of a means to produce human blood clotting factors using recombinant DNA technologies, human blood clotting factors were produced from donated blood that was inadequately screened for HIV. Thus, HIV infection posed a significant danger to patients with hemophilia who received human blood clotting factors:Most reports indicate that 60 to 80 percent of patients with hemophilia who were exposed to factor VIII concentrates between 1979 and 1984 are seropositive for HIV by [the] Western blot assay. As of May 1988, more than 659 patients with hemophilia had AIDS...[6]The first human blood clotting factor to be produced in significant quantities using recombinant DNA technology was Factor IX, which was produced using transgenic Chinese hamster ovary cells in 1986.[7] Lacking a map of the human genome, researchers obtained a known sequence of the RNA for Factor IX by examining the amino acids in Factor IX:
Microsequencing of highly purified... [Factor IX] yielded sufficient amino acid sequence to construct oligonucleotide probes.[8]The known sequence of Factor IX RNA was then used to search for the gene coding for Factor IX in a library of the DNA found in the human liver, since it was known that blood clotting factors are produced by the human liver[8]:
A unique oligonucleotide... homologous to Factor IX mRNA... was synthesized and labeled... The resultant probe was used to screen a human liver double-stranded cDNA library... Complete two-stranded DNA sequences of the... [relevant] cDNA... contained all of the coding sequence COOH-terminal of the eleventh codon (11) and the entire 3'-untranslated sequence.[7]This sequence of cDNA was used to find the remaining DNA sequences comprising the Factor IX gene by searching the DNA in the X chromosome:
A genomic library from a human XXXX chromosome was prepared... and screen[ed] with a Factor IX cDNA probe. Hybridizing recombinant phage were isolated, plaque-purified, and the DNA isolated. Restriction mapping, Southern analysis, and DNA sequencing permitted identification of five recombinant phage-containing inserts which, when overlapped at common sequences, coded the entire 35kb Factor IX gene.[9]
Plasmids containing the Factor IX gene, along with plasmids with a gene that codes for resistance to methotrexate, were inserted into Chinese hamster ovary cells via transfection. Transfection involves the insertion of DNA into a eukaryotic cell. Unlike the analogous process of transformation in bacteria, transfected DNA is not ordinarily integrated into the cell's genome, and is therefore not usually passed on to subsequent generations via cell division. Thus, in order to obtain a "stable" transfection, a gene which confers a significant survival advantage must also be transfected, causing the few cells that did integrate the transfected DNA into their genomes to increase their population as cells that did not integrate the DNA are eliminated. In the case of this study, "grow[th] in increasing concentrations of methotrexate"[10] promoted the survival of stably transfected cells, and diminished the survival of other cells.
The Chinese hamster ovary cells that were stably transfected produced significant quantities of Factor IX, which was shown to have substantial coagulant properties, though of a lesser degree than Factor IX produced from human blood:The specific activity of the recombinant Factor IX was measured on the basis of direct measurement of the coagulant activity... The specific activity of recombinant Factor IX was 75 units/mg... compared to 150 units/mg measured for plasma-derived Factor IX...[11]
In 1992, the FDA approved Factor VIII produced using transgenic Chinese hamster ovary cells, the first such blood clotting factor produced using recombinant DNA technology to be approved.[12]
Transgenic Farm Animals
References
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- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Human Insulin: Seizing the Golden Plasmid". Science News. 114 (12): 195. 1978-09-16. doi:10.2307/3963132.
- ↑ Brar, Deepinder: "The History of Insulin" http://www.med.uni-giessen.de/itr/history/inshist.html, accessed June 14, 2006
- ↑ "Labs tie for human growth hormone". Science News. 116 (2): 22. 1979-07-14. doi:10.2307/3964172.
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- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Toole JJ, Knopf JL, Wozney JM; et al. (1984). "Molecular cloning of a cDNA encoding human antihaemophilic factor". Nature. 312 (5992): 342–7. doi:10.1038/312342a0. PMID 6438528.
page 343
- ↑ Kaufman, pages 9622–3
- ↑ Kaufman, page 9623
- ↑ Kaufman, page 9626
- ↑ United States Food and Drug Administration: "The licensing of the first recombinant DNA-derived clotting factor", http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/NEWS/NEW00312.html, accessed June 17, 2006
- ↑ O'Donnell JK, Martin MJ, Logan JS, Kumar R (1993). "Production of human hemoglobin in transgenic swine: an approach to a blood substitute". Cancer Detect. Prev. 17 (2): 307–12. PMID 8402717.
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