Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6485421 | Biomaterials | 2015 | 27 Pages |
Abstract
Antibodies (inhibitors) developed by hemophilia B patients against coagulation factor IX (FIX) are challenging to eliminate because of anaphylaxis or nephrotic syndrome after continued infusion. To address this urgent unmet medical need, FIX fused with a transmucosal carrier (CTB) was produced in a commercial lettuce (Simpson Elite) cultivar using species specific chloroplast vectors regulated by endogenous psbA sequences. CTB-FIX (â¼1Â mg/g) in lyophilized cells was stable with proper folding, disulfide bonds and pentamer assembly when stored â¼2Â years at ambient temperature. Feeding lettuce cells to hemophilia B mice delivered CTB-FIX efficiently to the gut immune system, induced LAP+ regulatory T cells and suppressed inhibitor/IgE formation and anaphylaxis against FIX. Lyophilized cells enabled 10-fold dose escalation studies and successful induction of oral tolerance was observed in all tested doses. Induction of tolerance in such a broad dose range should enable oral delivery to patients of different age groups and diverse genetic background. Using Fraunhofer cGMP hydroponic system, â¼870Â kg fresh or 43.5Â kg dry weight can be harvested per 1000Â ft2 per annum yielding 24,000-36,000 doses for 20-kg pediatric patients, enabling first commercial development of an oral drug, addressing prohibitively expensive purification, cold storage/transportation and short shelf life of current protein drugs.
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Authors
Jin Su, Liqing Zhu, Alexandra Sherman, Xiaomei Wang, Shina Lin, Aditya Kamesh, Joey H. Norikane, Stephen J. Streatfield, Roland W. Herzog, Henry Daniell,