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Genetically engineered tobacco can save lives
Posted by: Prof. Dr. M. Raupp (IP Logged)
Date: June 04, 2008 08:22AM

Instead of killing people, tobacco plants are being used to
mass-produce cheaper vaccines that will better protect against hepatitis B
and cervical cancer, halt gastroenterological norovirus infections and - in
the future - even improve the treatment of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and other
cancers, as well as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease.



So says Arizona State University Prof. Charles Arntzen, a pioneer in
biotechnology and the genetic engineering of plants to trigger an effective
immune response in humans and animals, who received an honorary doctorate
from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Sunday night.

Arntzen, who has been here five times and collaborates on projects
with his Israeli (especially Hebrew University) counterparts, previously
worked with raw potatoes and bananas to boost production of vaccine for
poultry and humans, but he has found tobacco is much more effective,
practical and cheaper to produce.

His team injects viral vectors based on tobacco mosaic virus into the
leaves of tobacco plants using a syringe. Five to 15 days later, they
harvest that part of the leaf to see if the vectors produce a vaccine
antigen.

"When we get a good vector, we scale it up by growing pallets of
tobacco plants and dip them into a bath of the plant virus vectors. The
plants are put in a growth chamber to allow the antigen to be expressed by
the virus," he told The Jerusalem Post in an interview Sunday at Jerusalem's
King David Hotel. This is a much quicker and more efficient process than
culturing dangerous viruses in the lab and then weakening or killing them to
produce vaccines.

For the team's vaccine against norovirus - which affects people of all
ages, is transmitted by food or water contaminated with excrement and is
responsible for most of the world's gastroenteritis infections - two weeks
are required for the antigen to develop. The tobacco leaves are ground up
and the cells purified through a filter - leaving out all the deadly
alkaloid ingredients in tobacco. It can then be administered via nasal spray
to halt the infection. As it does not give lifelong protection,
pharmaceutical companies are very interested in such a plant-based vaccine
because it offers a long-term, profitable mass market.

Other vaccines produced quickly and cheaply in tobacco leaves will be
able to replace antibiotics and keep poultry healthy until they're
slaughtered, Arntzen said. It needs only be sprayed onto chicken feed and
eaten to protect from infections.

The plant technology is also being used experimentally to produce a
customized vaccine for patients with non-Hodkin's lymphoma - a cancer of the
lymph glands - to halt the progression of the disease. As tobacco plants can
be used quickly to produce a vaccine based on the patient's own immune
system, he said, it can stimulate the patient's immune system to fight the
disease more effectively.

While not all injectable vaccines will be replaced by vaccines in oral
or nasal sprays, Arntzen said that many will, as new ones will be developed
in the future to get the immune system to fight the progression of chronic
diseases in the body.


www.Checkbiotech.org



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