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From gene to harvest: insights into upstream process development for the GMP production of a monoclonal antibody in transgenic tobacco plants

Journal

PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages 1094-1105

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/pbi.12438

Keywords

upstream process development; GMP/GACP; plant-made pharmaceuticals; 2G12; HIV; transgenic tobacco; manufacturing licence; glasshouse

Funding

  1. European Union [LSHB-CT-2003-503565]
  2. Fraunhofer Society

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The EU Sixth Framework Programme Integrated Project 'Pharma-Planta' developed an approved manufacturing process for recombinant plant-made pharmaceutical proteins (PMPs) using the human HIV-neutralizing monoclonal antibody 2G12 as a case study. In contrast to the well-established Chinese hamster ovary platform, which has been used for the production of therapeutic antibodies for nearly 30 years, only draft regulations were initially available covering the production of recombinant proteins in transgenic tobacco plants. Whereas recombinant proteins produced in animal cells are secreted into the culture medium during fermentation in bioreactors, intact plants grown under nonsterile conditions in a glasshouse environment provide various 'plant-specific' regulatory and technical challenges for the development of a process suitable for the acquisition of a manufacturing licence for clinical phase I trials. During upstream process development, several generic steps were addressed (e.g. plant transformation and screening, seed bank generation, genetic stability, host plant uniformity) as well as product-specific aspects (e.g. product quantity). This report summarizes the efforts undertaken to analyse and define the procedures for the GMP/GACP-compliant upstream production of 2G12 in transgenic tobacco plants from gene to harvest, including the design of expression constructs, plant transformation, the generation of production lines, master and working seed banks and the detailed investigation of cultivation and harvesting parameters and their impact on biomass, product yield and intra/interbatch variability. The resulting procedures were successfully translated into a prototypic manufacturing process that has been approved by the German competent authority.

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