4.7 Review

On the verge of the market - Plant factories for the automated and standardized production of biopharmaceuticals

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY ADVANCES
Volume 46, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biotechadv.2020.107681

Keywords

Greenhouse; Indoor farming; Open field cultivation; Plant-made pharmaceuticals; Process monitoring; Vertical farming unit

Funding

  1. Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft Internal Programs [Attract 125-600164]
  2. state of North RhineWestphalia under the Leistungszentrum grant [423]

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The biopharmaceutical market is driven by recombinant proteins, mainly for vaccines and antibodies. Plant molecular farming as an alternative production method offers scalability and cost efficiency in upstream processes. However, lack of standardized process equipment has hindered approvals for pharmaceutical proteins from whole plants.
The market for biopharmaceuticals is dominated by recombinant proteins and is driven mainly by the development of vaccines and antibodies. Manufacturing predominantly relies on fermentation-based production platforms, which have limited scalability and suffer from high upstream process costs. As an alternative, the production of recombinant proteins in whole plants (plant molecular farming) provides a scalable and cost efficient upstream process because each plant functions as a self-contained bioreactor, avoiding costs associated with single-use devices and cleaning-in-place. Despite many proof-of-concept studies and the approval of a few products as medical devices, the only approved pharmaceutical proteins manufactured in whole plants have been authorized under emergency protocols. The absence of approvals under standard clinical development pathways in part reflects the lack of standardized process equipment and unit operations, leading to industry inertia based on familiarity with fermenter systems. Here we discuss the upstream production steps of plant molecular farming by transient expression in intact plants, including seeding, plant cultivation, infiltration with Agrobacterium tumefaciens, post-infiltration incubation, and harvesting. We focus on cultivation techniques because they strongly affect the subsequent steps and overall process design. We compare the benefits and drawbacks of open field, greenhouse and vertical farm strategies in terms of upfront investment costs, batch reproducibility, and decoupling from environmental impacts. We consider process automation, monitoring and adaptive process design in the context of Industry 4.0, which can boost process efficiency and batch-to-batch uniformity to improve regulatory compliance. Finally, we discuss the costs-benefit aspects of the different cultivation systems.

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