4.8 Article

High-yield production of a human therapeutic protein in tobacco chloroplasts

Journal

NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages 333-338

Publisher

NATURE AMERICA INC
DOI: 10.1038/73796

Keywords

pharmaceutical; plastid transformation; somatotropin; transplastomic; ubiquitin fusion

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Transgenic plants have become attractive systems for production of human therapeutic proteins because of the reduced risk of mammalian viral contaminants, the ability to do targe scale-up at low cost, and the tow maintenance requirements. Here we report a feasibility study for production of a human therapeutic protein through transplastomic transformation technology, which has the additional advantage of increased biological containment by apparent elimination of the transmission of transgenes through pollen. We show that chloroplasts can express a secretory protein, human somatotropin, in a soluble, biologically active, disulfide-bonded form. High concentrations of recombinant protein accumulation are observed (>7% total soluble protein), more than 300-fold higher than a similar gene expressed using a nuclear transgenic approach. The plastid-expressed somatotropin is nearly devoid of complex posttranslational modifications, effectively increasing the amount of usable recombinant protein. We also describe approaches to obtain a somatotropin with a non-methionine N terminus, similar to the native human protein. The results indicate that chloroplasts are a highly efficient vehicle for the potential production of pharmaceutical proteins in plants.

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