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Altogether, the biochemical, technical and economic limitations on
existing proka- otic and eukaryotic expression systems and the
growing clinical demand for complex therapeutic proteins have
created substantial interest in developing new expression systems
for the production of therapeutic proteins. To that end, plants
have emerged in the past decade as a suitable alternative to the
current production systems, and today their potential for
production of high quality, much safer and biologically active
complex recombinant pharmaceutical proteins is largely documented.
The chapters in this volume, contributed by leaders in the field,
sum up the state-- the-art methods for using a variety of different
plants as expression hosts for phar- ceutical proteins. Several
production platforms are presented, ranging from seed- and
leaf-based production in stable transgenic plant lines, to plant
cell bioreactors, to viral or Agrobacterium-mediated transient expr
ession systems. Currently, antibodies and their derived fragments
represent the largest and most important group of biote- nological
products in clinical trials. This explains why the potential of
most prod- tion platforms is illustrated here principally for
antibodies or antibody fragments with acknowledged potential for
immunotherapy in humans. In addition, a comparison of different
plant expression systems is presented using aprotinin, a commercial
phar- ceutical protein, as a test system. Although multiple books
and monographs have been recently published on mol- ular pharming,
there is a noticeable dearth of bench step-by-step protocols that
can be used quickly and easily by beginners entering this new
field.
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