Bioprocessing of plant-derived virus-like particles of Norwalk virus capsid protein under current Good Manufacture Practice regulations

被引:77
作者
Lai, Huafang [1 ,2 ]
Chen, Qiang [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Arizona State Univ, Biodesign Inst, Ctr Infect Dis & Vaccinol, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
[2] Arizona State Univ, Coll Technol & Innovat, Mesa, AZ 85212 USA
关键词
Bioprocessing; cGMP; Large-scale; Plant-derived vaccines; Purification; VLP; ORAL IMMUNIZATION; EXPRESSION; ANTIBODIES; VACCINES; SYSTEMS;
D O I
10.1007/s00299-011-1196-6
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Despite the success in expressing a variety of subunit vaccine proteins in plants and the recent stride in improving vaccine accumulation levels by transient expression systems, there is still no plant-derived vaccine that has been licensed for human use. The lack of commercial success of plant-made vaccines lies in several technical and regulatory barriers that remain to be overcome. These challenges include the lack of scalable downstream processing procedures, the uncertainty of regulatory compliance of production processes, and the lack of demonstration of plant-derived products that meet the required standards of regulatory agencies in identity, purity, potency and safety. In this study, we addressed these remaining challenges and successfully demonstrate the ability of using plants to produce a pharmaceutical grade Norwalk virus (NV) vaccine under current Good Manufacture Practice (cGMP) guidelines at multiple gram scales. Our results demonstrate that an efficient and scalable extraction and purification scheme can be established for processing virus-like particles (VLPs) of NV capsid protein (NVCP). We successfully operated the upstream and downstream NVCP production processes under cGMP regulations. Furthermore, plant-derived NVCP VLP demonstrates the identity, purity, potency and safety that meet the preset release specifications. This material is being tested in a Phase I human clinical trial. This research provides the first report of producing a plant-derived vaccine at scale under cGMP regulations in an academic setting and an important step for plant-produced vaccines to become a commercial reality.
引用
收藏
页码:573 / 584
页数:12
相关论文
共 32 条
[1]   Conformational stability and disassembly of Norwalk virus-like particles - Effect of pH and temperature [J].
Ausar, Salvador F. ;
Foubert, Thomas R. ;
Hudson, Mary H. ;
Vedvick, Thomas S. ;
Middaugh, C. Russell .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2006, 281 (28) :19478-19488
[2]   Oral immunization with recombinant Norwalk virus-like particles induces a systemic and mucosal immune response in mice [J].
Ball, JM ;
Hardy, ME ;
Atmar, RL ;
Conner, ME ;
Estes, MK .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1998, 72 (02) :1345-1353
[3]  
Chen Q., 2008, Biological Engineering, V1, P291
[4]  
Chen Q., 2009, New Generation Vaccines, P306
[5]  
Chen Q., 2011, EUROPEAN BIOPHARM RE, V2, P64
[6]  
Chen Q, 2011, TRANSGENIC HORTICULTURAL CROPS: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES, P83
[7]   Commercialization of whole-plant systems for biomanufacturing of protein products: evolution and prospects [J].
Davies, H. Maelor .
PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL, 2010, 8 (08) :845-861
[8]  
Elbehri A., 2005, AgBioForum, V8, P18
[9]  
Estes MK, 2004, NEW GENERATION VACCI, P283
[10]   Success stories in molecular farming-a brief overview [J].
Faye, Loic ;
Gomord, Veronique .
PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL, 2010, 8 (05) :525-528