Interferons are being tested as antiviral and antitumour agents in man 1-5, but because of their limited availability, clinical trials have remained inconclusive. Most of the interferon (IFN) preparations tested in man have been derived from human peripheral blood, buffy-coat leukocytes (HuIFN-α)6 induced by Sendai virus or from human diploid fibroblastoid cells (HuIFN-β) superinduced with poly(rI)-poly(rC) 7. As production of interferon from leukocytes is restricted by the availability of blood donors, and production from cultured cells is a laborious and relatively costly process, the use of recombinant DNA technology may provide the most economical approach to the large-scale production of pure species of human interferon. The testing of such interferons is in its infancy. With the availability of bacterially produced HuIFN-α2 we have been able to compare its activity against vaccinia virus infection of the rhesus monkey with that of HuIFN-α from leukocyte buffy coats. Here we provide evidence that the two human α-interferons have comparable antiviral activity but that the bacterially produced form has fewer side effects, at least in the rhesus monkey. © 1981 Nature Publishing Group.
CITATION STYLE
Schellekens, H., De Reus, A., Bolhuis, R., Fountoulakis, M., Schein, C., Ecsödi, J., … Weissmann, C. (1981). Comparative antiviral efficiency of leukocyte and bacterially produced human α-interferon in rhesus monkeys. Nature, 292(5825), 775–776. https://doi.org/10.1038/292775a0
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.