Feasibility of antibody production in plants for human therapeutic use

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Abstract

From the description above, the diversity of antibodies as a class of potential therapeutic agents is weighed against the constraints of developing any therapeutic molecule. Although much of this limit is specific to the antibody design, plant-based production systems have a potential to impact commercialization by making larger volume products manageable, with lower up- front capital requirements. Due to their novel glycosylation pattern (FAYE et al. 1989), plants at present may not create antibodies with all the functions of mammalian-glycosylated antibodies (WRIGHT and MORRISON 1994). This is not a limit for all current products. Success is dependent on fusing the efficient agriculture infrastructure with the narrow tolerances required for a drug production system. Further validation of plants as a production system will come as more therapeutics from plants follow the corn-produced material through human clinical trials.

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Russell, D. A. (1999). Feasibility of antibody production in plants for human therapeutic use. Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-60234-4_6

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