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Scientists grow diabetes drug in tobacco plants
Mar 20, 09 Clinical UpdatesScientists have found a healthy use for tobacco after breeding genetically modified plants containing a medicine that could stop type 1 diabetes.
The move marks the latest advance in the emerging field of molecular farming, which may offer a cheaper way of making biotech drugs and vaccines than traditional factory systems.
European researchers said on Thursday they had produced tobacco plants containing a potent anti-inflammatory protein called interleukin-10 (IL-10) that could help patients with insulin-dependent type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune diseases.
A number of agrochemical companies, including Bayer and Syngenta, have been looking at ways to make complex protein drugs in plants, although progress has been slow.
At the moment, antibody medicines and vaccines are produced in cell cultures inside stainless steel fermenters. However, Mario Pezzotti of the University of Verona, who led the tobacco study published in the journal BMC Biotechnology, believes they could be grown more efficiently in fields, since plants are the world’s most cost-effective protein producers.
Several different plants have been studied by research groups around the world, but tobacco is a firm favorite. “Tobacco is a fantastic plant because it is easy to transform genetically and you can easily regenerate an entire plant from a single cell,” Pezzotti said in a telephone interview.
Pezzotti and colleagues—who received funding for their research from the European Union—now plan to feed the plants to mice with autoimmune diseases to find out how they respond.
Further down the line, they want to test whether repeated small doses could help prevent diabetes in people, when given alongside another compound called glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65), which has also been produced in tobacco plants.
By Ben Hirschler
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