Production of plant made pharmaceuticals: from plant host to functional protein

2012 
In the last two decades plants have emerged as valuable alternatives to mammalian cells for the production of pharmaceuticals and their potential as expression systems was shown by the commercial availability and acceptance of several plant made therapeuticals in clinical trials. Plants have many advantages over yeast, insect and bacterial expression systems such as the potential to properly fold the expressed proteins and the synthesis of more human-like N-glycans on the proteins. However, several constraints, such as expression yields, downstream processing and structural authenticity, currently limit the widespread use of plant expression systems. In this review, the focus is on the current limitations of plant systems for the production of pharmaceuticals and the possibilities to overcome these obstacles. A comparison is made with insect cell and yeast expression systems. Furthermore, the importance of glycosylation, in particular N-glycosylation for the biological function(s) of therapeutics in the h...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    200
    References
    26
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []