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VACCINES IN VEGETABLE FORM
HOUSTON - Genetically engineered fruits and vegetables that provide immunity could soon become a reality according to several
recent studies.
Scientists now report that laboratory animals fed genetically
engineered potatoes produced antibodies against hepatitis B, an
infectious bacterium responsible for diarrheal disease. This is
the first time that an oral vaccination has been achieved by
feeding a genetically modified plant.
The researchers first transferred a gene that makes an
antigen against hepatitis B (rHBsAg) from yeast to tobacco and
then to potatoes. The immune response elicited by the transferred
protein was similar to that obtained by immunizing mice with
commercial vaccines for hepatitis B. Both the B- and T-cell
epitopes of HBsAg were preserved when the antigen was expressed
in the transgenic plant.
If these preliminary results translate into immunity against
infection, it could open the door to edible vaccines against
enteric diseases caused by viruses or bacteria, such as cholera.
These diarrheal illnesses are blamed for the deaths of at least
five million children each year in developing nations.
"In the developing world, a low-cost vaccine for these
diseases would make a dramatic health improvement," said Dr.
Charles J. Arntzen, a molecular biologist at Texas A&M
University's Institute for Biosciences and Technology.
Arntzen says that potatoes were genetically engineered to
produce a protein subunit from an infectious variety of E. coli
bacteria. When mice consumed the raw potatoes as food, they
produced antibodies against the protein in both their blood serum
and in secretions in the gut.
These results are "extremely hopeful, but not yet
conclusive," Arntzen says. "Because mice do not get the human
form of diarrheal disease, we cannot determine protective
immunity yet." Further tests in other animals that do get
diarrheal disease are planned, he says.
Arntzen emphasizes that potatoes themselves are a good
system in which to test the idea of edible vaccines, but probably
would not be a practical to administer them to children. Other
members of Arntzen's research group are attempting to introduce
the E. coli genetic material into other food plants, especially
bananas.
"The chances are that nobody is going to want to eat raw
potatoes, and we believe that cooking is going to destroy the
proteins that we're interested in, so we have to have something
that's eaten raw. We're looking for something that could be eaten
without cooking, and something that could be grown easily in
developing areas of the world. Bananas seem to fill the bill," he
noted.
"I don't see that every village in Africa or Latin America
is going to have a pharmaceutical banana tree, because there
might be disadvantages to eating this material on a repeated
basis. I would say that if we are successful, this will be
treated like any other pharmaceutical or herbal medicine and
managed in a health care context," he added.
According to the World Health Organization, some 2 million
children around the world die each year from diseases that can be
prevented with vaccines, such as diphtheria, tetanus, whooping
cough, polio and measles.
For information on these studies, see articles by Arntzen et
al. in the 5/5/95 issue of Science and the 4/11/95 issue of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Transmitted: 95-05-05 18:36:47 EDT
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