Top Banner
Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 [email protected] Novel Biotechnology Strategies to Produce Countermeasures Against Biological and Chemical Weapons Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention Workshop The Royal Society; Sept. 4-6, 2006
20

Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 [email protected].

Dec 28, 2015

Download

Documents

Marcia Jenkins
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Charles J. ArntzenCenter for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology

Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State UniversityTempe, AZ 85287-1601

[email protected]

Novel Biotechnology Strategies to Produce Countermeasures Against Biological and

Chemical Weapons

Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention Workshop

The Royal Society; Sept. 4-6, 2006

Page 2: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Rapid Response to Biothreats• Current working concept of biothreat defense: Create Strategic Reserves of Therapeutics and Vaccines against known biothreat agents.

Limitations - large number of agents, multiple strains, ability to mutate or modify a strain to make it resistant to treatment, long term instability of therapeutics in the reserve, and overall cost.

Paul Keim (Sept. 4): “Fight against Bioterrorism is a race -- a race that has no end.”

Page 3: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Rapid Response to Biothreats

• The alternative to Strategic Reserves is a rapid response health care system -- rapid detection and characterization of the pathogen, and rapid production of therapeutics.

• The Defense Sciences Office (DSO) of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is seeking new technologies that radically accelerate the manufacturing of protein vaccines and protein-based therapeutics.

Page 4: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

DARPA Concepthttp://www.sainc.com/dso0631/dsowhitepaper/index.asp

Page 5: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

• What production system can make a new (protein) therapeutic in 12 week?

• Transgenic organisms are too slow

• The need: a large scale, transient gene expression system

Page 6: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Plant-Made Pharmaceuticals (PMPs)

1989 Hiatt, A., Cafferkey, R. and Bowdish, K. Production of Antibodies in Transgenic Plants. Nature 342: 76-78.

1992 Mason, H.D., M.-K. Lam and C. J. Arntzen. Expression of hepatitis B surface antigen in transgenic plants. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89:11745-749.

Page 7: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Human Clinical Trials (Vaccine in Food)

Plant Engineering: • Choose a plant which is facile for protein expression• Use a plant that can be eaten uncooked Regulatory:

• Pre-clinical studies with mice• Vaccine is only a “food additive”

Page 8: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

• Tacket, C.O., Mason, H.S., Losonsky, G., Clements, J.D., Levine, M.M., C.J. Arntzen. 1998. Immunogenicity in humans of a recombinant bacterial antigen delivered in a transgenic potato. Nature Medicine, 4:607-609.

• Tacket, C.O., Mason, H.S., Losonsky, G., Clements, J.D., Levine, M.M., C.J. Arntzen. 1998. Immunogenicity in humans of a recombinant bacterial antigen delivered in a transgenic potato. Nature Medicine, 4:607-609.

• Tacket, C.O., H.S. Mason, G. Losonsky, M.K. Estes, M.M. Levine, C.J. Arntzen. 2000. Human immune responses to a Novel Norwalk virus vaccine delivered in transgenic potatoes. The Journal of Infectious Diseases. 182:302-305.

• Tacket, C.O., H.S. Mason, G. Losonsky, M.K. Estes, M.M. Levine, C.J. Arntzen. 2000. Human immune responses to a Novel Norwalk virus vaccine delivered in transgenic potatoes. The Journal of Infectious Diseases. 182:302-305.

For Vaccines, Five Human Clinical Trials

• Thanavala, Y., Mahoney, M., Pal, S., Scott, A., Richter, L., Natarajan, N., Goodwin, P. and H.S. Mason. 2005. Immunogenicity in humans of an edible vaccine for hepatitis B. PNAS. 102, 3378-3382.

• Thanavala, Y., Mahoney, M., Pal, S., Scott, A., Richter, L., Natarajan, N., Goodwin, P. and H.S. Mason. 2005. Immunogenicity in humans of an edible vaccine for hepatitis B. PNAS. 102, 3378-3382.

The others used corn seed or lettuce

Three trials used raw potatoes

Page 9: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Yersinia

Plant-derived Pharmaceutical Protein Production

Plant Cell

AgrobacteriumAgrobacterium

• Design a gene for proteins(s) of choice and introduce it into a plant expression vector (example: Yersinia antigens).

• Produce the protein using one of two expression systems: transient expression (non-integrating vector) or stable transgenic plants (shown here).

Page 10: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Transient Gene Expression in Plants

AgrobacteriumAgrobacterium

• (#1) Engineer desired gene into plant virus; protein expression as a by-product of viral replication.

• (#2) Convert RNA virus to DNA sequence and move into a delivery vector such as Agrobacterium; infiltrate Agrobacterium into leaves to express RNA from the DNA sequence and achieve “deconstructed virus*” replication.

TMVTMV #1

#2

(*ICON Genetics’

magnICON® vectors as one major example)

Page 11: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

US Army Research supported a study of “Plant Production of Vaccines for Protection Against Biowarfare Agents”

Case Study: Plague Vaccine Vaccines

Page 12: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Plague Vaccine Research• 100 plants will yield a gram of purified vaccine (ie.,

75,000 doses)• Transient expression using “deconstructed virus”

required 12 days from infection to harvest

Page 13: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Gram quantities of Yersinia pestis antigens F1, V and an F1-V fusion protein were purified for injection delivery.

The antigens were successfully used to immunize guinea pigs, which were protected from Yersinia aerosol challenge trials at USAMRIID. Preliminary studies show that we can develop an oral delivery formulation, at least for boosting doses.

Plague Vaccine Candidates

Santi et al., PNAS, Jan. 24, 2006

Page 14: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Halabja, IraqMarch 17th 1988

Recent history of “successful” use of nerve agents by rogue states and terrorist

organizations

Case Study 2: Organophosphate nerve-agents countermeasures

Page 15: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Sarin, Soman, Tabun, VXMalathion, Parathion,

Diazinon, Fenthion,

Dichlorvos, Chlorpyrifos

Organophosphate toxicity occurs by inhibition of acetylcholinesterase

Therapeutic strategy: utilize human AChE as a molecular “sponge” to bind nerve gas agents

Validation: purified AChE from blood is functional

Organophosphates

Page 16: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Plants will “biomanufacture” human AChE

Figure 2. Purification of plant derived AChE-RSEKDEL. Three lots were analyzed further by SDS-PAGE and western blotting.

Plants were shown to produce human AChE• Active• “Human” kinetic

properties• Inhibitor binding

mimics human enzyme

Current research:

expression of BChE in

native and form

DOD N66001-01-C-8015 contract (Tsafrir Mor and Charles Arntzen)Completed in 2005.

Project title: Human Acetylcholinesterase Isoforms from Transgenic Plants: A Robust System for the Production and Delivery of Effective Countermeasure

Page 17: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

Plant-made AChE provides protection against Paraoxon challenge

0

1

2

3

4

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8[AChE]/[Paraoxon]

Sym

pto

ms (

a.u

.)

Pending research: “Center of Excellence for Catalytic Bioscavenger Medical Defense Research” to be lead by David E.

Lenz, United States Army Medical Research Institute of Chemical Defense. Focus: Catalytic enzymes such as BChE

Page 18: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

A. Plant cultivation B. Infiltrationand growth

C. Protein purification

HggkFlkgklFlskflfllfkbd

HggkFlkgklFlskflfllfkbd

HggkFlkgklFlskflfllfkbd

Industrialization

cGMP Facilities for Plant-based Biopharmaceuticals are availableat Arizona State University andKentucky BioProcessing

A. Plant cultivation B. Infiltrationand growth

C. Protein purification

HggkFlkgklFlskflfllfkbd

HggkFlkgklFlskflfllfkbd

HggkFlkgklFlskflfllfkbd

HggkFlkgklFlskflfllfkbd

HggkFlkgklFlskflfllfkbd

HggkFlkgklFlskflfllfkbd

Industrialization

cGMP Facilities for Plant-based Biopharmaceuticals are availableat Arizona State University andKentucky BioProcessing

The use of Plants for Accelerated Protein Manufacture

Page 19: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

cGMP Manufacturing Facility

Plant production advantages: • Capital cost avoidance • Scalable production

Page 20: Charles J. Arntzen Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology Arizona Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1601 charles.arntzen@asu.edu.

cGMP Manufacturing Facility

Plant production advantages: • Capital cost avoidance • Scalable production

Dual Use Facility -- Exploratory infectious disease studies to maintain expertise and advance the technology