Bethesda, MD—A new study published in the February 2008 print
edition of
The FASEB Journal describes a scientific
advance that should reduce the cost and increase the availability of a
wide range of drugs. In the report, University of Pennsylvania
researchers describe how they used gene therapy to reduce the time it
takes to breed large animals capable of producing therapeutic proteins
in their milk, such as insulin or those that fight cancer. This
represents a significant milestone in drug development, as current
methods involve cloning, which takes more time and generally costs
more.
“Having an easier way to harness nature’s power to
produce large quantities of specific proteins in milk could increase
the availability of drugs for people who could otherwise not afford
these treatments,” said Ina Dobrinski, one of the researchers
on the study.
The study also is significant because it may also be a new way to
eliminate diseases in future generations of animals, such as those used
for livestock. Here’s why: To get the goats to produce
specific proteins, the researchers used radiation to kill a portion of
a male goat’s germ cells (the cells that produce sperm). Then
they used a modified adeno-associated virus (a well studied and
tolerated gene therapy vector) to insert a gene in the remaining cells.
Once the new gene took hold in the germ cells, a predictable number of offspring carried the gene necessary to produce the desired protein in their milk. The advance is immediately valuable for pharmaceutical development and biology research, but a similar approach could be used to bolster the food supply by eliminating genetic disorders in animals over several generations. It is also possible that once perfected, this technique could eliminate disease genes in humans over several generations, assuming ethical concerns can be resolved adequately.
“For thousands of years, people have domesticated cows and
goats to make milk, butter and cheese. And for thousands of years dairy
products have been used as folk remedies for practically every human
illness. Most have been completely ineffective.” said Gerald
Weissmann, MD, editor-in-chief of The FASEB Journal. “So it
is reassuring that modern science would find a way to use the milk we
drink to yield drugs that actually work.”
The FASEB Journal (www.fasebj.org) is published by the Federation of
American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) and is consistently
ranked among the top three biology journals worldwide by the Institute
for Scientific Information. FASEB comprises 21 nonprofit societies with
more than 80,000 members, making it the largest coalition of biomedical
research associations in the United States. FASEB advances biological
science through collaborative advocacy for research policies that
promote scientific progress and education and lead to improvements in
human health.