多利、波莉和其他“奥利”:克隆技术对牲畜生物医学用途的可能影响

Alan Colman
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引用次数: 35

摘要

在20世纪80年代末,随着大量转基因绵羊的生产被披露,培育转基因牲畜的想法开始出现,这种牲畜的奶中分泌大量用于治疗的蛋白质。有一种特殊的动物,名叫特雷西的羊,它产的牛奶中超过50%的蛋白质由人类α - 1抗胰蛋白酶组成。羊源性蛋白现已进入囊性纤维化(英国、美国)和先天性肺气肿(英国)的临床试验。还有许多其他的例子表明,这项技术正在进入更传统的生物制药方式。然而,尽管这项技术很强大,但它也有一些局限性,包括无法对动物基因组进行靶向插入/修饰,生产畜群/畜群的时间较长,以及在比较不同转基因创始人时所看到的相当不可预测的表达水平。我们相信,所有这些问题现在都有一个技术解决方案。多莉是一项新技术的一个引人注目的例子,该技术包括从培养的体细胞中产生相同的动物。这项工作有许多意义。在商业环境中,当基因工程体细胞被证明是合适的核供体时,特别是当操作的目标是宿主细胞基因组中预先确定的位置时,这一进步的真正好处将被看到。随着Polly的诞生,第一个目标已经实现,Polly是一只克隆羊,它含有人类基因编码因子IX,一种参与预防血友病的蛋白质。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Dolly, Polly and other ‘ollys’: likely impact of cloning technology on biomedical uses of livestock

The idea of generating transgenic livestock which secrete into their milk large quantities of proteins for therapeutic use, was pioneered in the late 1980s with the disclosure of the production of a number of transgenic sheep. One particular animal, a sheep called Tracy, produced milk where over 50% of the protein consisted of human alpha 1 anti-trypsin. Sheep-derived protein has now entered clinical trials for cystic fibrosis (UK, USA) and congenital emphysema (UK). There are many other examples where this technology is making inroads into more traditional ways of making biopharmaceuticals. However, although robust, this technology has several limitations, including an inability to allow targeted insertion/modification of the animal genome, long timelines to production flocks/herds, and the rather unpredictable expression levels seen when different transgenic founders are compared. We believe that there is now a technical solution to all of these problems. Dolly is a high profile example of a new technology comprising the generation of identical animals from cultured somatic cells. This work has many implications. In the commercial context, the real benefits of this advance will be seen when genetically engineered somatic cells are shown to be suitable nuclear donors, and particularly when the manipulations are targeted to pre-determined sites in the host cell genome. The first objective has now been achieved with the birth of Polly, a cloned sheep which contains the human gene encoding Factor IX, a protein involved in preventing haemophilia.

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