Pharmaceutical protein production by yeast: towards production of human blood proteins by microbial fermentation
Reviewartikel, 2012

Since the approval of recombinant insulin from Escherichia coli for its clinical use in the early 1980s, the amount of recombinant pharmaceutical proteins obtained by microbial fermentations has significantly increased. The recent advances in genomics together with high throughput analysis techniques (the so-called - omics approaches) and integrative approaches (systems biology) allow the development of novel microbial cell factories as valuable platforms for large scale production of therapeutic proteins. This review summarizes the main achievements and the current situation in the field of recombinant therapeutics using yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model platform, and discusses the future potential of this platform for production of blood proteins and substitutes.

filamentous fungi

therapeutic proteins

escherichia-coli

human hemoglobin

human serum-albumin

heterologous proteins

expression

alpha-hemoglobin

pichia-pastoris

saccharomyces-cerevisiae

systems

Författare

Jose Luis Martinez Ruiz

Chalmers, Kemi- och bioteknik, Livsvetenskaper

Lifang Liu

Chalmers, Kemi- och bioteknik, Livsvetenskaper

Dina Petranovic Nielsen

Chalmers, Kemi- och bioteknik, Livsvetenskaper

Jens B Nielsen

Chalmers, Kemi- och bioteknik, Livsvetenskaper

Current Opinion in Biotechnology

0958-1669 (ISSN) 1879-0429 (eISSN)

Vol. 23 6 965-971

Industrial Systems Biology of Yeast and A. oryzae (INSYSBIO)

Europeiska kommissionen (EU) (EC/FP7/247013), 2010-01-01 -- 2014-12-31.

Styrkeområden

Livsvetenskaper och teknik (2010-2018)

Ämneskategorier

Kemi

DOI

10.1016/j.copbio.2012.03.011

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Senast uppdaterat

2021-07-20