|
Home
Page
Bella Mira Essential Oil
Supplements
Organic Carrier Oils
Diffusers
Essential Oil Information and Use
Express Order Form
Essential Oil
Singles
Essential Oil
Blends
Essential Oil
Kits
Essential Oil Supplies
Gluten Free Living and Recipes
Thyroid 101
Fibromyalgia 101
PAIN Relief and Information
Pet Place
Save Your Computer Free Protection
CD's DVD's and Books
3-D Screensavers
Hormone Balance Test New
Improved
Thyroid Function Test
Internal Toxicity Test

Gift Certificates
Link Exchange/Banners
.gif)

Our
Shopping Cart Is:

& FAQ



| |
Old McDonald had a pharm 6-16-08
Encompassed by pastoral green fields, the headquarters of GTC Biotherapeutics
looks like any other New England farmstead. But its serenity is deceiving.
Behind barn doors, the farm's most valuable employees -- a herd of pygmy goats
from New Zealand -- are working round the clock, their milk glands churning out
hundreds of gallons of high-grade pharmaceutical compounds.
The white gold extracted from the goats' udders will someday command big bucks
in the American healthcare marketplace -- or so GTC hopes. The company's
genetically modified animals possess a human gene that allows them to produce
milk rich with a protein called antithrombin, which helps prevent blood clots
from forming and staves off related conditions like heart attacks and strokes.
Tom Newberry, GTC's vice president of corporate communications, leads me into a
corrugated-metal hutch. Goats enclosed in pens train inquisitive rectangular
pupils on us and poke their heads through the bars. "They're looking for a
handout," Newberry says, chuckling. But we can't give these goats kibble or even
a pat on the head; that would be a breach of strict sanitary regulations.
ATryn, GTC's goat-derived antithrombin, cleared its first regulatory hurdle in
2006 when the European Commission approved it for sale in all 25 European Union
countries. This past fall, GTC successfully lobbied the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration to designate ATryn as a "fast-track product," making it eligible
for accelerated review on this side of the Atlantic.
But GTC is out to prove it's no one-trick ruminant. Staff scientists have
created transgenic goats that can churn out a smorgasbord of human proteins,
including compounds that halt tumor blood-vessel development and blood-clotting
factors for hemophiliacs. Protein-based human antibodies that protect against
all kinds of diseases -- from SARS to incurable cancers -- could be next in the
dairy pipeline.
A bevy of biotech companies is crowding the drug market with takes on the
transgenic-remix concept. Origen, located in Burlingame, Calif., is developing a
transgenic production line that employs chickens instead of goats as drug
incubators. The company has bred birds that produce a range of human anticancer
proteins and other antibodies in their eggs. In Athens, Ga., AviGenics is using
a transgenic-chicken system to make a protein compound that stimulates the bone
marrow to make more white blood cells -- essential in helping cancer patients
bounce back after chemotherapy.
"Transgenic drug technology has been in the incubation stage for a long time,"
says Robert Kay, president and CEO of Origen. "But within the next five to 10
years, we should be seeing many new products in the clinic and pushing their way
toward approval." Future drug-producing menageries, he predicts, will include
pigs, cows and rabbits.
While these transgenic pioneers might seem to be cruising toward FDA approval,
the road is hardly without obstacles. To the frustration of executives like Kay
and Newberry, most of the snags are not financial or logistical but arise from
people's reflexive reactions -- as in, Omigod, they're putting human genes into
animals! It's "The Island of Dr. Moreau" made real.
But the revulsion to transgenic animals is more than reflexive; some animal
biologists say biotech companies are overselling the safety of the resulting
drugs. Meanwhile, ethicists question whether we should be restyling animals as
drug producers at all.
GTC transforms goats into drug factories thanks to a recently perfected
biological sleight of hand. Once a goat embryo is artificially fertilized in the
lab, technicians zero in on the portion of the goat's genome that codes for a
sugar found in goat milk and insert a human gene that codes for a naturally
occurring protein. When the animal reaches maturity and begins producing milk,
every cup of the white stuff contains large quantities of the therapeutic
protein, which can be chemically extracted in pure form. "The mammary gland is
nature's way of making proteins that are nutritious for offspring," Newberry
says. "All we're doing is placing extra DNA coding in this natural pathway."
Before transgenic breeding, pharmaceutical companies normally extracted such
protein compounds from donated blood plasma. But to get the same kilogram of
antithrombin that a single transgenic goat produces each year, you'd have to get
50,000 people to donate blood -- a time-consuming process with its own inherent
risks. "It's so bloody expensive, excuse the pun," Newberry says, "and the Red
Cross just got hit with another set of fines for insufficient screening. Now,
would you rather have a drug derived from human blood donors, or from our goats,
given that we know where they slept last night?"
That question ignores a key fact. "Using goats for drug production has
unpredictable effects, and the genetic inheritance of the modified genes is not
a given -- 90 to 99 percent of the animals bred are killed immediately because
they don't incorporate the desired gene," says Jessica Sandler, director of the
regulatory testing division at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.
Creating transgenic animals does indeed have a high failure rate. With the
technique known as pronuclear injection, only about one to 10 of every 100
attempts results in transgenic offspring, producing a high number of animals
typically earmarked for euthanasia. The more sophisticated nuclear-transfer
method that GTC uses ensures that virtually 100 percent of viable offspring are
transgenic. Still, the transgene does not always land in the targeted section of
the genome, and some offspring end up with severe birth defects for reasons that
are still not well understood.
Tom Regan, a philosophy professor emeritus at North Carolina State University
and author of "Empty Cages," sees the death and suffering of defective animals
as a grave ethical misstep. "The animals used for these purposes are in
fundamental ways like us -- their behavior tells us they're like us,
evolutionary theory tells us they're like us," he says. "What we have with
transgenic research is another incentive for reducing animals to something whose
purpose for being in the world is to serve human interests. And that's
fundamentally flawed."Others contend that raising animals to produce drugs is no
crueler than raising them for agricultural purposes. "I've been involved in this
for a long time, and the animals we have are positively spoiled," says dairy
scientist Robert Bremel, founder of transgenics company ioGenetics. "If the drug
product is innocuous to the animals themselves, they do fine."
Debates over animals' welfare and self-determination aside, there's the question
of whether transgenic animals will produce drugs that create unexpected side
effects in humans. "We have to be careful about the activation of retroviral or
pathogenic agents," says Doug Gurian-Sherman, a senior scientist with the Union
of Concerned Scientists' food and environment program, adding that human drug
products derived from animals could potentially pass on such pathogens to
recipients.
Spurred by similar worries, the National Academy of Sciences' research council
formed a committee to assess the safety of animal biotechnology products. "The
mere fact that something is produced by a genetically altered animal does not
make it harmful," says John Vandenbergh, a biologist who chaired the committee.
"But there was concern that some of these new proteins could induce allergic
reactions in people." The report the committee issued in 2002 recommended
controls to keep transgenic animal products out of the food supply. (GTC adheres
strictly to such standards, Newberry says: "We don't sell our milk, and we give
our dead goats to a licensed contractor that incinerates them.")
To be sure, squeamishness about human-animal hybrids has a storied pedigree:
Geryon of Dante's "Inferno," who dwells in the lowest circles of hell, is a
fearsome crossbreed with a human face and a scaly tail. But is equating
chimerism with fallen virtue still justified? What rules should govern foisting
part of the genetic code that makes us human -- no matter how small -- onto
chickens, goats and rabbits?
"With chimeras, we are challenging our concepts of what it means to be 'human,'"
bioethicist Linda MacDonald Glenn, a former ethics fellow at the American
Medical Association, said in a 2003 speech. "We need to be prepared to ask, 'How
can we preserve our human rights and dignity despite the fact that our
"humanness" may no longer be the exclusive possession of Homo sapiens?'"
Today, Glenn still struggles with questions about what "humanness" signifies.
"If you say, 'Humans are the ones who can reason,' what happens when you have a
child who's born with mental deficiencies?" she says. "It's insulting to say
that child's not a person. On the other hand, there are also animals that have
high cognitive abilities." The lack of a clear-cut distinction between humans
and animals, Glenn says, makes it difficult to justify the process of
drastically modifying animal genomes, though she feels some genetic alterations
may be appropriate if they stand to improve human health and well-being
significantly. "We are all interconnected. It's important that we treat the
goats with respect, because they're really not that far away from us."
In Newberry's view, this kind of deep-waters philosophy is unwarranted. He
scoffs at the implication that GTC's operations are even in the Dr. Moreau
ballpark. "People say, 'Are they breeding centaurs out there, some kind of
man-goat beast?' No, of course not. We put a control sequence in the transgene
to make sure it's only turned on during lactation. And there's a big difference
between manipulating a single gene, like we're doing, and manipulating a whole
chromosome. Treating them the same is like saying, 'I moved my brother-in-law
into his new apartment with a pickup truck. Now I'm going to move all of New
York City with that same truck.'"
Despite the deeply ingrained public perception that, darn it, there's something
just not right about this kettle of fish, companies like GTC may succeed if they
can make a lights-out case for the medical necessity of their products. After
all, even conservative grande dame Nancy Reagan became a stem-cell research
crusader once she realized the treatment was the best hope to reverse her late
husband's Alzheimer's.
"The bottom line is that people do these trade-off calculations," says Edna
Einsiedel, a communications professor at the University of Calgary. The World
Organization for Animal Health commissioned her to write a 2005 survey report
assessing the tenor of public opinion regarding transgenic animals. "There seems
to be a hierarchy in terms of preferences -- people view medical-related
applications more positively than food-related ones. But there's still some
discomfort with the idea that you're taking genes from one species and putting
them into another. People ask things like, 'What kind of animal will you end up
with?'" At the same, Einsiedel continues, "Sometimes when you explain things to
people in greater depth, their initial reluctance can change."
Naturally, Newberry is at the ready with examples illustrating how transgenic
drugs can transform patients' lives. If hemophiliacs had an unrestricted supply
of factor-7 protein -- a drug that currently costs more than $1,000 a milligram
-- courtesy of his goats' mammary glands, the drug "could be used as a
prophylactic, not just a rescue therapy," he says. This development, he adds,
could markedly improve sufferers' prospects, as they'd no longer have to endure
the pinpoint bleeds that cause debilitating joint damage over time.
In reality, though, transgenic drug development simply isn't far enough along
for the public to perceive it as a medical grand slam. Being able to treat
clotting disorders more cheaply and effectively is great, but whether transgenic
medicines will ever vanquish intractable tumors or keep drug-resistant
tuberculosis in check is still an open question.
Still, extrapolation -- warranted or not -- is one of the things visionary firms
do best, and GTC is no exception. The company's current full-tilt focus is on
shepherding ATryn through the FDA approval process. When Newberry looks ahead,
he likes to picture the day when GTC's goat herd will become the pharmaceutical
equivalent of a soft-drink machine, dispensing a vast array of life-giving
substances on command.
"You can make hundreds of different proteins this way, and the system is
linearly scalable: If you need more, you breed more," he says. "This is like
'Back to the Future.' It's Buck Rogers combined with farming, the oldest trade
known to man."
Comment:
Much has been said about the effect this has on the animals but we forget
that all the humans treated with these components will now have goat dna mixed
with their own. Nothing new considering that 80% of Americans has rhesus monkey,
cat, chicken and sheep dna in them via forced vaccinations. Much science has
proven a link to these cells and cancer. Cancer is the biggest money making
disease. Goat cells create more cancer. Follow the money, honey!
|