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Taters for tots provide an edible vaccine.


Consider the versatile potato. Even most children consume it in at least some form--baked, mashed, French fried, the list goes on. Now, molecular biologists predict that through genetic engineering they can turn spuds into the darling of the medical world: low-cost, nutritious vaccines.

William H.R. Langridge and his coworkers at Loma Linda (Calif.) University School of Medicine say they have inserted into potatoes a gene that enables the tuber tuber, enlarged tip of a rhizome (underground stem) that stores food. Although much modified in structure, the tuber contains all the usual stem parts—bark, wood, pith, nodes, and internodes.  to make a nontoxic component of the cholera toxin cholera toxin Infectious disease A heat-sensitive multimeric enterotoxin produced by Vibrio cholera, which transfers ADP-ribose to a G protein, locking adenyl cyclase in an 'on' position by ADP ribosylation of a Gs protein . The research could lead to protection against a scourge that afflicts 5 million people annually, they assert.

Moreover, because the toxins produced by the bacterium that causes cholera and by the more common Escherichia coli Escherichia coli (ĕsh'ərĭk`ēə kō`lī), common bacterium that normally inhabits the intestinal tracts of humans and animals, but can cause infection in other parts of the body, especially the urinary tract.  are nearly identical, Langridge says, vaccines against one germ may head off or ameliorate disease caused by the other.

Cholera locks open crucial pores in cells lining the gut. "So water pours from the blood into the intestines and then out of the system," Langridge notes. People with this diarrhea can quickly become dehydrated de·hy·drate  
v. de·hy·drat·ed, de·hy·drat·ing, de·hy·drates

v.tr.
1. To remove water from; make anhydrous.

2. To preserve by removing water from (vegetables, for example).
 and die.

Langridge's team added the cholera toxin's B-protein to potatoes. This portion of the toxin not only binds to cells in the gut, it also triggers the production of antibodies against cholera.

Mice ate the altered potato raw once a week for 4 weeks and downed a booster meal some 40 days later. The scientists then removed pieces of intestine from the animals and added cholera toxin to the tissues. In the March Nature Biotechnology, Langridge's team reports that tissue from the treated mice leaked about half as much as tissue from mice that ate only regular potato.

Because people seldom eat potatoes raw, the scientists cooked the medicinal spuds and found that at least half of the vaccine survived in biologically active form--a donut-shaped ring of five linked B-protein molecules. Taking into account the fact that to develop immunity, people need far less of the vaccine than mice do, Langridge calculates that one cooked potato a week for a month should provide enough active B-protein to immunize im·mu·nize
v.
1. To render immune.

2. To produce immunity in, as by inoculation.



im
 against the cholera toxin. However, because immunity falls over time, periodic booster spuds would be required.

Langridge plans to refine the potato further, adding genes to make its vaccine target not just the toxin but also the bacterium that produces it. Such potatoes would constitute a medicine, he emphasizes, and should not be eaten too often. Overexposure overexposure

too long an exposure time or too high a milliamperage causing too black a picture, loss of detail and some anomalies of translucency.
 to their vaccine could suppress a person's production of disease-fighting antibodies.

Charles J. Arntzen of Cornell University's Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research The Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research is a renown research and education organization currently located on the campus of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. A Board of Directors, half appointed by Cornell, governs this independent institution addressing plant research.  was one of the first scientists to engineer a potential vaccine into potatoes, but the E. coli E. coli: see Escherichia coli.
E. coli
 in full Escherichia coli

Species of bacterium that inhabits the stomach and intestines. E. coli can be transmitted by water, milk, food, or flies and other insects.
 protein he uses breaks down at high temperatures. He says he is especially interested in the results from cooked potatoes in the Loma Linda project.

Concern that heating would inactivate in·ac·ti·vate
v.
1. To render nonfunctional.

2. To make quiescent.



in·acti·va
 vaccines had led to an expectation that any useful ones would eventually need to go into foods eaten raw, such as bananas, observes Carol Tacket at the University of Maryland's Center for Vaccine Development in Baltimore. "But now that we know you can cook them, maybe potatoes will become the ultimate vehicle."
COPYRIGHT 1998 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:genetic engineering produces potato that acts as cholera vaccine
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Mar 7, 1998
Words:516
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