Options
Evolving Paradigms of Recombinant Protein Production in Pharmaceutical Industry: A Rigorous Review
Journal
Sci
ISSN
2413-4155
Date Issued
2024-01-31
Author(s)
Achuth Jayakrishnan
Wan Rosalina Wan Rosli
Ahmad Rashidi Mohd Tahir
Fashli Syafiq Abd Razak
Phei Er Kee
Hui Suan Ng
Yik-Ling Chew
Mahenthiran Ramasamy
Ching Siang Tan
Kai Bin Liew
DOI
10.3390/sci6010009
Abstract
Many beneficial proteins have limited natural availability, which often restricts their supply and thereby reduces their potential for therapeutic or industrial usage. The advent of recombinant DNA (rDNA) technology enables the utilization of different microbes as surrogate hosts to facilitate the production of these proteins. This microbial technology continues to evolve and integrate with modern innovations to develop more effective approaches for increasing the production of recombinant biopharmaceuticals. These strategies encompass fermentation technology, metabolic engineering, the deployment of strong promoters, novel vector elements such as inducers and enhancers, protein tags, secretion signals, synthetic biology, high-throughput devices for cloning, and process screening. This appraisal commences with a general overview regarding the manufacture of recombinant proteins by microbes and the production of biopharmaceuticals, their trends towards the development of biopharmaceuticals, and then discusses the approaches adopted for accomplishing this. The design of the upstream process, which also involves host selection, vector design, and promoter design, is a crucial component of production strategies. On the other hand, the downstream process focuses on extraction and purification techniques. Additionally, the review covers the most modern tools and resources, methods for overcoming low expression, the cost of producing biopharmaceuticals in microbes, and readily available recombinant protein products.
File(s)
Loading...
Name
Journal Article.png
Size
17.27 KB
Format
PNG
Checksum
(MD5):85f5e85fa8f8c13d7350540217a227b6
