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Biopharmaceuticals Gary Walsh (University of Limerick, Ireland)

Biopharmaceuticals By Gary Walsh (University of Limerick, Ireland)

Biopharmaceuticals by Gary Walsh (University of Limerick, Ireland)


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Summary

The latest edition of this highly acclaimed textbook, provides a comprehensive and up--to--date overview of the science and medical applications of biopharmaceutical products.

Biopharmaceuticals Summary

Biopharmaceuticals: Biochemistry and Biotechnology by Gary Walsh (University of Limerick, Ireland)

The latest edition of this highly acclaimed textbook, provides a comprehensive and up-to-date overview of the science and medical applications of biopharmaceutical products. Biopharmaceuticals refers to pharmaceutical substances derived from biological sources, and increasingly, it is synonymous with 'newer' pharmaceutical substances derived from genetic engineering or hybridoma technology.

This superbly written review of the important areas of investigation in the field, covers drug production, plus the biochemical and molecular mechanisms of action together with the biotechnology of major biopharmaceutical types on the market or currently under development. There is also additional material reflecting both the technical advances in the area and detailed information on key topics such as the influence of genomics on drug discovery.

Biopharmaceuticals Reviews

...contains just about everything that anyone would want to know about the subject...It's all here in this easy-to-read textbook. (Biochemistry and Molecular Education, March/April 2004)

...well written... (and) copiously illustrated... (Chemistry & Industry, 17th January 2005)

This book should be recommended reading for all under-graduate course in pharmacy and the pharmaceutical sciences .... (Cell Biochemistry & Function, March-April 2005)

About Gary Walsh (University of Limerick, Ireland)

Gary Walsh is a senior lecturer in industrial biochemistry at the University of Limerick, Ireland. He combines industrial experience within the pharmaceutical industry with an extensive teaching and academic research background in pharmaceutical biotechnology. He has published half a dozen highly acclaimed books on various aspects of protein biotechnology. He is on the editorial board of several biopharmaceutical journals and is closely affiliated with the European Association of Pharma Biotechnology, serving as its scientific secretary.

Table of Contents

Preface xvii

Chapter 1 Pharmaceuticals, biologics and biopharmaceuticals 1

Introduction to pharmaceutical products 1

Biopharmaceuticals and pharmaceutical biotechnology 1

History of the pharmaceutical industry 3

The age of biopharmaceuticals 5

Biopharmaceuticals: current status and future prospects 8

Traditional pharmaceuticals of biological origin 12

Pharmaceuticals of animal origin 13

The sex hormones 14

The androgens 14

Oestrogens 15

Progesterone and progestogens 17

Corticosteroids 19

Catecholamines 21

Prostaglandins 23

Pharmaceutical substances of plant origin 27

Alkaloids 28

Atropine and scopalamine 28

Morphine and cocaine 29

Additional plant alkaloids 30

Ergot alkaloids 30

Flavonoids, xanthines and terpenoids 30

Cardiac glycosides and coumarins 33

Aspirin 33

Pharmaceutical substances of microbial origin 33

The macrolides and ansamycins 38

Peptide and other antibiotics 39

Conclusion 39

Further reading 40

Chapter 2 The drug development process 43

Drug discovery 44

The impact of genomics and related technologies upon drug discovery 45

Gene chips 47

Proteomics 49

Structural genomics 50

Pharmacogenetics 51

Plants as a source of drugs 52

Microbial drugs 53

Rational drug design 54

Combinatorial approaches to drug discovery 56

Initial product characterization 57

Patenting 57

What is a patent and what is patentable? 57

Patent types 62

The patent application 63

Patenting in biotechnology 64

Delivery of biopharmaceuticals 66

Oral delivery systems 66

Pulmonary delivery 67

Nasal, transmucosal and transdermal delivery systems 68

Pre-clinical trials 69

Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics 69

Toxicity studies 71

Reproductive toxicity and teratogenicity 71

Mutagenicity, carcinogenicity and other tests 72

Clinical trials 73

Clinical trial design 75

Trial size and study population 75

Randomized control studies 76

Additional trial designs 76

The role and remit of regulatory authorities 78

The Food and Drug Administration 78

The investigational new drug application 80

The new drug application 82

European regulations 84

National regulatory authorities 84

The EMEA and the new EU drug approval systems 85

The centralized procedure 86

Mutual recognition 88

Drug registration in Japan 88

World harmonization of drug approvals 89

Conclusion 89

Further reading 89

Chapter 3 The drug manufacturing process 93

International pharmacopoeia 93

Martindale, the Extra Pharmacopoeia 94

Guides to good manufacturing practice 94

The manufacturing facility 97

Clean rooms 98

Cleaning, decontamination and sanitation (CDS) 101

CDS of the general manufacturing area 102

CDS of process equipment 102

Water for biopharmaceutical processing 104

Generation of purified water and water for injections (WFI) 105

Distribution system for WFI 107

Documentation 109

Specifications 110

Manufacturing formulae, processing and packaging instructions 110

Records 111

Generation of manufacturing records 111

Sources of biopharmaceuticals 112

E. coli as a source of recombinant, therapeutic proteins 112

Expression of recombinant proteins in animal cell culture systems 116

Additional production systems: yeasts 116

Fungal production systems 117

Transgenic animals 118

Transgenic plants 122

Insect cell-based systems 123

Production of final product 124

Cell banking systems 127

Upstream processing 128

Microbial cell fermentation 129

Mammalian cell culture systems 133

Downstream processing 134

Final product formulation 140

Some influences that can alter the biological activity of proteins 142

Proteolytic degradation 143

Protein deamidation 144

Oxidation and disulphide exchange 145

Alteration of glycoprotein glycosylation patterns 147

Stabilizing excipients used in final product formulations 150

Final product fill 153

Freeze-drying 155

Labelling and packing 158

Analysis of the final product 159

Protein-based contaminants 159

Removal of altered forms of the protein of interest from the product stream 160

Product potency 161

Determination of protein concentration 163

Detection of protein-based product impurities 164

Capillary electrophoresis 166

High-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) 167

Mass spectrometry 168

Immunological approaches to detection of contaminants 168

Amino acid analysis 169

Peptide mapping 170

N-terminal sequencing 171

Analysis of secondary and tertiary structure 173

Endotoxin and other pyrogenic contaminants 173

Endotoxin, the molecule 174

Pyrogen detection 176

Dna 179

Microbial and viral contaminants 180

Viral assays 181

Miscellaneous contaminants 182

Validation studies 183

Further reading 185

Chapter 4 The cytokines -the interferon family 189

Cytokines 189

Cytokine receptors 194

Cytokines as biopharmaceuticals 195

The interferons 196

The biochemistry of interferon-a 197

Interferon-b 198

Interferon-g 198

Interferon signal transduction 198

The interferon receptors 199

The JAK-STAT pathway 199

The interferon JAK-STAT pathway 202

The biological effects of interferons 203

The eIF-2a protein kinase system 207

Interferon biotechnology 207

Production and medical uses of IFN-a 210

Medical uses of IFN-b 213

Medical applications of IFN-g 214

Interferon toxicity 216

Additional interferons 218

Conclusion 219

Further reading 219

Chapter 5 Cytokines: interleukins and tumour necrosis factor 223

Interleukin-2 (IL-2) 225

IL-2 production 228

IL-2 and cancer treatment 228

IL-2 and infectious diseases 230

Safety issues 231

Inhibition of IL-2 activity 231

Interleukin-1 (IL-1) 232

The biological activities of IL- 1 233

IL-1 biotechnology 234

Interleukin-3: biochemistry and biotechnology 235

Interleukin- 4 236

Interleukin- 6 238

Interleukin- 11 240

Interleukin- 5 241

Interleukin- 12 244

Tumour necrosis factors (TNFs) 246

TNF biochemistry 246

Biological activities of TNF-a 247

Immunity and inflammation 248

TNF receptors 249

TNF: therapeutic aspects 250

Further reading 252

Chapter 6 Haemopoietic growth factors 255

The interleukins as haemopoietic growth factors 257

Granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) 258

Macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) 259

Granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) 259

Clinical application of CSFs 261

Leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF) 263

Erythropoietin (EPO) 264

The EPO receptor and signal transduction 267

Regulation of EPO production 267

Therapeutic applications of EPO 268

Chronic disease and cancer chemotherapy 271

Additional non-renal applications 272

Tolerability 273

Thrombopoietin 273

Further reading 275

Chapter 7 Growth factors 277

Growth factors and wound healing 277

Insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) 279

IGF biochemistry 280

IGF receptors 280

IGF-binding proteins 282

Biological effects 282

IGF and fetal development 283

IGFs and growth 283

Renal and reproductive effects 284

Neuronal and other effects 285

Epidermal growth factor (EGF) 285

The EGF receptor 286

Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) 287

The PDGF receptor and signal transduction 288

PDGF and wound healing 289

Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) 289

Transforming growth factors (TGFs) 290

TGF-a 290

TGF-b 292

Neurotrophic factors 293

The neurotrophins 294

Neurotrophin receptors 296

The neurotrophin low-affinity receptor 297

Ciliary neurotrophic factor and glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor 297

Neurotrophic factors and neurodegenerative disease 298

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and peripheral neuropathy 298

Neurotrophic factors and neurodegenerative diseases of the brain 298

Further reading 300

Chapter 8 Hormones of therapeutic interest 303

Insulin 303

Diabetes mellitus 304

The insulin molecule 304

The insulin receptor and signal transduction 307

Insulin production 307

Enzymatic conversion of porcine insulin 311

Production of human insulin by recombinant DNA technology 312

Formulation of insulin products 314

Engineered insulins 317

Additional means of insulin administration 320

Treating diabetics with insulin-producing cells 321

Glucagon 321

Human growth hormone (hGH) 324

Growth hormone releasing factor (GHRF) and inhibitory factor (GHRIF) 325

The GH receptor 325

Biological effects of GH 327

Therapeutic uses of GH 328

Recombinant hGH (rhGH) and pituitary dwarfism 328

Idiopathic short stature and Turner's syndrome 330

Metabolic effects of hGH 330

GH, lactation and ovulation 331

The gonadotrophins 331

Follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH) and human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) 331

Pregnant mare serum gonadotrophin (PMSG) 335

The inhibins and activins 337

LHRH and regulation of gonadotrophin production 338

Medical and veterinary applications of gonadotrophins 339

Sources and medical uses of FSH, LHand hCG 340

Recombinant gonadotrophins 342

Veterinary uses of gonadotrophins 344

Gonadotrophin releasing hormone (GnRH) 345

Additional recombinant hormones now approved 345

Conclusions 348

Further reading 348

Chapter 9 Blood products and therapeutic enzymes 351

Disease transmission 351

Whole blood 353

Platelets and red blood cells 353

Blood substitutes 353

Dextrans 354

Albumin 355

Gelatin 357

Oxygen-carrying blood substitutes 357

Haemostasis 358

The coagulation pathway 358

Terminal steps of coagulation pathway 361

Clotting disorders 365

Factor VIII and haemophilia 366

Production of Factor VIII 368

Factors IX, VII a and XIII 371

Anticoagulants 372

Heparin 372

Vitamin Kantimetabolites 375

Hirudin 375

Antithrombin 379

Thrombolytic agents 380

Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) 381

First-generation tPA 383

Engineered tPA 383

Streptokinase 385

Urokinase 386

Staphylokinase 386

a1 -Antitrypsin 388

Enzymes of therapeutic value 389

Asparaginase 390

DNase 392

Glucocerebrosidase 393

a-Galactosidase and urate oxidase 395

Superoxide dismutase 397

Debriding agents 397

Digestive aids 398

Lactase 400

Further reading 400

Chapter 10 Antibodies, vaccines and adjuvants 403

Polyclonal antibody preparations 403

Anti-D immunoglobulin 406

Normal immunoglobulins 407

Hepatitis Band tetanus immunoglobulin 407

Snake and spider antivenins 408

Monoclonal antibodies 409

Production of monoclonals via hybridoma technology 411

Antibody screening: phage display technology 412

Therapeutic application of monoclonal antibodies 414

Tumour immunology 415

Antibody-based strategies for tumour detection/destruction 417

Drug-based tumour immunotherapy 424

First-generation anti-tumour antibodies: clinical disappointment 426

Tumour-associated antigens 426

Antigenicity of murine monoclonals 428

Chimaeric and humanized antibodies 429

Antibody fragments 432

Additional therapeutic applications of monoclonal antibodies 433

Cardiovascular and related disease 433

Infectious diseases 433

Autoimmune disease 434

Transplantation 434

Vaccine technology 435

Traditional vaccine preparations 436

Attenuated, dead or inactivated bacteria 438

Attenuated and inactivated viral vaccines 439

Toxoids, antigen-based and other vaccine preparations 440

The impact of genetic engineering on vaccine technology 441

Peptide vaccines 444

Vaccine vectors 445

Development of an AIDS vaccine 447

Difficulties associated with vaccine development 450

AIDS vaccines in clinical trials 450

Cancer vaccines 452

Recombinant veterinary vaccines 452

Adjuvant technology 453

Adjuvant mode of action 455

Mineral-based adjuvants 455

Oil-based emulsion adjuvants 455

Bacteria/bacterial products as adjuvants 457

Additional adjuvants 458

Further reading 460

Chapter 11 Nucleic acid therapeutics 463

Gene therapy 463

Basic approach to gene therapy 464

Some additional questions 467

Vectors used in gene therapy 468

Retroviral vectors 468

Additional viral-based vectors 472

Manufacture of viral vectors 474

Non-viral vectors 476

Manufacture of plasmid DNA 480

Gene therapy and genetic disease 482

Gene therapy and cancer 485

Gene therapy and AIDS 486

Gene-based vaccines 488

Gene therapy: some additional considerations 488

Anti-sense technology 488

Anti-sense oligonucleotides 490

Uses, advantages and disadvantages of 'oligos' 491

Delivery and cellular uptake of oligonucleotides 493

Manufacture of oligonucleotides 493

Vitravene, an approved antisense agent 494

Antigene sequences and ribozymes 494

Conclusion 495

Further reading 496

Appendix 1 Biopharmaceuticals thus far approved in the USA or European Union 499

Appendix 2 Some Internet addresses relevant to the biopharmaceutical sector 509

Appendix 3 Two selected monographs reproduced from the European Pharmacopoeia with permission from the European Commission: I. Products of recombinant DNA technology 515

II. Interferon a-2 concentrated solution 520

Appendix 4 Manufacture of biological medicinal products for human use. (Annex 2 from The Rules Governing Medicinal Products in the European Community, Vol. 4, Good Manufacturing Practice for Medicinal Products) 527

Index 533

Additional information

GOR009006693
9780470843277
0470843276
Biopharmaceuticals: Biochemistry and Biotechnology by Gary Walsh (University of Limerick, Ireland)
Used - Very Good
Paperback
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
2003-07-18
576
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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