Milk and milk products comprise a substantial fraction of the protein intake of the industrialised West. The establishment of germline manipulation techniques in cows offers opportunities for directly manipulating milk composition to produce products with enhanced nutritional and processing properti
The prospects for domesticating milk protein genes
β Scribed by Lothar Hennighausen
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 801 KB
- Volume
- 49
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0730-2312
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
It is possible to convert milk glands of transgenic animals into bioreactors producing heterologous proteins such as scarce human pharmaceuticals. To predictably and successfullyengineer the milk gland, we will need a thorough understanding of its physiology. Expression studies in transgenic animals have located mammary specific and hormone inducible transcription elements in the promoter/upstream regions of milk protein genes, and transfection studies in cell lines or primary cells have identified constitutive and hormone inducible elements. Most importantly, it appears that in addition to individual promoter based transcription elements structural features of milk protein chromosomal loci may contribute to the tight developmental and hormonal regulation.
I will discuss milk protein gene regulation with emphasis on regulatory differences between genes and species, and the possibility that transcription elements function only properly within genetically defined chromatin domains. Novel strategies to build mammary expression vectors and to test their functionality without pursuing the standard transgenic route will be presented. Finally, I will discuss homologous recombination with the goal to target milk protein genes. Only through the domestication of milk protein genes will we be able to use their full potential in the mammary bioreactor. Published 1992 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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