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NTU uses bananas to make new pig vaccine

July 18, 2013
NTU professor Huang Pung-ling explains how his team developed a biovaccine that can be grown in bananas and fed to pigs. (CNA)

A National Taiwan University team has developed transgenic bananas to orally vaccinate swine against porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome, a major breakthrough with great economic potential, the ROC National Science Council said July 17.

The team was led by professor Huang Pung-ling of the NTU Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture and professor Jeng Chian-ren, director of the NTU Graduate Institute of Molecular and Comparative Pathobiology. Its research made the front cover of the April issue of the prestigious Plant Biotechnology Journal.

After PRRS first emerged at the end of the 1980s, it caused serious damage to the hog industry in Europe and the U.S., and spread to Taiwan in 1991. The disease causes miscarriages, weak newborns and a low litter survival rate, creating serious economic losses, with Taiwan virus strains even more virulent than those found abroad, the NSC said.

At present, there is no effective vaccine on the market, the NSC said. Neither inactivated or attenuated vaccine forms are effective in activating the pig’s immune system. Moreover, vaccines effective against one strain of the disease have limited efficacy against other strains.

The NTU team used genetic engineering technology to transfer some of the virus’ genetic material to the banana chromosome. The banana effectively functions as a bioreactor, producing a vegetable oral vaccine. As the time-consuming and costly injection process is avoided, the biovaccine has high economic value, the NSC said.

“Pigs can eat the vaccine as raw food,” Huang said. “It is extremely convenient and there is no risk of secondary infection or attenuation of vaccine proteins in the cooking process.” He added that the vaccine would be safe and readily prepared.

“Patents have already been secured in Taiwan, the U.S. and mainland China. In the future, the technique could be used to produce vaccines for cattle, sheep and poultry diseases, and possibly even against human illnesses such as hepatitis and influenza.” (SDH)

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