Myth: Tobacco Plants Are Only For Smoking: Difference between revisions

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===2014: [https://time.com/3457472/see-how-ebola-drugs-grow-in-tobacco-leaves/ See How Ebola Drugs Grow In Tobacco Leaves]===
===2014: [https://time.com/3457472/see-how-ebola-drugs-grow-in-tobacco-leaves/ See How Ebola Drugs Grow In Tobacco Leaves]===
*"Why plants? The time it takes to grow a plant is less time than it takes to genetically engineer a mouse or other rodent to produce human antibodies, which is how such products have been made in the past. It’s also less expensive. Plant-based manufacturing represents a promising new way of producing drugs that could cut the time it takes to bring critical medications, such as a flu vaccine during a pandemic, to a large number of people. Researchers have used the technology to develop a vaccine against norovirus, the infection that plagues cruise ships, for example, that is being tested now."
*"Why plants? The time it takes to grow a plant is less time than it takes to genetically engineer a mouse or other rodent to produce human antibodies, which is how such products have been made in the past. It’s also less expensive. Plant-based manufacturing represents a promising new way of producing drugs that could cut the time it takes to bring critical medications, such as a flu vaccine during a pandemic, to a large number of people. Researchers have used the technology to develop a vaccine against norovirus, the infection that plagues cruise ships, for example, that is being tested now."
===2011: [https://www.the-scientist.com/tobacco-plants-make-hiv-antibody-42187 Tobacco Plants Make HIV Antibody]===
*"Last month, a monoclonal antibody produced in the leaves of tobacco plants entered phase I clinical trials in the United Kingdom. The antibody, known as P2G12, recognizes an HIV surface protein and is expected to help stop the transmission of the virus, although it has never been tested in humans. The phase I trial, underway at the University of Surrey, will test the safety of vaginally applying the antibody to 11 healthy women."
*"This is the first plant-produced antibody to be cleared for clinical trials by the Medicines and Healthcare Products Agency (the UK equivalent of the US Food and Drug Administration). Producing the antibody using tobacco plants grown in a greenhouse in Germany is 10 to 100 times cheaper than using conventional methods employing bacteria or mammalian cells, Smart Planet reports. “Monoclonal antibodies can be made in plants to the same quality as those made using existing conventional production systems," Professor Julian Ma from St George's University, London and joint co-ordinator of the project, told The Guardian. “That is something many people did not believe could be achieved.”


==Is there opposition to using tobacco plants to make vaccines and medicines? If yes, why?==
==Is there opposition to using tobacco plants to make vaccines and medicines? If yes, why?==