Cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) is the signalling molecule that is produced as a result of TSH-receptor activation. It regulates the gene expression pathway that results in thyroid hormone production. Therefore, it is the most commonly used indicator of TSH-receptor activity, including TSI abundance in patients with Graves' disease.
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The amount of TSI in a patient was calculated using two independent papers. The first paper, by Gerding et al. (2000), measured cAMP levels per 40,000 CHO cells, transfected with the hTSH-receptor, grown in IgG fractions (containing TSI) taken from patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy (GO) (a form of Graves' disease that is also caused by elevated TSI levels) , and divided these into two classes of severity (S). The more severe class was determined to have an average of 42pmol of cAMP, and the less severe class to have 35pmol. Thus, we use the left-half of this equation to deduce how much cAMP is present, on average, in patients with either more-severe or less-severe GO. This is measured in cAMP/cell, and was calculated to be 0.000875pmol of cAMP/cell for in a less-severe case, and 0.00105pmol of cAMP/cell. <br><br>The right-half of the equation is taken from Kraiem et al. (1987), which used <i> in vitro </i> cell cultures of 25,000 cells, and measured 6.5pmol of cAMP produced in the surrounding solution when 250µU/ml of TSI was added. Using this, we can calculate how much cAMP is produced per cell per µU of TSI, which was calculated to be 0.00000104pmol cAMP/cell/µU/ml. Together, assuming that these <i> in vitro </i> studies reflect <i> in vivo </i>, and that the growth medium for these experiments does not influence cAMP production, we can estimate that a patient with less-severe Graves' disease has 841.35 µU of TSI/ml of serum, and a patient with more-severe Graves' disease has 1009.62 µU of TSI/ml of serum.<br><br> Thus, these are the two units for 'I' that we used in the model. For the average, we took the mean of these values (925.485µU of TSI/ml) which was used to calculate the number of plants needed to treat the everyone in the US who has Graves' disease.
The amount of TSI in a patient was calculated using two independent papers. The first paper, by Gerding et al. (2000), measured cAMP levels per 40,000 CHO cells, transfected with the hTSH-receptor, grown in IgG fractions (containing TSI) taken from patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy (GO) (a form of Graves' disease that is also caused by elevated TSI levels) , and divided these into two classes of severity (S). The more severe class was determined to have an average of 42pmol of cAMP, and the less severe class to have 35pmol. Thus, we use the left-half of this equation to deduce how much cAMP is present, on average, in patients with either more-severe or less-severe GO. This is measured in cAMP/cell, and was calculated to be 0.000875pmol of cAMP/cell for in a less-severe case, and 0.00105pmol of cAMP/cell. <br><br>The right-half of the equation is taken from Kraiem et al. (1987), which used <i> in vitro </i> cell cultures of 25,000 cells, and measured 6.5pmol of cAMP produced in the surrounding solution when 250µU/ml of TSI was added. Using this, we can calculate how much cAMP is produced per cell per µU of TSI, which was calculated to be 0.00000104pmol cAMP/cell/µU/ml. Together, assuming that these <i> in vitro </i> studies reflect <i> in vivo </i>, and that the growth medium for these experiments does not influence cAMP production, we can estimate that a patient with less-severe Graves' disease has 841.35 µU of TSI/ml of serum, and a patient with more-severe Graves' disease has 1009.62 µU of TSI/ml of serum.<br><br> Thus, these are the two units for 'I' that we used in the model. For the average, we took the mean of these values (925.485µU of TSI/ml) which was used to calculate the number of plants needed to treat the everyone in the US who has Graves' disease.
<p> These graphs clearly suggest that the use of <i> Nicotiana tabacum </i> cultivars is more beneficial for plant recombinant protein production. Cultivars of this species usually grow larger than those of <i> N. benthamiana</i>, meaning that they require more space in the lab and so you can have fewer plants. More importantly, these plants grow slower than <i> N. benthamiana </i>. These factors make <i> N. benthamiana </i> the organism of choice for most plant expression facilities (Conley et al, 2010)<br><br>
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The results that this model has obtained for us seem reasonable. <i> Nicotiana benthamiana </i> is a small plant and the amount of protein that can be produced from this plant is well characterised. Conversely, these cultivars of <i> N. tabacum </i> are very large and can have extremely high total protein concentrations, so the large difference between plant species also seems reasonable. With regards to the HyperTrans and PVX model results, these expression systems are relatively new, but do claim that this amount of protein is possible. We believe that the statistics generated for these systems are plausible, but whether they are in practice will likely be revealed with subsequent experiments by future researchers using them. <br><br>