Growing vaccines in plants

22 November 2018 | Story Supplied. Photo ACME,Flickr. Read time 2 min.
UCT’s disruptive biopharming technology is facilitating the production of vaccines from plants.
UCT’s disruptive biopharming technology is facilitating the production of vaccines from plants.

What do the 2010 FIFA World Cup, bird flu and a weedy cousin of the tobacco plant have in common?

The link is the ability to grow vaccines in plants, thanks to disruptive technology developed at the University of Cape Town’s (UCT) Biopharming Research Unit (BRU) in the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, and now being utilised by spin-out company Cape Bio Pharms.

The hydroponic farm in Cape Town where the plants are being grown to produce vaccines, along with the story behind BRU's research and development, sparked the interest of MNet's Carte Blanche television programme, which featured the progress on Sunday, 18 November.

Professor Ed Rybicki, director of BRU, explained in the programme that the possibility of an outbreak of a flu pandemic during the World Cup, and the realisation that South Africa would have been unable to cope, prompted his research team to develop a flu vaccine grown in a common tobacco plant.

When environmental journalist Belinda Shaw heard Rybicki giving a lecture on the vaccine in 2014, and discovered that South Africa wasn’t benefiting from the technology, she was "irritated", she told Carte Blanche.

 It took three years, but with the backing of UCT, she raised funding from the Department of Trade and Industry and Cape Bio Pharms became a reality.


Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Please view the republishing articles page for more information.


Cape Town water crisis




At UCT our researchers have been analysing the causes of the current drought, monitoring water usage on campus and in the city, and looking for ways to save water while there is still time. As part of UCT’s water-saving campaign, all members of the campus community are encouraged to reduce their water use by half, which will help Cape Town to meet its water-use goals and ensure a water-sustainable university in the future.

Use what you have before you take from others At the start of South Africa’s National Water Week, Professor Neil Armitage looks at the City of Cape Town’s current and future sources of water. 16 Mar 2020
Peninsula Paddle: 10 years on The upcoming Peninsula Paddle, in partnership with UCT’s Future Water Institute, will continue to challenge the City of Cape Town about the state of the city’s waterways. 12 Aug 2019
Managing the Berg River Dam overflow Dr Kevin Winter, from UCT’s Future Water Institute, argues that the health of the Berg River Dam and river system requires a comprehensive monitoring plan. 30 Jul 2019
Lessons from a record-breaking drought Multiple perspectives are key to building resilience according to Gina Ziervogel’s latest research into Cape Town’s water crisis. 24 Jul 2019


 
TOP