“…Recombinant proteins, including human von Willebrand factor (Lee et al, 2009), human erythropoietin (Park et al, 2006), human insulin-like growth factor-I (Monaco et al, 2005), human factor VIII (Paleyanda et al, 1997) and bovine alpha-lactalbumin (Bleck et al, 1998) have been produced in the milk of transgenic pigs. Transgenic goats, capable of synthesizing human butyrylcholinesterase (Huang et al, 2007) and human longer acting tissue plasminogen activator (Ebert et al, 1991) in their milk have also been created. Human salmon calcitonin in milk of transgenic rabbits (McKee et al, 1998); human factor IX and alpha-1-antitrypsin (Wright et al, 1991) in milk of transgenic sheep; and human lactoferrin (van Berkel et al, 2002;Yang et al, 2008), human growth hormone (Salamone et al, 2006) and human -lactalbumin in milk of transgenic cows are all additional examples of using transgenic domestic animals and the mammary gland as a bioreactor for production of recombinant proteins.…”