Desirable fusion proteins can be produced in and purified from the milk of
transgenic animals. The peptides are made as fusion proteins with a
suitable fusion partner such as human alpha-fetoprotein. The fusion
partner protein acts to promote and increase the half-life of the overall
molecule as well as having therapeutic effects on its own. The fusion
protein is typically produced through the use of transgenic animals and
can be purified away from the now the milk or other bodily fluid of such
an animal by an affinity purification method. A particular advantage of
producing peptides via this route, in addition to the obvious advantages
of high yield and biocompatibility, is that specific post-translational
modifications, such as carboxy terminal amidation, can be performed in
the mammary gland. Biologically active polypeptides comprising a
therapeutically active polypeptide fused to human alpha-fetoprotein
fragment or a variant thereof, methods for the preparation thereof,
nucleotide sequences encoding such fusion polypeptides, expression
cassettes comprising such nucleotide sequences, self-replicating plasmids
containing such expression cassettes, and pharmaceutical compositions
containing said fusion polypeptides.