Literature DB >> 11708884

Adenovirus hexon protein enhances nuclear delivery and increases transgene expression of polyethylenimine/plasmid DNA vectors.

R C Carlisle1, T Bettinger, M Ogris, S Hale, V Mautner, L W Seymour.   

Abstract

Inefficient nuclear delivery restricts transgene expression using polyelectrolyte DNA vectors. To increase transfer from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, we have covalently linked adenovirus hexon protein to polyethylenimine (PEI, 800 kDa). Activity of the conjugate was compared with PEI and PEI linked to albumin. Hexon-containing complexes gave 10-fold greater transgene expression in HepG2 cells than PEI/DNA or complexes containing albumin, without increasing cell uptake. Following cytoplasmic injection into Xenopus laevis oocytes, hexon-containing complexes showed reporter gene expression to be elevated by 10-fold compared with PEI/DNA. The ability of hexon to promote nuclear delivery of PEI/DNA nanoparticles was compared with that of classical nuclear localization sequences (NLS) by measuring transgene expression following intracytoplasmic microinjection of hexon-PEI/DNA complexes and NLS-albumin-PEI/DNA complexes in rat-1 fibroblasts. The resulting nuclear transfer efficiency was in the following order: hexon-PEI/DNA>NLS-albumin-PEI/DNA>PEI/DNA>DNA alone>albumin-PEI/DNA. The activities of both NLS-albumin-PEI and hexon-PEI were abolished by co-injection of wheat germ agglutinin, suggesting that both act by means of the nuclear pore complex (NPC); in contrast, excess free NLS-albumin abolished transgene expression with NLS-albumin-PEI/DNA, but only partially inhibited hexon-PEI/DNA. Nuclear transfer efficiency following cytoplasmic injection was dependent on DNA concentration for all materials, although hexon conjugates showed much better activity than NLS-albumin at low DNA doses (500-1000 plasmids/cell). Our data are consistent with hexon mediating nuclear delivery of plasmid complexes by means of the NPC, using mechanisms that are only partially dependent on the classical NLS import pathway. The hexon-mediated mechanism of nuclear import enables substantially better transgene expression, particularly when DNA concentrations in the cytoplasm are limiting.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11708884     DOI: 10.1006/mthe.2001.0472

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ther        ISSN: 1525-0016            Impact factor:   11.454


  17 in total

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2.  Switch from capsid protein import to adenovirus assembly by cleavage of nuclear transport signals.

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Review 5.  The nuclear pore complex: the gateway to successful nonviral gene delivery.

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Review 6.  Nucleic acid delivery: the missing pieces of the puzzle?

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7.  Targeted Gene Delivery to MCF-7 Cells Using Peptide-Conjugated Polyethylenimine.

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Review 8.  Development of adenovirus capsid proteins for targeted therapeutic delivery.

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9.  Efficient transfection of blood-brain barrier endothelial cells by lipoplexes and polyplexes in the presence of nuclear targeting NLS-PEG-acridine conjugates.

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10.  Human erythrocytes bind and inactivate type 5 adenovirus by presenting Coxsackie virus-adenovirus receptor and complement receptor 1.

Authors:  Robert C Carlisle; Ying Di; Anna M Cerny; Andreas F-P Sonnen; Robert B Sim; Nicola K Green; Vladimir Subr; Karel Ulbrich; Robert J C Gilbert; Kerry D Fisher; Robert W Finberg; Leonard W Seymour
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