Literature DB >> 16002190

Using QPCR to assign infectious potencies to adenovirus based vaccines and vectors for gene therapy: toward a universal method for the facile quantitation of virus and vector potency.

Fubao Wang1, Alan C Puddy, Bill C Mathis, Allison G Montalvo, Anthonise A Louis, Jennifer L McMackin, Jenny Xu, Yuhua Zhang, Charles Y Tan, Timothy L Schofield, Jayanthi J Wolf, John A Lewis.   

Abstract

The assignment of infectious potency to test articles of adenovirus has been conducted mainly using classical end-point dilution methods, which rely on virus induced cytopathology to reveal the presence of infectious virus. These assays suffer the disadvantages of labor intensity, duration, throughput restriction and variability. In the course of our development of an Ad5 based HIV vaccine for clinical evaluation, we sought a facile method for the assignment of potency to the numerous test articles generated during the development of bioprocesses for bulk manufacture, downstream purification and formulation. In this paper we describe a quantitative PCR based potency assay (QPA) which uses QPCR to quantitate adenovirus genomes replicated 24h after the inoculation of a test article on 293 cell monolayers, and then relates that mass to potency by interpolation to a standard curve of replicated adenovirus genomes constructed with a reference adenovirus standard to which infectious potency has been previously assigned in the classical end-point dilution assay. The QPA assay for adenovirus is simple and rapid, with a throughput capacity adequate to the potency assay demands of bioprocess development, and with a precision expressed as a root variability of 16.8% R.S.D., allowing for close discriminations of the products of alternative process configurations. The adenovirus QPA principle can be applied to the quantitation of infectious potency of both RNA and DNA viruses and we report briefly on the development of QPA assays for measles and mumps. QPA assays owing to their simplicity and easy automation, rapidity, capacity and precision hold promise to become widely practiced methods for the quantitation of the potency of live virus vaccines and other recombinant virus vectors.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16002190     DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2005.04.023

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vaccine        ISSN: 0264-410X            Impact factor:   3.641


  5 in total

1.  A TaqMan reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in vitro potency assay for plasmid-based vaccine products.

Authors:  Rohit Mahajan; Beth Feher; Basil Jones; Doug Jones; Lana Marjerison; Mindy Sam; Jukka Hartikka; Mary Wloch; Peggy Lalor; David Kaslow; Keith Hall; Alain Rolland
Journal:  Mol Biotechnol       Date:  2008-03-26       Impact factor: 2.695

2.  Linearized oncolytic adenoviral plasmid DNA delivered by bioreducible polymers.

Authors:  Jaesung Kim; Pyung-Hwan Kim; Hye Yeong Nam; Jung-Sun Lee; Chae-Ok Yun; Sung Wan Kim
Journal:  J Control Release       Date:  2011-12-20       Impact factor: 9.776

3.  A rapid Q-PCR titration protocol for adenovirus and helper-dependent adenovirus vectors that produces biologically relevant results.

Authors:  Sean D Gallaher; Arnold J Berk
Journal:  J Virol Methods       Date:  2013-04-26       Impact factor: 2.014

Review 4.  Considerations for bioanalytical characterization and batch release of COVID-19 vaccines.

Authors:  Gautam Sanyal; Anna Särnefält; Arun Kumar
Journal:  NPJ Vaccines       Date:  2021-04-13       Impact factor: 7.344

5.  Characterization of transgene expression in adenoviral vector-based HIV-1 vaccine candidates.

Authors:  Marie-Noëlle Takahashi; Judith A Rolling; Katherine E Owen
Journal:  Virol J       Date:  2010-02-18       Impact factor: 4.099

  5 in total

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