| Literature DB >> 18369962 |
Kim M Van Vliet1, Veronique Blouin, Nicole Brument, Mavis Agbandje-McKenna, Richard O Snyder.
Abstract
Adeno-associated virus (AAV) is one of the most promising viral gene transfer vectors that has been shown to effect long-term gene expression and disease correction with low toxicity in animal models, and is well tolerated in human clinical trials. The surface of the AAV capsid is an essential component that is involved in cell binding, internalization, and trafficking within the targeted cell. Prior to developing a gene therapy strategy that utilizes AAV, the serotype should be carefully considered since each capsid exhibits a unique tissue tropism and transduction efficiency. Several approaches have been undertaken in an effort to target AAV vectors to specific cell types, including utilizing natural serotypes that target a desired cellular receptor, producing pseudotyped vectors, and engineering chimeric and mosaic AAV capsids. These capsid modifications are being incorporated into vector production and purification methods that provide for the ability to scale-up the manufacturing process to support human clinical trials. Protocols for small-scale and large-scale production of AAV, as well as assays to characterize the final vector product, are presented here. The structures of AAV2, AAV4, and AAV5 have been solved by X-ray crystallography or cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), and provide a basis for rational vector design in developing customized capsids for specific targeting of AAV vectors. The capsid of AAV has been shown to be remarkably stable, which is a desirable characteristic for a gene therapy vector; however, recently it has been shown that the AAV serotypes exhibit differential susceptibility to proteases. The capsid fragmentation pattern when exposed to various proteases, as well as the susceptibility of the serotypes to a series of proteases, provides a unique fingerprint for each serotype that can be used for capsid identity validation. In addition to serotype identification, protease susceptibility can also be utilized to study dynamic structural changes that must occur for the AAV capsid to perform its various functions during the virus life cycle. The use of proteases for structural studies in solution complements the crystal structural studies of the virus. A generic protocol based on proteolysis for AAV serotype identification is provided here.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18369962 PMCID: PMC7120696 DOI: 10.1007/978-1-59745-210-6_2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Methods Mol Biol ISSN: 1064-3745
Fig. 2.1The single-stranded DNA genome of AAV. The inverted terminal repeats (ITRs) flank the two open reading frames rep and cap. The rep gene encodes four nonstructural proteins – Rep78, Rep68, Rep52, and Rep40. The cap gene encodes three structural proteins – VP1, VP2, and VP3. The location of the promoters, p5, p19, and p40 are depicted by arrows
Fig. 2.2The structure of a monomeric subunit of AAV2 as determined by Xie et al. [31]. This image was produced using the AAV2 coordinates from the Protein Databank, (PDB Accession no. 1lp3), with the molecular modeling software PyMOL (www.pymol.org) provided by DeLano Scientific, Palo Alto, CA [39]
Transduction efficiencies of AAV serotypes in different tissues
| Tissue type | Serotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Muscle | AAV1 > AAV2 | [ |
| AAV1-AAV6-AAV7 > AAV5 > AAV3 > AAV2 > AAV4 | [ | |
| AAV6 > AAV5 or AAV2 | [ | |
| AAV5 > AAV2 | [ | |
| AAV7 | [ | |
| AAV8 highest systemic; AAV1 and AAV6 highest local injection | [ | |
| Transducing remote sites when injected locally: | ||
| AAV7 = AAV8 > AAV1, AAV5 and AAV6. AAV8 > AAV2; AAV1 > AAV2 and AAV8 | ||
| Liver (hepatocytes) | AAV8 > AAV7 > AAV5 > AAV2; AAV1 > AAV5 > AAV3 > AAV2 > AAV4 | [ |
| AAV5 > AAV2 | [ | |
| AAV1 > AAV8 > AAV6 > AAV2 | [ | |
| AAV8 | [ | |
| AAV9 = AAV8 | [ | |
| AAV8-AAV9 > AAV2 | [ | |
| Pancreas | AAV8 > AAV2 | [ |
| AAV1 > AAV2 | [ | |
| Kidney | AAV1 = AAV2 = AAV5 | [ |
| AAV2 transduces tubular epithelium but not glomerular, blood vessel or interstitial cells | ||
| Lung | AAV5 and AAV6 | [ |
| AAV9 > AAV5 | [ | |
| Retina | AAV5 > AAV4 > AAV1 = AAV2 = AAV3 | [ |
| Photoreceptor cells | AAV5 > AAV2 | [ |
| Hematopoietic stem cells | AAV1 > AAV2-AAV5 | [ |
| Dendritic cells | AAV6 | [ |
| Cochlear inner ear cells | AAV1 and AAV2 > AAV5 | [ |
| Solid tumors and melanoma | AAV2 > AAV1 and AAV3 | [ |
| Glioblastoma | AAV8 = AAV7 > AAV6 > AAV2 > AAV5 | [ |
| Glioma cells | AAV2 > AAV4 and AAV5 | [ |
| Brain | AAV5 > AAV1 > AAV2 | [ |
| AAV7 > AAV8 > AAV5 > AAV2 = AAV6 | [ | |
| AAV1 and AAV5 > AAV2; AAV1 and AAV5 transduced pars reticulate; AAV1 transduced entire midbrain; AAV1 and AAV5 transduced pyramidal cell layers; AAV2 transduced the dentate gyrus | [ | |
| AAV5 > AAV4 > AAV2 | [ | |
| AAV1 > AAV2 | [ | |
| AAV8 > AAV1 or AAV2 | [ | |
| AAV5 > AAV2 | [ | |
| AAV2 transduces neurons | [ | |
| AAV5 and AAV1 transduce neurons and glial cells | [ | |
| AAV4 transduces ependymal cells | [ | |
| AAV1 transduces glial cells and ependymal cells | [ | |
| Cardiac tissue | AAV8 > AAV2 | [ |
| AAV1 > AAV2 > AAV5 > AAV4 > AAV3 | [ | |
| AAV9 > AAV8 | [ | |
| AAV9 > AAV8 > AAV1 | [ | |
| AAV1 > AAV2 | [ | |
| AAV6 > AAV2 | [ |
Disease targets
| Disorder | Target tissue | Species | Serotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cystic fibrosis | Nasal and lung epithelium | Mice | AAV2/5, AAV2/9 | [ |
| Lung | Mice | AAV1, AAV2, AAV5 | [ | |
| Airway epithelium | Cell culture | AAV5 | [ | |
| Lung | Mice | AAV2, AAV5 | [ | |
| Lung | Mice | AAV2, AAV6 | [ | |
| Lungs – airway epithelium and maxillary sinus | Human | AAV2 | [ | |
| Hemophilia B | Liver | Mice | AAV8, AAV9 | [ |
| Liver | Mice | AAV1, AAV2, AAV6 | [ | |
| Liver | Mice | AAV5 | [ | |
| Liver | Mice, Monkey | AAV2, AAV5, AAV2/8 | [ | |
| Liver | Mice | AAV2 | [ | |
| Liver | Dog | AAV2/8 | [ | |
| Liver | Dog | AAV2 | [ | |
| Liver | Human | AAV2 | [ | |
| Muscle | Mice | AAV1-AAV2 hybrid | [ | |
| Muscle | Mice | AAV1 | [ | |
| Muscle | Mice | AAV1, AAV2, AAV3, AAV4, AAV5 | [ | |
| Muscle | Mice; Dog | AAV1 | [ | |
| Muscle | Dog | AAV2 | [ | |
| Muscle | Human | AAV2 | [ | |
| Anemia | Muscle | Mice | AAV2 | [ |
| Parkinson's disease | Brain | Rat | AAV2 | [ |
| Brain | Monkey | AAV2 | [ | |
| Brain | Human | AAV2 | [ | |
| Lysosomal storage disease | Muscle | Mice | AAV2 | [ |
| Muscle | Mice | AAV1 and AAV2 | [ | |
| Muscle | Mice | AAV2/6 | [ | |
| Brain | Mice | AAV2 | [ | |
| Brain | Mice | AAV2, AAV5 | [ | |
| Brain | Human | AAV2 | [ | |
| i.v. – systemic delivery | Mice | AAV8 | [ | |
| i.v. – systemic delivery | Mice | AAV2/8 | [ | |
| Canavan disease | Brain | Mice | AAV2 | [ |
| Brain | Rodents, monkey, human | AAV2 | [ | |
| Brain | Human | AAV2 | [ | |
| Type I diabetes | Pancreas – acinar cells, beta cells | Mice | AAV6, AAV8 | [ |
| Islets | Mice | dsAAV2, dsAAV6, dsAAV8 | [ | |
| Islet cells | Mice | AAV1, AAV2 | [ | |
| [ | ||||
| Alzheimer's disease | Brain – Abeta vaccine | Mice | AAV2 | [ |
| Brain | Rat | AAV2/5 | [ | |
| Brain | Rat | AAV1, AAV2, AAV4, AAV5 | [ | |
| Cardiovascular | Cardiac tissue | Rodent | AAV2 | [ |
| Cardiac tissue | Mice | AAV2/1, AAV2/8, AAV2/9 | [ | |
| Cardiac muscle | Mice | AAV2 | [ | |
| Cardiac tissue | Rat | AAV6, AAV2 | [ | |
| Cancer | Glioma | Tumor cell lines | AAV2, AAV4, AAV5 | [ |
| Ovarian carcinoma | Ovarian carcinoma cell line | RGD modified AAV2 | [ | |
| AAV2 | [ | |||
| Mice | AAV2 | [ | ||
| Breast carcinoma | Mice | AAV2 | [ | |
| Glioblastoma | Mice | Pseudotyped AAV7 and AAV8 | [ | |
| Rat | AAV2 | [ | ||
| Prostate cancer | Mice | AAV2 | [ | |
| Liver cancer | Mice | AAV2 | [ | |
| Lung adenocarcinoma | Mice | Hybrid AAV2/5 | [ | |
| Vaccine development | Bone-marrow-derived dendritic cells | Mouse | AAV6 | [ |
| Papillomavirus antigen HPV16 L1 protein delivery | Mice – intranasal delivery | AAV5 | [ | |
| Dendritic cells or muscle, HIV gp160 protein delivery | Mice | AAV1, AAV5, AAV7 and AAV8 | [ | |
| Dendritic cells, siRNA delivery for dengue virus vaccine | Human cells | AAV2 | [ | |
| Obesity | Vector expressing leptin | Mouse | AAV2 | [ |
| Vetor expressing leptin receptor | Rat | AAV2 | [ | |
| Vector expressing adiponectin | Rat | AAV1, AAV2, AAV3, AAV4, AAV5 | [ |
Fig. 2.3Viral vector production. The rAAV Vector plasmid contains the therapeutic gene flanked by the ITRs, usually of AAV2. The helper plasmid contains the rep and cap genes, as well as the adenoviral genes needed for replication. Both plasmids are transiently transfected into HEK293 cells that express the adenovirus E1A and E1B gene products
Fig. 2.4Flowchart of the steps for rAAV production as described in Protocol 1. HEK293 cells are expanded, transfected, and harvested at 60 h posttransfection. The cells are lysed, and loaded onto either a cesium chloride gradient or an iodixanol gradient to separate infectious virions from empty capsids. Virus is purified using either heparin affinity chromatography or ion-exchange chromatography. Virus preparations are formulated and concentrated, and characterized
Assays used for vector characterization and safety testing of rAAV vectors produced for clinical trials under cGMP conditions
| Assay type | Method and reference | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Infectious | Infectious Center Assay (ICA) [ | Determine titer of infectious particles produced |
| Serial Dilution Replication Assay (dRA) [ | ||
| Vector genome | Dot-blot hybridization | Determine genome-containing vector concentration |
| PCR [ | ||
| Capsid | ELISA [ | Determine total capsid protein concentration – enables a determination of empty particles in the prep |
| Bradford | ||
| Western | ||
| Electron microscopy [ | ||
| Optical density (OD) [ | ||
|
| ||
| Protein | SDS-PAGE | Determine the presence or absence of contaminating proteins |
| Cellular DNA | DNA hybridization or PCR | Determine the presence or absence of cellular DNA |
|
| ||
| Transgene cassette | DNA sequencing or restriction enzyme digestion | Verification of the transgene |
| Capsid | SDS-PAGE with silver and Coomassie stain | Expected AAV banding pattern |
| Limited proteolysis | Serotype identification | |
|
| ||
| Transgene expression | Transduction assay in cells or animals | Ensure that the active transgene product is expressed |
|
| ||
| Adventitious agents | qPCR-based assays to detect infectious adventitious viral agents | Detect contaminating infectious viral agents of human or animal origin (serum, trypsin) |
| Mycoplasma | Growth assays on cells in antibiotic-free conditions, followed by dye or PCR to detect mycoplasma | Determine the presence or absence of mycoplasma |
| Growth assay in appropriate agar media | ||
| Endotoxin | Rabbit pyrogen assays | Determine the presence or absence of endotoxin |
| Sterility | Bacteriostasis/fungistasis | Determine the presence or absence of microbial contaminants |
|
| ||
| Physiochemical | SDS-PAGE | Demonstrate that the product is not degrading over time |
| Infectious | ICA | Demonstrate that infectivity is maintained over time |
| Sterility | Bacteriostasis/fungistasis | Demonstrate the integrity of final product container over time |
Fig. 2.5Protease mapping of the AAV capsid for capsid serotype determination. A Samples are digested with a protease, in this case trypsin for one set of samples and chymotrypsin for the other set. A Western blot is performed using polyclonal antisera to AAV capsids, and based on the fragmentation pattern, a serotype determination can be made. Undigested sample (T0) and samples digested for 12 h (T12) for AAV2, AAV1, and AAV5 are shown. AAV5 is resistant to these proteases, while AAV1 and AAV2 exhibit differences in their fragmentation patterns. T0 samples represent the undigested capsid proteins VP1, VP2, and VP3. B Different AAV serotypes demonstrate different susceptibilities to proteases due to the differences in their primary amino acid sequences. This differential susceptibility provides a unique signature for each serotype and allows for capsid serotype identification
| Step | Optiprep (ml) | 5 M NaCl (ml) | 5× TD (ml) | dH2O (ml) | Phenol red (μl) | Total volume (ml) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15% | 45 | 36 | 36 | 63 | – | 180 |
| 25% | 50 | – | 24 | 46 | 300 | 120 |
| 40% | 68 | – | 20 | 12 | – | 100 |
| 60% | 100 | – | – | – | 250 | 100 |