Human adenovirus serotype 5 (HAdV5)-based vectors administered intravenously accumulate in the liver as the result of their direct binding to blood coagulation factor X (FX) and subsequent interaction of the FX-HAdV5 complex with heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) at the surface of liver cells. Intriguingly, the serotype 35 fiber-pseudotyped vector HAdV5F35 has liver transduction efficiencies 4-logs lower than HAdV5, even though both vectors carry the same hexon capsomeres. In order to reconcile this apparent paradox, we investigated the possible role of other viral capsid proteins on the FX/HSPG-mediated cellular uptake of HAdV5-based vectors. Using CAR- and CD46-negative CHO cells varying in HSPG expression, we confirmed that FX bound to serotype 5 hexon protein and to HAdV5 and HAdV5F35 virions via its Gla-domain, and enhanced the binding of both vectors to surface-immobilized hypersulfated heparin and cellular HSPG. Using penton mutants, we found that the positive effect of FX on HAdV5 binding to HSPG and cell transduction did not depend on the penton base RGD and fiber shaft KKTK motifs. However, we found that FX had no enhancing effect on the HAdV5F35-mediated cell transduction, but a negative effect which did not involve the cell attachment or endocytic step, but the intracellular trafficking and nuclear import of the FX-HAdV5F35 complex. By cellular imaging, HAdV5F35 particles were observed to accumulate in the late endosomal compartment, and were released in significant amounts into the extracellular medium via exocytosis. We showed that the stability of serotype 5 hexon:FX interaction was higher at low pH compared to neutral pH, which could account for the retention of FX-HAdV5F35 complexes in the late endosomes. Our results suggested that, despite the high affinity interaction of hexon capsomeres to FX and cell surface HSPG, the adenoviral fiber acted as the dominant determinant of the internalization and trafficking pathway of HAdV5-based vectors.
Human adenovirus serotype 5 (HAdV5)-based vectors administered intravenously accumulate in the liver as the result of their direct binding to blood coagulation factor X (FX) and subsequent interaction of the FX-HAdV5 complex with heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) at the surface of liver cells. Intriguingly, the serotype 35 fiber-pseudotyped vector HAdV5F35 has liver transduction efficiencies 4-logs lower than HAdV5, even though both vectors carry the same hexon capsomeres. In order to reconcile this apparent paradox, we investigated the possible role of other viral capsid proteins on the FX/HSPG-mediated cellular uptake of HAdV5-based vectors. Using CAR- and CD46-negative CHO cells varying in HSPG expression, we confirmed that FX bound to serotype 5 hexon protein and to HAdV5 and HAdV5F35 virions via its Gla-domain, and enhanced the binding of both vectors to surface-immobilized hypersulfated heparin and cellular HSPG. Using penton mutants, we found that the positive effect of FX on HAdV5 binding to HSPG and cell transduction did not depend on the penton base RGD and fiber shaft KKTK motifs. However, we found that FX had no enhancing effect on the HAdV5F35-mediated cell transduction, but a negative effect which did not involve the cell attachment or endocytic step, but the intracellular trafficking and nuclear import of the FX-HAdV5F35 complex. By cellular imaging, HAdV5F35 particles were observed to accumulate in the late endosomal compartment, and were released in significant amounts into the extracellular medium via exocytosis. We showed that the stability of serotype 5 hexon:FX interaction was higher at low pH compared to neutral pH, which could account for the retention of FX-HAdV5F35 complexes in the late endosomes. Our results suggested that, despite the high affinity interaction of hexon capsomeres to FX and cell surface HSPG, the adenoviral fiber acted as the dominant determinant of the internalization and trafficking pathway of HAdV5-based vectors.
The human adenovirus (HAdV) capsid is composed of eleven well identified structural
proteins, of which the hexon is the major component with 240 copies forming the 20
facets and 30 edges of the icosahedral capsid. The penton is the second most
represented capsid protein, with 12 copies of penton located at each apex. Each
penton capsomere is made up of a fiber, a triple beta-stranded fibrous protein [1], anchored to a
pentameric protein, the penton base, closing up the vertices of the icosahedron
(reviewed in [2],
[3]). HAdVs
are divided into subgroups or species A to F, covering 51 different serotypes. The
members of species C (HAdV2, HAdV5) and species B (HAdV3, HAdV35) are the most
studied and characterized in terms of capsid structure, cell entry mechanisms,
cellular response and gene transfer (reviewed in [2], [3]). The classical cell entry and
trafficking pathway of HAdV5, as demonstrated by epithelial cell models of
adenoviral infection in vitro, consists of (i) the fiber binding to
CAR, the Coxsackie B and Adenovirus Receptor [4]–[11], followed by (ii) the
interaction of the penton base RGD motifs with the cellular integrins
alphaVbeta3 and alphaVbeta5, [12]–[15], which promotes virus
endocytosis into clathrin-coated vesicles [16], [17]. In step (iii), partially
uncoated HAdV5 particles are released from the early endosomal compartment into the
cytosol, a process involving the capsid protein VI [18], [19]. (iv) Dynein and microtubules
mediate the cytoplasmic transit of the residual HAdV5 capsid, which docks at the
nuclear pore complex [20], [21], before (v) the nuclear import of the viral nucleoprotein
core [22], [23].Contrasting with the vast scientific information available on HAdV5 and its multiple
interactions with host cell components, the clinical application of HAdV5, the most
widely utilised serotype as gene transfer vector, has suffered from several
drawbacks. The prevalence of anti-HAdV antibodies in the human population results in
the rapid neutralisation of HAdV5 vector after in vivo
administration. Secondly, intravenous delivery of HAdV5 vector results in the liver
uptake of the vast majority of the virus particles, and therefore do not reach their
target cells or tissues. Numerous strategies have been employed to overcome these
hurdles, notably by engineering mutant or chimeric vectors to evade the neutralising
antibodies and ablate the hepatotropism of the vector, but the results have been
somewhat disappointing (reviewed in [24]).Recent breakthrough in the HAdV-host interactions showed that the vector particle
accumulation in the liver is the result of HAdV5 binding to humanblood coagulation
factor X (FX) via the hexon capsomeres, followed by the interaction of the HAdV5-FX
complexes to heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) molecules which are present in high
concentration at the surface of Kupffer cells [25]–[34]. Further dissection of the
molecular mechanism of the HPSG-mediated cellular uptake of HAdV5-FX complex
revealed the importance of O- and N-sulfation of
HPSG in this high affinity pathway, and the requirement of alphaV
integrins as secondary receptors for an efficient internalization step [35]. In contrast
to HAdV5, it has been observed in vivo that HAdV35 vectors have
liver transduction efficiencies which are of four orders of magnitude lower than
that of HAdV5 vectors [36]. Likewise, fiber-pseudotyped or chimeric fiber-carrying
HAdV5 vectors showed less hepatotropism, compared to HAdV5. This was the case for
HAdV5F35, which carried serotype 35 fibers [37], HAdV5/35 chimeric vector, which
carried serotype 35 fiber knob domains [38], and HAdV5F2/BAdV4, carrying
chimeric human-bovine fibers [39]. Intriguingly however, HAdV5, HAdV5F35 and HAdV5F2/BAdV4
vectors were all composed of the serotype 5 hexon capsomere, thus suggesting the
contribution of factors other than hexon, FX and HSPG to the mechanism of liver
uptake of FX-HAdV5 complex in vivo. Both HAdV35 and the HAdV5F35
chimera use CD46, one of the cell attachment receptors recognized by subspecies B
HAdVs besides desmoglein-2 [40], and to a lesser degree HSPG molecules, to infect
epithelial cells [41]–[44].In the present study, we sought to determine the influence of capsid proteins other
than the hexon, viz. penton base and/or fiber, on the interaction of FX with
HAdV5-based vectors, and their FX- and HSPG-mediated cell entry pathway and gene
transduction. To this aim, we analyzed the binding of wild type HAdV5 (HAdV5wt),
penton base or fiber mutants of HAdV5, and fiber 35-pseudotyped HAdV5 vector
(HAdV5F35) to heparan sulfate in the presence or absence of FX by surface plasmon
resonance in vitro. We analyzed the effect of FX on the HAdV5wt-
and HAdV5F35-mediated transduction of CHO cells expressing HSPG (CHO-K1), the
alternative receptors for HAdV5 [45]–[47] and HAdV35 viruses [41]–[44], and HSPG-negative CHO cells
(CHO-2241). Both cell lines lack the CD46 and CAR receptors for HAdV5F35 and HAdV5,
respectively.We found that FX bound to HAdV5 hexon protein via its Gla-domain,
and enhanced the binding of HAdV5wt and HAdV5F35 vector particles to
surface-immobilized hypersulfated heparin (HS) in vitro, and to
cellular HSPG in vivo. We also found that FX augmented the
efficiency of cellular transduction by HAdV5, but had a negative effect on the
transduction by HAdV5F35. Our experimental data showed that this negative effect did
not involve the cell attachment or the endocytic step of the FX-HAdV5F35 complex,
but the intracellular trafficking. In the presence of FX, the HAdV5F35 particles
accumulated in the late endosomal compartment, resulting in a delay in their
vesicular release and nuclear import. Furthermore, HAdV5F35 were released in
significant amounts in the extracellular medium via exocytosis,
resulting in lower numbers of particles reaching the nucleus. Our results suggested
that the serotype 35 fiber determined the cell internalization and trafficking
pathway of the HAdV5F35 vector, despite the absence of known fiber receptor at the
plasma membrane, and acted dominantly despite the interaction between hexon and cell
surface HSPG mediated by FX. This observation has significant implications for the
future design of target tissue-redirected adenoviral vectors.
Results
Gla domain-dependence of FX-mediated binding of serotype 5 hexon protein and
adenovirions to heparan sulfate in vitro
The interaction between soluble HAdV5wt hexon protein and heparan sulfate
in vitro, directly or indirectly via FX,
was investigated using surface plasmon resonance (SPR) analysis and a
hypersulfated form of heparin (HS), recognized as the best structural model to
mimic the heparan sulfate chains contained in HSPG [48], [49]. HS was covalently
immobilized onto the biosensor chip, and the binding of hexon to HS was assessed
using FX in a stoichiometric ratio of 1∶1 with hexon protein. A truncated
version of FX devoid of its gamma-carboxylic acid (Gla) domain, FXGL, was
assayed in parallel experiments. As expected from previous studies (reviewed in
[24]),
we found that hexon binding to HS was enhanced in the presence of FX, but not
with FXGL (
), and this enhancing effect occurred in a FX dose-dependent
manner (not shown). The binding of HAdV5wt virions to immobilized HS with and
without FX was also assessed by SPR, using various stoichiometric ratios of FX
per hexon trimeric capsomere, as determined from the number of virus particles
present in the samples. FX enhanced the binding of HAdV5wt virions to HS in a
dose-dependent manner (
). As for isolated hexon protein, the Gla domainless FXGL
showed no significant enhancement of the binding of HAdV5wt virion to HS (not
shown). Of note, a weak signal of binding was observed with control samples of
FX alone (
), used in amounts equivalent to its average physiological
concentration in human adult serum (8 µg/ml), referred to as the maximum
FX concentration (FXmax). This excluded the possibility that the
signal of binding to HS observed with FX∶hexon or FX∶vector
complexes were due to the binding of free FX.
Figure 1
SPR analysis of the in vitro binding of HAdV5 hexon
capsomeres and HAdV5-based vectors to immobilized HS with or without
factor X (FX) bridging.
Representative sensorgrams for (A) HAdV5 hexon capsomeres
alone, or with FX or Gla domainless FXGL, (B) HAdV5wt
virions alone or with FX, and (C) HAdV5 virion mutants
HAdV5FTTAT and HAdV5PbEGD alone or with FX. In
(A) and (B), the molecular ratio of FX to hexon protein (isolated
capsomeres as in (A), or virion-encapsidated hexons, as in (B)) is
indicated in parenthesis. The control sensorgrams with FX and FXGL alone
were obtained at FX and FXGL concentrations of 8 µg/ml,
corresponding to the concentration in human adult serum
(FXmax). In (C), FX was also used at 8 mg/ml. Hexon
capsomeres, HAdV5wt virions and HAdV5FTTAT and
HAdV5PbEGD mutants bound to immobilized HS only in the
presence of FX. RU, response units.
SPR analysis of the in vitro binding of HAdV5 hexon
capsomeres and HAdV5-based vectors to immobilized HS with or without
factor X (FX) bridging.
Representative sensorgrams for (A) HAdV5 hexon capsomeres
alone, or with FX or Gla domainless FXGL, (B) HAdV5wt
virions alone or with FX, and (C) HAdV5 virion mutants
HAdV5FTTAT and HAdV5PbEGD alone or with FX. In
(A) and (B), the molecular ratio of FX to hexon protein (isolated
capsomeres as in (A), or virion-encapsidated hexons, as in (B)) is
indicated in parenthesis. The control sensorgrams with FX and FXGL alone
were obtained at FX and FXGL concentrations of 8 µg/ml,
corresponding to the concentration in human adult serum
(FXmax). In (C), FX was also used at 8 mg/ml. Hexon
capsomeres, HAdV5wt virions and HAdV5FTTAT and
HAdV5PbEGD mutants bound to immobilized HS only in the
presence of FX. RU, response units.Two mutants of HAdV5 were then analyzed, HAdV5FTTAT, mutated in the
KKTK motif of the fiber shaft, and HAdV5PbEGD, mutated in the RGD
motif of the penton base. The KKTK tetrapeptide had been identified as a
putative HSPG-binding motif [45], [46], [50], a function which is debatable [51]. FX used at 8 µg/ml
(FXmax) was found to enhance the binding of the two mutants to HS
to equivalent levels (
). As for HAdV5wt, no binding enhancement was observed
with the Gla domainless version FXGL, indicating that the FX bridge between
HAdV5wt hexon and HS required the integrity of its Gla domain. This confirmed
previous reports which showed that the Gla domain of FX interacts with the hexon
capsomere [26], [33], whilst basic residues Arg240, Lys236, Lys169,
Arg165, Lys96, Arg93, and Arg125 in the exosite of FX interact with HSPG [52]. Our
results also indicated that the mutations in HAdV5FTTAT and
HAdV5PbEGD had no effect on the FX-mediated binding function of
HAdV5wt hexon to HS.
Requirement of HSPG expression at the cell surface for FX-mediated
enhancement of cell transduction by HAdV5wt vector
We next assayed the transduction efficiency of HAdV5wt vector in the presence or
absence of FX or FXGL in a CAR-negative cellular model, using CHO cells, which
express HSPG at their surface (control CHO-K1), or CHO-2241, which are deficient
in HSPG expression. The FX concentrations in the viral inoculum ranged from 0 to
8 µg/ml (FXmax). In HSPG-positive CHO-K1 cells, FX, but not the
Gla domainless FXGL, enhanced the transduction efficiency (TE) of HAdV5wt in a
dose-dependent manner (
). Of note, the maximum enhancement of transduction was
not reached with a concentration of FX in the medium corresponding to a ratio of
720 copies of FX per virion (i.e. with 3 FX per trimeric hexon
capsomere), but with the highest FX concentration (FXmax;
), a
result consistent with sensorgrams shown in Fig. 1B. At FXmax, the increase of
TE was 18-fold at 2,500 vp/cell, and 26-fold at 5,000 vp/cell (
). No
detectable effect of FX on TE levels was observed in HSPG-negative CHO-2241
cells (
). This demonstrated that the surface expression of HSPG
molecules was indispensable for the FX-mediated enhancing effect on the HAdV5wt
cell binding and transduction, confirming previous studies [24], [37].
Figure 2
Cell transduction of CAR- and CD46-negative CHO cells by HAdV5wt in
the absence of presence of FX.
(A), Dose-response effect of FX on cell transduction. CHO-K1
cells were transduced by GFP-expressing HAdV5wt vector in the presence
of increasing concentration of FX. Both FXmax and
FXGLmax corresponded to 8 mg/ml. Results were expressed
as relative transduction efficiency (RTE). Transduction efficiency, in
arbitrary units (AU), was given using the
formula∶TE = (percentage of GFP-positive
cells)×(MFI). The RTE was calculated using the
formula∶RTE = (TE with FX)∶(TE without
FX), with the 1-value attributed to TE in the absence of FX.
(B), CHO-K1 (double CAR- and CD46-negative cells) and
CHO-2241 (triple CAR- , CD46-, and HSPG-negative cells) were transduced
by HAdV5wt vector at MOI 2,500 (left half of the bar graph) or MOI 5,000
(right half of the bar graph) in the absence or presence of FX (8
µg/ml). Results were expressed as RTE, with the 1-value attributed
to the TE of CHO-K1 in the absence of FX.
Cell transduction of CAR- and CD46-negative CHO cells by HAdV5wt in
the absence of presence of FX.
(A), Dose-response effect of FX on cell transduction. CHO-K1
cells were transduced by GFP-expressing HAdV5wt vector in the presence
of increasing concentration of FX. Both FXmax and
FXGLmax corresponded to 8 mg/ml. Results were expressed
as relative transduction efficiency (RTE). Transduction efficiency, in
arbitrary units (AU), was given using the
formula∶TE = (percentage of GFP-positive
cells)×(MFI). The RTE was calculated using the
formula∶RTE = (TE with FX)∶(TE without
FX), with the 1-value attributed to TE in the absence of FX.
(B), CHO-K1 (double CAR- and CD46-negative cells) and
CHO-2241 (triple CAR- , CD46-, and HSPG-negative cells) were transduced
by HAdV5wt vector at MOI 2,500 (left half of the bar graph) or MOI 5,000
(right half of the bar graph) in the absence or presence of FX (8
µg/ml). Results were expressed as RTE, with the 1-value attributed
to the TE of CHO-K1 in the absence of FX.
Absence of requirement of fiber KKTK motif and penton base RGD motif for FX-
and HSPG-mediated enhancement of cell transduction by HAdV5 vectors
It was shown that mutation of the putative HSPG binding site in the HAdV5wt shaft
(91KKTK94) interfered negatively with the cellular
trafficking of the virions to the nucleus [45], [51]. We therefore evaluated the
influence of FX on the capacity of transducing CHO-K1 and CHO-2241 cells by the
mutant vector HAdV5FTTAT. In the absence of FX, HAdV5FTTAT
transduced CHO-K1 cells with a significantly lower TE, compared to HAdV5wt used
at the same MOI (2,500 vp/cell ;
). In the presence of increasing doses of
FX, we observed a progressive augmentation of the TE, with a 35-fold enhancement
for the FX∶virion ratio of 3∶1 for (viz. 720 copies
of FX per 240 hexon capsomeres), and 65-fold for FXmax (
). No
enhancement, but instead a slight decreasing effect of FX on TE was observed in
CHO-2241 (
). This indicated that FX was able to rescue the loss of
infectivity due to the KKTK-to-TTAT mutation in the fiber shaft, provided that
HSPG molecules were present at the cell surface. This also indicated that the
putative HSPG-binding motif KKTK was dispensable for the FX-mediated bridging of
HAdV5wt virion to surface HSPG molecules, confirming the major role of hexon as
the ligand of FX [24]. It could not be excluded however that other fiber
interactions, besides the assumed interaction with HSPG, might be affected as a
consequence of the TTAT mutation, although the TTAT mutant fibers folded as
trimers and were incorporated at wild-type levels in the adenoviral capsid (data
not shown).
Figure 3
Transduction of CHO-K1 or CHO-2241 cells by GFP-expressing, fiber
mutants of HAdV5-based vectors in the absence (w/o) or presence of
(with) FX (8 µg/ml).
(A), HAdV5wt, mutants HAdV5FTTAT and
HAdV5PbEGD and serotype 35 fiber-pseudotyped HAdV5F35
were all used at MOI 2,500, and transduction efficiency were expressed
as arbitrary units (AU), as described in the legend to Fig. 2.
(B), Dose-response effect of FX on cell transduction by
HAdV5FTTAT mutant. CHO-K1 cells were transduced by
GFP-expressing HAdV5FTTAT mutant vector in the presence of
increasing concentration of FX
(FXmax = 8 µg/ml). Results were
expressed as relative transduction efficiency (RTE; refer to the legend
to Fig. 2).
Transduction of CHO-K1 or CHO-2241 cells by GFP-expressing, fiber
mutants of HAdV5-based vectors in the absence (w/o) or presence of
(with) FX (8 µg/ml).
(A), HAdV5wt, mutants HAdV5FTTAT and
HAdV5PbEGD and serotype 35 fiber-pseudotyped HAdV5F35
were all used at MOI 2,500, and transduction efficiency were expressed
as arbitrary units (AU), as described in the legend to Fig. 2.
(B), Dose-response effect of FX on cell transduction by
HAdV5FTTAT mutant. CHO-K1 cells were transduced by
GFP-expressing HAdV5FTTAT mutant vector in the presence of
increasing concentration of FX
(FXmax = 8 µg/ml). Results were
expressed as relative transduction efficiency (RTE; refer to the legend
to Fig. 2).Humanadenovirus serotype 35 (HAdV35) utilizes CD46 and
αv-integrins as primary and secondary receptors, respectively
[41],
[53]. We
next investigated the possible influence of RGD-dependent integrins on the
FX+HSPG-mediated enhancing effect on transduction by HAdV5 vectors. To this
aim, the HAdV5PbEGD penton base mutant was used in transduction
assays of CHO-K1 and CHO-2241 cells. In the absence of FX, HAdV5PbEGD
showed a lower TE of both CHO-K1 and CHO-2241 cells, compared to HAdV5wt used at
the same MOI (
). In the presence of FXmax, we observed an
enhancement of transduction of CHO-K1 cells, at levels similar to those of
HAdV5wt or HAdV5FTTAT (50- to 100-fold), whereas no effect was
detectable in CHO-2241 (
). This showed that FX was able to rescue the negative
effect of the penton base RGD-to-EGD mutation in HSPG-expressing CHO-KI cells,
but not in HSPG-negative CHO cells. Similar to the HAdV5FTTAT fiber
shaft mutant, this result implied that the penton base RGD motifs and the
integrins played no significant role in the FX+HSPG-mediated enhancement of
cell transduction using HAdV5 vectors.Interestingly, CHO-2241 seemed to be slightly more permissive to HAdV5wt compared
to CHO-K1 infected at the same MOI in the absence of FX, which could suggest a
higher accessiblity of alternative virus attachment receptor(s) other than HSPG
for the primary binding of HAdV5wt to CHO-2241 cells, e.g. integrins [12], [54], [55]. The
possibility of integrins acting as alternative attachment receptor of Ad5 to CHO
cells in the absence of CAR and HSPG were envisaged, based on the results
obtained with our RGD-mutant vector : HAdV5PbEGD transduced CHO-2241
cells in the absence of FXmax with a 10-fold lower efficiency,
compared to HAdV5wt (
). However, since CHO cells lack ß-integrins and
fail to express αVß3/5 integrin heterodimers at their
surface, other types of RGD-interactors/ligands might be responsible for the low
levels of HAdV5PbEGD-mediated transduction.
Paradoxical behavior of serotype 35 fiber-pseudotyped HAdV5F35 vector in the
context of FX and HSPG
Fiber swapping between adenovirus serotypes has been widely used as a rational
strategy to (i) explore the various functions associated with
fibers in fundamental virology [56]–[58],
(ii) to allow fiber-pseudotyped vectors to evade prexisting
neutralizing antibodies [59], [60], or (iii) to ablate the natural
tropism of the virus and confer a novel transductional retargeting capacity to
the pseudotyped vectors [24], [27], [34], [37], [61]–[67]. Novel and sometimes
unexpected properties, e.g. nonnative entry pathway and/or
aberrant cellular trafficking, have been observed with such chimeric
adenoviruses. This was the case for the serotype 35 fiber-pseudotyped HAdV5F35
vector [68],
or for HAdV5F2/BAdV4, which carried bovine-human chimeric fibers [39].A phylogenetic study of HAdV fiber shaft has revealed the absence of the putative
heparan sulfate (HS)-binding site (KKTK motif) in all HAdVs other than species C
[69]. The
serotype 35 fibers carried by the chimeric HAdV5F35 vector lacked the KKTK
motif, and species B HAdV35 has been shown to interact with cellular HSPG via
capsid protein domains other than the fiber knob [42]. We therefore wanted to
determine the capacity of our chimeric HAdV5F35 vector to bind to HS with or
without a FX bridge. Firstly, we analyzed the binding of HAdV5F35 to immobilized
FX in SPR assays, and found that HAdV5F35 bound to FX with a higher response
compared to HAdV5wt used at the same particle input (
). We also observed a
higher FX-mediated binding of HAdV5F35 to surface-immobilized HS, compared to
HAdV5wt (
). No effect was observed with FXGL (
). In dose-dependent
binding assays, maximum binding was observed with 480 copies of FX per HAdV5F35
virion, i.e. a stoichiometric ratio of 2 FX molecules per hexon
capsomere, with no further significant increase obtained using 3 copies of FX
per hexon (720 FX copies per virion;
). This differed from
the sensorgrams of FX-mediated binding of HAdV5wt to immobilized HS, which was
not maximal with 2 copies of FX per hexon, and still increased in the range 2 to
10 copies of FX per hexon (refer to
). This difference could be due to the
relatively higher accessibility of hexon capsomeres to FX in short
fiber-carrying HAdV5F35 vector, compared to the long fiber-carrying vector
HAdV5Fwt.
Figure 4
SPR analysis of the in vitro binding of chimeric
HAdV5F35 vector to (A) surface-immobilized FX, or (B, C) immobilized HS
with or without FX or FXGL.
(A), Representative sensorgrams for HAdV5wt vector
(discontinuous lines) injected at 2×109 and
4×109 vp/ml, or for HAdV5F35 injected at the same
doses (solid lines). (B), Comparison of binding to HS of
HAdV5wt and HAdV5F35 vector particles (2×109 vp/ml) in
the presence of FX or FXGL at 720 copies per vector particle. Controls
shown are FX and FXGL alone. For better clarity, the sensorgrams for
virions alone, which superimposed those of FX and FXGL, are not shown
(refer to Fig. 1C).
(C), Dose-response effect of FX on HAdV5F35 binding to
immobilized HS. Note that a detectable signal was observed for 120
copies of FX per virion, and reached the maximal value for 480
copies/vp.
SPR analysis of the in vitro binding of chimeric
HAdV5F35 vector to (A) surface-immobilized FX, or (B, C) immobilized HS
with or without FX or FXGL.
(A), Representative sensorgrams for HAdV5wt vector
(discontinuous lines) injected at 2×109 and
4×109 vp/ml, or for HAdV5F35 injected at the same
doses (solid lines). (B), Comparison of binding to HS of
HAdV5wt and HAdV5F35 vector particles (2×109 vp/ml) in
the presence of FX or FXGL at 720 copies per vector particle. Controls
shown are FX and FXGL alone. For better clarity, the sensorgrams for
virions alone, which superimposed those of FX and FXGL, are not shown
(refer to Fig. 1C).
(C), Dose-response effect of FX on HAdV5F35 binding to
immobilized HS. Note that a detectable signal was observed for 120
copies of FX per virion, and reached the maximal value for 480
copies/vp.The influence of FX-mediated bridging of HAdV5F35 to cellular HSPG on the
transduction of CHO-K1 cell was then tested with increasing MOI, from 200 to
5,000 vp/cell. HAdV5wt was used at the same MOI for comparison and as control.
As expected, the transduction efficiency with HAdV5wt vector was significantly
higher when FX was added to the virus inoculum, from 14-fold to 30-fold higher
at MOI 200 and 5,000 vp/cell, respectively (
, panels
a). With HAdV5F35 however, no enhancing effect on transduction of
CHO-K1 cells was observed in the presence of FX, compared to the vector alone,
but instead a 3- to 4-fold decreasing effect at high MOI (
, panels
b). Likewise, in control experiments using HAdV5F35 and permissive
CHO-CD46 cells, no increasing effect of FX on cell transduction was observed,
but a decreasing effect at high vector doses (
, panels
c). A similar phenomenon has previously been reported, and attributed
to a blockage in postinternalization step(s) of chimeric vectors carrying
serotype 35 fibers [37]. The fact that FX-HAdV5F35 complexes were less
efficient than FX-HAdV5wt complexes in cell transduction was paradoxical,
considering (i) that both HAdV5wt and HAdV5F35 carried the same
hexon capsomeres of serotype 5, (ii) which had the same ligand,
FX, and (iii) that the FX-HAdV5F35 complexes were capable of
binding to surface-immobilized HS and to cellular HSPG with an apparent higher
affinity than that of the FX-HAdV5wt complexes.
Figure 5
Comparison of transduction efficiency of (a, b) CHO-K1 cells or (c)
CHO-CD46 by (a) HAdV5wt, and (b, c) chimeric HAdV5F35 vectors at
different MOI (200, 1,000 or 5,000 vp/cell) in the absence (w/o) or
presence of (with) FX (8 µg/ml).
Results were expressed as (A) the percentage of GFP-positive
cells, or (B) relative transduction efficiency (RTE; refer
to the legend to Fig.
2). In B, the number on top of each bar corresponded to the
fold increase in RTE, with the 1-value attributed to the TE of CHO-K1 or
CHO-CD46 cells transduced by HAdV5F35 at MOI 200. Note that RTE of
CHO-K1 cells with HAdV5F35 was lower in the presence of FX than in the
absence of FX, at all MOI tested.
Comparison of transduction efficiency of (a, b) CHO-K1 cells or (c)
CHO-CD46 by (a) HAdV5wt, and (b, c) chimeric HAdV5F35 vectors at
different MOI (200, 1,000 or 5,000 vp/cell) in the absence (w/o) or
presence of (with) FX (8 µg/ml).
Results were expressed as (A) the percentage of GFP-positive
cells, or (B) relative transduction efficiency (RTE; refer
to the legend to Fig.
2). In B, the number on top of each bar corresponded to the
fold increase in RTE, with the 1-value attributed to the TE of CHO-K1 or
CHO-CD46 cells transduced by HAdV5F35 at MOI 200. Note that RTE of
CHO-K1 cells with HAdV5F35 was lower in the presence of FX than in the
absence of FX, at all MOI tested.
Cell attachment and internalization of FX-HAdV5F35 complex in HSPG-expressing
CHO cells
The following experiments were designed to explain the 2-log difference between
FX-HAdV5wt and FX-HAdV5F35 complexes in the transduction of CHO-K1 cells. We
investigated the (i) cell attachment, (ii) cellular uptake (endocytosis and
internalization), and (iii) intracellular trafficking of FX-HAdV5F35, in
comparison with FX-HAdV5wt complexes, to determine which step(s) was blocked or
altered in the infection pathway. The rationale for using CHO-K1 cells as target
cells, was that they express neither CAR nor CD46, and thus made possible the
analysis of the cell entry pathway of the HAdV5wt and HAdV5F35 vectors mediated
by their FX-bridging to cellular HSPG, while avoiding any bias due to adenovirus
serotype-specific receptors.
(i) Cell attachment
Samples of HAdV5wt and HAdV5F35 suspension were mixed with FX at a final
concentration of 8 µg/ml, and the mixture added to CHO-K1 cell
monolayers at a MOI of 5,000 vp/cell. Incubation was carried out for 1 h at
4°C, which allowed for virus-cell attachment but not virus entry or
endocytosis [70]. After extensive rinsing to remove unattached
virus, cells were harvested and cell-bound virus determined by quantitative
PCR analysis (qPCR) of viral genomes after DNA extraction, based on the
fiber gene copy number normalized to the ß-actin gene. FX
significantly increased the amounts of cell-bound virions, by a factor of 5
to 6 for HAdV5wt, and by a factor of 10 for HAdV5F35 (
). This confirmed
the apparent higher affinity of FX for HAdV5F35 as observed in
vitro, compared to HAdV5wt (refer to Fig. 4). However, this was in apparent
contradiction with the lower transduction efficiency of the FX-HAdV5F35
complex, compared to FX-HAdV5wt (refer to Fig. 5), and excluded the cell attachment
as the limiting step for FX-HAdV5F35-mediated transduction.
Figure 6
Cellular uptake and extracellular release of HAdV5wt and HAdV5F35
vectors by CHO-K1 cells.
(A), Cell attachment of vector (MOI 5,000) was performed
at 4°C for 1 h, and cellular internalization at 37°C for 1
h, respectively, with or without FX (8 µg/ml), as indicated on
the x-axis. The number of viral genome copies was
determined by qPCR of the fiber gene, normalized to the
ß-actin gene. (B), Extracellular vectors
associated with microvesicles (MVs) or exosomes (EXOs) recovered
from the extracellular medium at 72 h post transduction, were
determined as above.
Cellular uptake and extracellular release of HAdV5wt and HAdV5F35
vectors by CHO-K1 cells.
(A), Cell attachment of vector (MOI 5,000) was performed
at 4°C for 1 h, and cellular internalization at 37°C for 1
h, respectively, with or without FX (8 µg/ml), as indicated on
the x-axis. The number of viral genome copies was
determined by qPCR of the fiber gene, normalized to the
ß-actin gene. (B), Extracellular vectors
associated with microvesicles (MVs) or exosomes (EXOs) recovered
from the extracellular medium at 72 h post transduction, were
determined as above.
(ii) Cellular uptake
The subsequent step of endocytosis was then investigated. After an incubation
period of 1 h at 4°C with FX-vector complexes at MOI 5,000, as above,
samples of CHO-K1 cells were transferred to 37°C and harvested after 1
h. After a brief trypsin treatment, to remove vector particles remaining
bound to the plasma membrane [71], cell samples were subjected to DNA extraction
and viral genomes determined by qPCR, as above. In the absence of FX, the
intracellular content was not significantly different between HAdV5wt and
HAdV5F35. In the presence of FX, there was a 2-fold increase in HAdV5wt
uptake, and a 4-fold increase for HAdV5F35 (
). This suggested
that the mechanism responsible for the lower cell transduction by the
FX-HAdV5F35 complex did not involve the endocytic step of the vector.
(iii) Extracellular release
The previous results incited us to explore the exocytic pathway of
cell-internalized vector particles, i.e. the possibility that significant
amounts of HAdV5F35 particles might be released in the extracellular medium,
either by shedding of vector-containing microvesicles (MVs) budding from the
plasma membrane, or by exocytosis, i.e. the release of exosomes (EXOs)
segregated within the lumen of multivesicular bodies (MVBs) (reviewed in
[72]). CHO-K1 cell culture supernatants were harvested at
2 h and 24 h post incubation with of HAdV5wt or HAdV5F35 at MOI 5,000, with
or without FX. The extracellular MVs and EXOs from the culture supernatants
were separated by sequential and differential ultracentrifugation. After DNA
extraction, the amount of virus particles in each microparticle population
was determined by qPCR quantification of the viral genomes. In the absence
of FX, HAdV5wt genomes were recovered in significant amounts in MVs and
EXOs, and these amounts decreased in both types of microparticles when
transduction was performed in the presence of FX (
). Interestingly,
the profile was different for HAdV5F35, with and without FX: (i) HAdV5F35
genomes were undetectable in either microparticle population in the absence
of FX, but became detectable in the presence of FX; (ii) HAdV5F35 was
recovered in higher amounts in EXOs, compared to MVs (2-fold;
).
This pattern suggested that the intracellular trafficking was likely
responsible for the low efficiency of FX-HSPG-mediated transduction of
CHO-K1 cells by HAdV5F35, and the next experiments were designed to
determine which subcellular compartment(s) were possibly implicated.
Intracellular trafficking and compartmentalization of FX-HAdV5F35 complexes
in HSPG-expressing CHO cells
(i) Live cell imaging
The capsids of HAdV5wt and HAdV5F35 vectors were chemically labeled with
Alexa-488, and mixed with FX, before incubation with CHO-K1 cells at high
vector multiplicity (10,000 vp/cell). Intracellular virions were tracked
in situ in live cells by time-lapse microscopy at early
times of infection (0 to 4 h pi). As early as 20–30 min pi, most of
the HAdV5wt signal was found in the vicinity of or within the nucleus (
).
This observation was consistent with the well-described rapid process of
endocytosis, endosomal escape and intracellular trafficking of HAdV5wt
virions [22], [73], and suggested that FX had no significant effect
on the internalized HAdV5wt particles and the kinetics of their
intracellular transit. This implied that FX acted at earlier steps, an
hypothesis consistent with the role of molecular bridge between viral hexon
capsomeres and cell surface HSPG played by FX. The fluorescence pattern of
HAdV5F35 vector was however significantly different. At 30 min pi, no
fluorescent signal was observed in the nucleus, instead multiple fluorescent
dots were visible in the cytoplasm, and most of the fluorescence remained
cytoplasmic until 3 h pi (
). This suggested that HAdV5F35
particles were delayed in terms of intracellular trafficking, compared to
HAdV5.
Figure 7
Confocal microscopy of live cells transduced by adenoviral vector
particles or capsid components (penton dodecamers).
(A–C), Confocal microscopy of live cells (CHO-K1)
transduced by Alexa-488-labeled adenoviral vectors, used at 10,000
vp/cell and complexed with FX (8 µg/ml). (A)
HAdV5wt, 30 min pi; (B, C) HAdV5F35, 3 h pi. (i), Green
channel image; (ii), phase contrast; (iii), merge of (i) and (ii).
In (C), CHO-K1 cells were transduced by recombinant
baculoviral vector expressing RFP-tagged, late endosome marker Lamp1
protein, 24 h before incubation with HAdV5F35 vector. (i), Green
channel image; (ii), phase contrast; (iii) orange channel; (iv),
merge of (i) and (iii). (D) Live HeLa cells transduced
by recombinant baculovirus expressing RFP-tagged, early endosome
marker Rab5A protein, were incubated 24 h later with
Alexa-488-labeled HAdV5wt particles without FX, at 10,000 vp/cell
and 37°C. Picture shown was taken at 20 min after incubation
with HAdV5wt. Note that most of the virus signal is weak and
diffuse, but some green fluorescent dots are visible within the
cytoplasm (white arrows). (E), Live CHO-CD46 cells
transduced by recombinant baculovirus expressing RFP-tagged, late
endosome marker Lamp1 protein, were incubated 24 h later with
Cy5-labeled HAdV3 penton dodecahedrons (Pt-Dd) at 37°C. Picture
shown was taken at 60 min after incubation with Pt-Dd. (i), Cy5
channel; (ii), phase contrast image; (iii) RFP channel; (iv), merge
of (i) and (iii).
Confocal microscopy of live cells transduced by adenoviral vector
particles or capsid components (penton dodecamers).
(A–C), Confocal microscopy of live cells (CHO-K1)
transduced by Alexa-488-labeled adenoviral vectors, used at 10,000
vp/cell and complexed with FX (8 µg/ml). (A)
HAdV5wt, 30 min pi; (B, C) HAdV5F35, 3 h pi. (i), Green
channel image; (ii), phase contrast; (iii), merge of (i) and (ii).
In (C), CHO-K1 cells were transduced by recombinant
baculoviral vector expressing RFP-tagged, late endosome marker Lamp1
protein, 24 h before incubation with HAdV5F35 vector. (i), Green
channel image; (ii), phase contrast; (iii) orange channel; (iv),
merge of (i) and (iii). (D) Live HeLa cells transduced
by recombinant baculovirus expressing RFP-tagged, early endosome
marker Rab5A protein, were incubated 24 h later with
Alexa-488-labeled HAdV5wt particles without FX, at 10,000 vp/cell
and 37°C. Picture shown was taken at 20 min after incubation
with HAdV5wt. Note that most of the virus signal is weak and
diffuse, but some green fluorescent dots are visible within the
cytoplasm (white arrows). (E), Live CHO-CD46 cells
transduced by recombinant baculovirus expressing RFP-tagged, late
endosome marker Lamp1 protein, were incubated 24 h later with
Cy5-labeled HAdV3 penton dodecahedrons (Pt-Dd) at 37°C. Picture
shown was taken at 60 min after incubation with Pt-Dd. (i), Cy5
channel; (ii), phase contrast image; (iii) RFP channel; (iv), merge
of (i) and (iii).
(ii) Retention of HAdV5F35 particles in the late endosomal
compartment
To determine the nature of the subcellular compartment in which HAdV5F35 was
retained, CHO-K1 cells were transduced by baculovirus vectors expressing
fluorescent markers designed for live-imaging of different cellular
organelles or compartments. We found that the green fluorescent signal of
HAdV5F35 colocalized with red fluorescent Lamp1 protein [74],
[75],
a marker of the lysosomal/late endosomal compartment (
). This result
suggested that the retarded trafficking to the nucleus of HAdV5F35 particles
was due to their segregation into the late endosomal compartment.
(iii) Evaluation of the baculovirus-mediated labeling of cellular
organelles and compartments for the study of adenoviral vector pathway in
living cells
To verify the validity of our observation of late endosomal
compartmentalization of HAdV5F35 particles, HeLa, HEK-293, CHO-K1 or
CHO-CD46 cells were transduced with recombinant baculoviruses expressing
Lamp1-RFP, as above, or Rab5A-RFP [76], a marker of the
early endosomes, 24 h prior to incubation with Alexa-488-labeled HAdV5wt
particles or Cy5-labeled HAdV3 penton dodecahedrons (Pt-Dd). No image of
colocalisation of Alexa-488 labeled HAdV5wt with RFP-labeled early endosomes
could be captured, even after short incubation period: as early as after
10–15 min incubation with living cells at 37°C, green fluorescent
dots of HAdV5wt were already found within the cytoplasm, outside of the red
fluorescent endosomal compartment (
). This confirmed
the scenario described by Greber et al., which showed that incoming HAdV5wt
particles escaped very rapidly from early endosomes [73]. By contrast,
Cy5-labeled Pt-Dd localized in the late endosomal compartment of HeLa or CHO
cells after incubation at 37°C for 1 h (
), as expected for
the HAdV3 pathway [40], [77]–[79]. The usefulness of
baculovirus-mediated labeling of specific organelles for tracking adenovirus
particles or adenoviral components within living cells was therefore
validated using our in-house model of HAdV3 Pt-Dd.
Electron microscopy (EM) of cell-internalized HAdV5wt and HAdV5F35 particles
in the presence of FX
To further explore the cellular localization of internalized vector particles in
the presence of FX, CHO-K1 cells were incubated with HAdV5wt or HAdV5F35 vector
(MOI 10,000) alone or complexed with FX (8 µg/ml). Cells were harvested at
2 h pi at 37°C, and processed for EM. As expected for CAR-negative cells
transduced in the absence of FX, rare HAdV5wt virions were observed within the
cells, in vesicles (
) or free in the cytoplasm (
). Occasionally,
HAdV5wt virions were seen attached to the invaginated plasma membrane forming
clathrin-coated vesicles: in such cases, the average distance of the capsid to
the plasma membrane was found to be 25±4 nm (m ± SEM), a value
consistent with the length of serotype 5 fiber (
). This
suggested that in the absence of CAR and FX, HAdV5wt bound directly to
components of the CHO-K1 plasma membrane acting as alternative receptors. In the
presence of FX however, HAdV5wt found in vesicles seemed to be associated with
electron lucent material (
). Very rare HAdV5wt particles were
found within the cells at 2 h pi, likely due to their rapid transit to the
nucleus and traverse of the nuclear pore (
).
Figure 8
Electron microscopy of CHO-K1 cells incubated with HAdV5wt at 10,000
vp/cell, (A) in the absence (w/o), or (B) presence of FX (8 µg/ml)
for 2 h at 37°C.
(A), (i) and (ii): General views of cell sections showing
(i) intravesicular and (ii) cytoplasmic vector particles. In (iii) and
(iv), a vector particle (Vir) is seen within a clathrin-coated vesicle
(CCV); (iv), enlargement of the CCV shown in (iii), with measurements of
the space between the vector particle and the inner leaflet of the
vesicular membrane. N, nucleus; NPC, nuclear pore complexes viewed in a
tangential section. (B), (i): vector particle within an
endocytic vesicle in the vicinity of a nuclear pore; (ii), viral core
seen in the process of traverse of the nuclear pore.
Electron microscopy of CHO-K1 cells incubated with HAdV5wt at 10,000
vp/cell, (A) in the absence (w/o), or (B) presence of FX (8 µg/ml)
for 2 h at 37°C.
(A), (i) and (ii): General views of cell sections showing
(i) intravesicular and (ii) cytoplasmic vector particles. In (iii) and
(iv), a vector particle (Vir) is seen within a clathrin-coated vesicle
(CCV); (iv), enlargement of the CCV shown in (iii), with measurements of
the space between the vector particle and the inner leaflet of the
vesicular membrane. N, nucleus; NPC, nuclear pore complexes viewed in a
tangential section. (B), (i): vector particle within an
endocytic vesicle in the vicinity of a nuclear pore; (ii), viral core
seen in the process of traverse of the nuclear pore.The pattern was different for CHO-K1 cells incubated with FX-HAdV5F35 complex for
2 h at 37°C. No particle with the regular shape of adenovirions was observed
in any of the cellular compartments, but each cell section showed large vesicles
containing abundant, electron dense material (
). This pattern was
consistent with the results of confocal microscopy showing the accumulation of
FX-HAdV5F35 complexes in lysosomes (refer to Fig. 7). Interestingly at the cell surface,
HAdV5F35 particles were frequently seen connected to the plasma membrane
via a bridge consisting of filamentous material (
). The length of these bridges varied from 80 to 140 nm,
with an average at 105 nm, a value compatible with the thickness of the
fibrilllous glycocalyx coat (77 to 201 nm; [80]). By contrast, in
control CHO-CD46 cells incubated with HAdV5F35 vector in the absence of FX,
cell-bound particles were seen at a distance of 13±2 nm from the plasma
membrane outer leaflet (
), a value compatible with the short-shafted serotype
35 fiber bound to its CD46 receptor. Enlargements of cell-bound HAdV5F35
particles showed fuzzy material decorating the viral capsid (
),
conferring the whole complex a diameter of 107±6 nm, instead of
80–85 nm for free virions (
: compare the sharp contour of the control
HAdV5F35 virion in panel e to the blurred contour of FX-HAdV5F35
complex in panel d). We hypothesize that the filaments emanating
from the cell which bridged the vector to the cell surface represented HSPG,
components of the cell glycocalyx [80], whereas the fuzzy
material which coated the capsid corresponded to FX molecules bound to
hexon.
Figure 9
Electron microscopy of CHO-K1 cells (a–d) incubated with
HAdV5F35 at 10,000 vp/cell in the presence of FX (8 µg/ml), and
harvested after 2 h at 37°C.
(a), Representative CHO-K1 cell section showing a
cytoplasmic vesicle containing abundant electron dense material.
(b–d), Cell surface-bound HAdV5F35 particles.
(e), CHO-CD46 cells incubated with HAdV5F35 in the
absence of FX (w/o FX). Note the difference in size and sharpness of the
viral contour between HAdV5F35 particles seen in (e) and in
(b–d).
Electron microscopy of CHO-K1 cells (a–d) incubated with
HAdV5F35 at 10,000 vp/cell in the presence of FX (8 µg/ml), and
harvested after 2 h at 37°C.
(a), Representative CHO-K1 cell section showing a
cytoplasmic vesicle containing abundant electron dense material.
(b–d), Cell surface-bound HAdV5F35 particles.
(e), CHO-CD46 cells incubated with HAdV5F35 in the
absence of FX (w/o FX). Note the difference in size and sharpness of the
viral contour between HAdV5F35 particles seen in (e) and in
(b–d).
Cellular uptake and retention of FX with or without adenoviral
particles
Our observation that FX enhanced the vector-cell binding for both HAdV5wt and
HAdV5F35, but failed to augment the FX-HAdV5F35-mediated cell transduction,
raised the question of the fate of FX after the cell attachment of the FX-vector
complex: was FX coendocytosed with HAdV5wt or HAdV5F35, or did it remain outside
of the cell? To address this issue, Alexa-555-labeled FX was preincubated with
Alexa-488-labeled vector particles, and the complex added to CHO-K1 cells. As
control, Alexa-555-labeled FX was added to CHO-K1 cells alone, without
preincubation with the vector. Both types of samples were followed by live cell
imaging. We found that FX alone could bind to CHO-K1 cells and was rapidly
endocytosed: intracellular FX was detected as early as 15–20 min post
incubation (
). No detectable cellular uptake of FX was observed in
HSPG-deficient CHO-2241 cells (not shown). In CHO-K1 cells incubated with the
double labeled FX-HAdV5wt complex, both fluorescent signals were observed within
the cell at 15–20 min pi, and most signals colocalized in cytoplasmic dots
and patches (
). At later times pi (45–60 min), HAdV5wt particles
were found to localize at the nuclear periphery or inside the nucleus, and less
colocalization with FX was visible (
). In CHO-K1 cells incubated with double
labeled FX-HAdV5F35 complex, FX and virions remained colocalized within the
cytoplasm until late times pi (3 h pi;
). This confirmed the
rapid intracellular transit of HAdV5wt, in contrast to the slow trafficking and
vesicular retention of HAdV5F35.
Figure 10
Confocal microscopy of live cells (CHO-K1) incubated with (A)
Alexa-555-labeled FX alone (8 µg/ml), or (B, C) in complex with
Alexa-488-labeled HAdV5wt, or (D) in complex with Alexa-488-labeled
HAdV5F35, both vectors used at 10,000 vp/cell.
Images were taken at 10-min intervals, until 3 h post incubation (pi).
(i), phase contrast image; (ii) orange channel; (iii) green channel.
Confocal microscopy of live cells (CHO-K1) incubated with (A)
Alexa-555-labeled FX alone (8 µg/ml), or (B, C) in complex with
Alexa-488-labeled HAdV5wt, or (D) in complex with Alexa-488-labeled
HAdV5F35, both vectors used at 10,000 vp/cell.
Images were taken at 10-min intervals, until 3 h post incubation (pi).
(i), phase contrast image; (ii) orange channel; (iii) green channel.We next investigated whether the vesicular retention or sequestration of HAdV5F35
could be explained by a higher stability of FX-HAdV5F35 complex in the acidic
environment of the late endosomal compartment, compared to the higher pH of
early endosomes, the endocytic compartment of HAdV5wt. This was determined
indirectly, using SPR analysis of the apparent affinity between FX and serotype
5 hexon, the capsomeres which were in common between HAdV5F35 and HAdV5wt and
the targets of FX. FX was covalently immobilized onto the biosensor chip, and
hexon protein diluted in the same 0.05 M phosphate buffer but with the different
Na2HPO4∶NaH2PO4 ratios required to obtain the
desired pH values. The sensorgrams obtained showed that the profile of binding
of serotype 5 hexon to FX was significantly higher at pH 5.7, compared to
neutral pH, with an intermediate interaction observed at pH 6.3 (
). This
suggested that the FX-HAdV5F35 complex dissociated at slower rate in the acidic
environment of late endosomal vesicles, compared to that of FX-HAdV5 complex in
early endosomes. This vesicular sequestration would account for the lower
transduction efficiency of (i) the FX-HAdV5F35 complex, compared to FX-HAdV5wt
complex (refer to Fig. 5,
panels a and b), and (ii) of the FX-HAdV5F35 complex, compared to the HAdV5F35
vector alone (refer to Fig.
5, panels b).
Figure 11
SPR analysis of the pH-dependence of FX∶hexon protein
interaction.
FX was immobilized on the sensorchip, and a hexon protein solution in 150
mM NaCl, 0.05 M sodium phosphate buffer of various pH values was
injected into the flowcell.
SPR analysis of the pH-dependence of FX∶hexon protein
interaction.
FX was immobilized on the sensorchip, and a hexon protein solution in 150
mM NaCl, 0.05 M sodium phosphate buffer of various pH values was
injected into the flowcell.
Discussion
It was recently shown that HAdV5 interaction with humanblood coagulation FX, which
results in the formation of FX-HAdV5 complexes, is the major parameter responsible
for the massive liver uptake of HAdV5 vector particles administered systemically. FX
binds to the hexon capsomeres via its Gla domain, and subsequently interacts with
cell surface-exposed HSPG molecules which are present in abundance at the surface of
liver Kupffer cells [25]–[34]. This prompted several
laboratories to engineer HAdV5-based vectors with hexon modifications designed to
abolish the FX binding and reduce their hepatotropism (reviewed in [24]). However,
the species B member HAdV35 [36], the serotype 35 fiber-pseudotyped vector HAdV5F35 [37], and the
HAdV5/35 chimeric vector carrying serotype 35 fiber knobs [38] all showed a decreased
hepatotropism, compared to HAdV5. Likewise HAdV5F2/BAdV4, another fiber-pseudotyped
vector which carried human-bovine chimeric fibers, was able to bind to FX in
vitro, but ineffective to promote liver transduction in
vivo
[39]. The fact that
both HAdV5F35 and HAdV5F2/BAdV4 vectors carried the same hexon capsomere serotype
and varied only in their fiber subtype incited us to explore the role of the fiber
in the cell entry pathway and transduction mediated by HAdV5-based vectors in the
presence of FX.Our results confirmed that FX bound to HAdV5 hexon protein via its Gla-domain and
enhanced the binding of serotype 5 hexon protein and HAdV5wt virus particles to
surface-immobilized HS. We also found that FX promoted the interaction of HS with
HAdV5FTTAT and HAdV5PbEGD mutants in
vitro, significantly enhanced the cell transduction by HAdV5wt, and was
able to rescue the lower infectivity of HAdV5FTTAT and
HAdV5PbEGD mutants. Since FX contains a RGD tripeptide motif at
position 227–229, it was conceivable that in the case of HAdV5PbEGD
mutant, FX might compensate for the integrin binding defect of penton base EGD
mutant. However, this hypothesis could be excluded for two reasons: (i) activated FX
(FXa) which had lost the activation peptide (amino acid sequence 183–234)
including the RGD motif, showed the same effect on HAdV5PbEGD infectivity
as RGD-containing FX (data not shown); (ii) the activity of FX required the presence
of HSPG at the cell surface, whereas RGD-dependent integrins seemed to be
dispensable.Intriguingly, however, we found that, although FX promoted the binding of
fiber-pseudotyped vector HAdV5F35 to HS in vitro and to cellular
HSPG in vivo, it failed to enhance, but instead decreased, the
HAdV5F35-mediated transduction of CAR- and CD46-negative, but HSPG-positive CHO
cells. It was recently hypothesized that the absolute levels of CAR, CD46, and HSPG
on the surface of target cells would define the importance of FX in modulating cell
binding and transduction mediated by HAdV5, HAdV35, and serotype 5/35 chimeric
viruses: thus, in the presence of FX, the high affinity of serotype 35 fiber for
CD46 would overcome the serotype 5 hexon∶FX interaction, resulting in reduced
liver transduction by the chimeric vector HAdV5F35 in vivo,
compared to HAdV5 [37]. However, this did not explain the limitation by FX of
the transduction of CHO-CD46 cells in vitro by chimeric vectors
carrying serotype 35 fibers, as previously reported [37], and observed in the present
study (refer to Fig. 5), or the
lower transduction of CD46transgenic hepatocytes by a chimeric HAdV5/35 vector
in vivo
[38]. In the
latter study, CD46-transgenic mice injected with a HAdV5/35-based chimeric vector
carrying serotype 35 fiber knobs showed a two orders of magnitude lower liver
transduction and 20-fold lower adenoviral genome content, compared to HAdV5-based
vector [38].Our analysis of the cell entry and trafficking pathway of HAdV5F35 vector in complex
with FX provided some clues to reconcile these apparent contradictions, and to
understand the possible mechanisms underlying the FX effect. We showed that FX
augmented by 10-fold the attachment and cellular uptake of HAdV5F35, and confirmed
that the negative effect of FX on HAdV5F35-mediated cell transduction did not result
from a binding defect at the cell attachment step, but was due to intracellular
mechanisms, as previously hypothesized [37]. According to our data, (i) the
primum movens was the fiber 35-mediated addressing of HAdV5F35
particles (bound or unbound to FX) to the late endosomal/lysosomal compartment; (ii)
FX-bound HAdV5F35 particles remained sequestered in this compartment, due to the
higher stability of the FX-HAdV5F35 complexes in an acidic environment, which in
turn (iii) delayed the trafficking of HAdV5F35 particles to the nucleus. (iv) An
additional mechanism involved the exocytic pathway: following the cellular uptake of
FX-HAdV5F35 complexes, significant amounts of exosome-associated HAdV5F35 were
released in the extracellular milieu, a phenomenon which was not observed in the
absence of FX. This was not observed with HAdV5wt either, with or without FX. Our
results therefore addressed the puzzling question why, in contrast to HAdV5 vectors,
fiber-chimeric vectors such as HAdV5F35 do not efficiently transduce liver cells
after intravenous injection, although they contain the same HAdV5 hexons, which
mediate binding to heparan sulfate on liver cells via blood FX. Our data suggested
that the retention of HAdV5F35 particles in late endosomal compartments, triggered
by HAdV35 fibers, was further enhanced by the hexon∶FX∶heparan sulfate
interaction. This mechanism led to an abortion of HAdV5F35 transduction in the
presence of FX, and most likely explained why HAdV5F35 vectors do not transduce
liver cells after intravenous injection in mice.The intracellular trafficking pathway of subspecies B HAdVs has been well studied
[41], [58]. It has been
shown that, despite high levels of binding to cells and similar internalization
kinetics, fiber-pseudotyped or full serotype species B HAdVs remain in late
endosomes or lysosomes for relatively long periods of time after infection, and take
significantly longer than species C HAdV to reach the nucleus [41], [58]. This supposedly favored the
recycling of the vectors to the cell surface and reduce their transduction
efficiency, in contrast to HAdV5. Our experimental data on exosomal release of
serotype 35 fiber-pseudotyped vector HAdV5F35 infection in the presence of FX
supported the latter hypothesis. In conclusion, FX would be benefical to the
infection of CAR-lacking cells by species C HAdVs, e.g. HAdV5, which transit via the
early endosomal pathway, but detrimental to species B HAdVs, e.g. HAdV35, which
follow the late endosomal pathway.In the light of the acid stability of the FX-HAdV5F35 complex that we observed, it
remained to explain the relative efficient transduction of CHO-CD46 cells by
HAdV5F35 in the presence of FX (refer to Fig. 5). We assume that in the absence of CD46,
such as in CHO-K1 cells, only the alternative receptors HSPG via the intermediate
ligand FX would mediate the cell binding and entry of HAdV5F35, and all or nearly
all vector particles would be complexed with FX, and retarded or trapped within the
late vesicular compartment. In the presence of CD46 receptors however, e.g. in
CHO-CD46 cells, FX became dispensable, and a significant number of free, FX-unbound
HAdV5F35 particles would be endocytosed via the CD46 pathway. These free particles
would normally escape the late endosomal vesicles and reach the nucleus, unlike
FX-complexed HAdV5F35 particles.Previous analyses of the intracellular fate of chimeric adenoviruses have shown that
the fiber protein is the major determinant of the cell trafficking of incoming
virions [57],
[58], [81]. Thus,
the targeting of HAdV5 pseudotyped with fibers of serotype 7 (a serotype belonging
to species B HAdV) to the lysosomal pathway is under the control of the fiber
serotype [57].
The present study provided another example of dominant effect of species B fiber,
serotype 35 fiber, which occurred in the absence of CD46 and any other cognate fiber
receptor at the plasma membrane. The endocytosis and retention of FX-HAdV5F35
complex in the late endosomal compartment, characteristic of species B HAdVs [41], [58], implied that
the nature of the adenoviral fiber was dominant over the high affinity serotype 5
hexon∶FX interaction as a determinant of the choice of the endocytic
compartment and intracellular trafficking pathway of HAdV particles. This confirmed
previous reports on the intracellular functions associated with the fibers carried
by incoming adenovirions [57], [58], [70], [81], [82]. The molecular mechanism and factors involved in the
cellular traffic determinism of adenoviral fiber remains an open question, but
should be taken into consideration in the future design of target tissue-redirected
adenoviral vectors.
Materials and Methods
Cell lines
E1A-E1B-trans-complementing HEK-293 cell line (abbreviated 293; CRL 1573) was
obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, Va). HEK-293 cells
were cultured as monolayers in DMEM supplemented with 10% fetal calf
serum (FCS, Sigma), penicillin (200 U/ml), and streptomycin (200 µg/ml;
Gibco-Invitrogen) at 37°C and 5% CO2. The 293-derived,
fiber-trans-complementing cell line, abbreviated 293-Fiber, was obtained from
Transgene SA (Strasbourg, France). 293-Fiber cells were grown in the same medium
as 293 cells, supplemented with hygromycin at 350 µg/ml [70], [83]. Chinese
hamster ovary cells CHO-K1, and proteoglycan-deficient CHO-2241 cells (pgsB-618,
ATCC code CRL-2241) were obtained from the European Collection of Cultured Cells
via the Institut de Biologie Structurale, Grenoble, France [79]. CAR-expressing CHO cells
(CHO-CAR) were obtained from Dr. J. Bergelson [4], and CD46-expressing CHO
cells (CHO-CD46) from Dr. D. Gerlier [84]. CHO-K1, CHO-2241, CHO-CAR
and CHO-CD46 cells were cultured as monolayers in Alpha-MEM supplemented with
10% FCS, penicillin and streptomycin as above (Gibco-Invitrogen). All
cells were incubated at 37°C under 5% CO2 .
HAdV5-based vectors and nomenclature
Replication-deficient HAdV5 vectors (E1A–E1B, and E3 deleted) expressing
GFP were propagated in trans-complementing cell line 293. Their
genetic construction and phenotypes have been described in detail in previous
studies [85]–[93]. Since all the vectors used
in the present study contained the same reporter gene coding for the green
fluorescent protein (EGFP) cloned downstream to the hCMV promoter, their
acronyms did not specify this reporter gene, in contrast to our previous
studies. For reason of simplification, their acronyms only referred to the
capsid component serotype and to the protein mutated, penton base (Pb) or fiber
(F).
(i) HAdV5 vector with wild-type (wt) capsid
Control HAdV5 vector with nonmodified capsid was abbreviated HAdV5wt.
(ii) Penton base mutant
Mutant HAdV5PbEGD carried a RGD-to-EGD substitution at position
340 in the penton base coding sequence.
(iii) Fiber shaft substitution mutant
In the HAdV5FTTAT vector, the KKTK motif at position 91–94
in the fiber shaft domain was modified into 91-TATT-94 using conventional
PCR-based mutagenesis [88], [91].
(iv) Chimeric fiber vector HAdV5F35
HAdV5F35 carried the HAdV serotype 35 fiber knob and shaft domains fused to
the HAdV5 fiber tail [68], [85].
Adenovirus purification and titration
HAdV5-based vectors were purified by CsCl gradient ultracentrifugation using
conventional methods [85], [94]. The infectious titer of the HAdV5 vector stocks was
determined by the plaque assay method in HEK-293 or in double
trans-complementing cell line 293-Fiber [70] for HAdV5
fiber mutants, and expressed as PFU per ml [91], [92]. The titer in physical
particles (viral particles; vp) was determined by absorbance measurement at 260
nm (A
260) of 1-ml samples of SDS-denatured virions
(0.1% SDS for 1 min at 56°C) in a 1-cm-path-length cuvette, using the
respective formula: A
260 of
1.0 = 1.1×1012 vp/ml for HAdV5
(genomic DNA = 36 kbp). HAdV5 particle titers ranged from
5×1011 to 1×1012 vp/ml, with infectious
titers between 2×1010 and 5×1010 PFU/ml [95].
Fluorescent labeling of adenovirus particles and FX protein
Alexa Fluor® 488 dye (tetrafluorophenyl ester; Molecular Probes; Invitrogen),
and Alexa Fluor® 555 dye (succinimidyl ester; Molecular Probes; Invitrogen),
were abbreviated Alexa-488 and Alexa-555, respectively. Random labeling of
HAdV5wt or HAdV5F35 vector particles with Alexa-488 was carried out as follows.
Aliquots of 1×1012 vector particles in suspension in 0.05 M
HEPES buffer pH 7.2 (900 µl, final volume) were incubated with chemically
reactive Alexa-488 used at a 20-fold excess over the 18,000 amino groups present
at the surface of the adenoviral capsid, for 2 h at room temperature (RT) and in
argon atmosphere. The reaction was stopped by adding 100 µl 1 M lysine
solution in 0.05 M HEPES buffer pH 7.2, corresponding to a 5-fold excess of
lysine over the Alexa-488 reagent. After 1 h incubation at RT, the
labeled-vector particles were separated from unreacted dye by gel filtration on
a PD10 column. For labeling of FX protein with Alexa-555, FX protein (5 mg/ml)
was reacted with 1 mM Alexa Fluor® 555 dye in 0.05 M HEPES buffer pH 7.2,
for 1 h at RT, and excess of unreacted dye eliminated by dialysis against
PBS.
Live cell imaging and time-lapse microscopy
Samples of CHO-K1 or CHO 2241 cell monolayers (5×105 cells/well)
were seeded directly onto poly L-lysine-coated glass dishes (Mattek Corp., USA),
and maintained in the appropriate medium at 37°C for 24 h. Cells were
infected with 35 µl of recombinant baculovirus suspension expressing
fluorescent markers of cellular organelles or compartments (CellLight™
Lysosomes-RFP and CellLight™ Endosomes-RFP *BacMam 2.0*) per
cm2 of monolayer in serum-free medium for 4 h at RT, according to
the supplier instructions (Invitrogen). Suspension was then withdrawn and
replaced by culture medium supplemented with 10% FCS. Cell samples were
further incubated overnight at 37°C under 5% CO2
atmosphere, then processed for infection with fluorescent-labeled vector
particles, as follows. The following day, the cells were washed with cold PBS
(4°C), and overlaid with 1 ml fresh and cold (4°C) medium.
Alexa-488-labeled vector particles (10,000 vp/cell, in a volume of 100 µl)
were added to the medium, and incubated on ice for 1 h. The cells were then
washed 3 times with PBS, followed by fresh and cold (4°C) medium. Cell
samples were kept on ice until they were transferred to 37°C in the
incubation chamber of the confocal microscope. Observations were performed from
10 min to 3 h pi, using an inverted confocal laser scanning microscope (LSM 510
Meta; Carl Zeiss, IAB), equipped with a 63× oil immersion objective
(Plan-Apochromat 63×/1.4) and a humidified CO2- and temperature-controlled
incubation chamber. The Alexa-488 dye was excited by the Argon laser and the
emission was collected with a BP 500–550 nm filter. Orange channel used
543 nm HeNe laser excitation and LP560 emission filter. The images were mainly
collected in the focal plane crossing the cell nucleus with a resolution of
512×512 pixels (Zoom 1) and 4× line average. The collection time was
3 s per channel. The pinhole of the fluorescence channels was set to one Airy
unit corresponding to the optical section of less than 1 µm and the signal
intensity was adjusted with a PMT gain to completely fill the detector dynamic
range. The two channels were acquired in a sequential mode to avoid spectral
cross-talk, and the acquisition of transmitted light image was concomitant with
the green channel.
Flow cytometry
Aliquots of cells (2×105 per well) were seeded in fully
supplemented appropriate medium into 24-well plates. 24 h later, the cells were
washed three times with PBS, and 500 µl of appropriate medium containing
1% penicillin/streptomycin and 10% glutamine but no FCS was added.
For transduction assays, different vector preparations were added to the medium
at various MOI, with or without incubation with FX at different concentrations.
After 2 h, the cells were extensively washed with PBS prewarmed at 37°C,
then 1 ml of fresh fully supplemented medium was added and cells further
incubated at 37°C for an additional 22 h. Cells were resuspended in PBS and
analyzed by flow cytometry, using a FACSCanto™ II cytometer (Becton
Dickinson Biosciences). 20,000 events were acquired for each sample and the
results were analyzed using the DIVA 6 software (Becton Dickinson).
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) assays
The source of naturally hypersulfated heparin (HS), sodium salt, was the porcine
intestinal mucosa (Sigma). HS calibrated to 9 kDa was biotinylated and
immobilized on a CM4 BIAcore sensorchip (GE Healthcare, Saclay, France), using a
BIAcore3000 (GE Healthcare), as previously described [48], [49]. Two flowcells were prepared
by sequential injections of EDC/NHS, streptavidin, and ethanolamine. One of
these flowcells served as negative control, while biotinylated heparin was
injected on the other one, to get an immobilization level of 80–90
response units (RU). All SPR experiments were performed using HBS buffer (10 mM
HEPES, 150 mM NaCl, pH 7.4) supplemented by 3 mM CaCl2, at a flow
rate of 5 µl/min. Interaction assays involved injections of different
amounts of protein or virus over the heparin-coated and negative control
surfaces, followed by a 3-min dissociation time with buffer. At the end of each
cycle, the heparin surface was regenerated by injections of 2 M NaCl (2 min).
Sensorgrams shown corresponded to on-line subtraction of the negative control to
the heparin surface signal.
Preparation of plasma membrane-shedded microvesicles (MVs) and MVB-released
exosomes (EXOs)
(i) Source of MVs and EXOs
Confluent CHO-K1 cells were transduced with HAdV5wt or HAdV5F35 at MOI 5,000,
with or without FX, and harvested at 2 h and 24 h pi. The cell culture
medium was harvested and floating cells were pelleted by centrifugation at
2,000× g for 10 min. The supernatant was further
clarified from cell debris by centrifugation for 2 min at 13,000×
g and 4°C. This final supernatant (S0) was the
source of plasma membrane-derived MVs and EXOs, prepared as described in
[96].
(ii) Isolation of MV
Fraction S0 was centrifuged for 2 h at 30,000× g and
4°C, and pellet P1 was saved: it mainly contained MVs.
(iii) Isolation of EXOs
Supernatant S1 was further centrifuged at 100,000× g
and 4°C for 2 h, giving supernatant S2, which was discarded, and pellet
P2, which contained EXOs. Pellets were resupended in PBS and subjected to
DNA extraction, using QIAamp DNA Blood Mini kit (Quiagen).
Quantification of AdV vector genomes by real-time PCR and real-time
RT-PCR
HAdV5 vectors which were possibly carried over with MVs were detected and
quantitated by real-time PCR, using HAdV5 or HAdV35 specific primers and probe
selected from the fiber gene. Extraction of DNA was carried out using the QIAamp
DNA Blood Mini Kit (Quiagen) and real time PCR reactions were carried out using
the LightCycler DNA Master SYBR Green I kit (Roche) and the LightCycler
instrument (Roche). For the serotype 5 fiber gene, the primers used were: sense
5′-GCTACAGTTTCAGTTTTGGCTG-3′ and antisense
5′-GTTGTGGCCAGACCAGTCCC-3′ ; for the serotype
35 fiber gene, the primers used were : sense 5′- TGGCTTCACACAAAGCCCAGACG-3′ and antisense
5′-
ACACGTAGCCATTAACAAGCCCTCC-3′. As internal control,
ß-actin gene was amplified using the following primers, sense
5′-GCTGTGTTCTTGCACTCCTTG-3′ and antisense
5′-
CGCACGATTTCCCTCTCAGC-3′.
Proteins
FX, activated FX (FXa) which lacked the RGD motif contained in the activation
peptide [97], and the truncated form FXGL (Gla domainless) were
all purchased from CRYOPREP (Montpellier, France). Proteolytically inactive
human FX, blocked with Dansyl-EGR (FX-DEGR), was also purchased from CRYOPREP.
HAdV5wt hexon, penton (penton base + fiber) and fiber proteins were
isolated from lysates of HAdV5wt-infected 293 cells [85]. HAdV5wt penton base
and penton base RGD-340-EGD mutant, were recombinant proteins isolated from
recombinant baculovirus-infected cells [98], [99]. Viral proteins were
purified according to a conventional protocol adapted to fast protein liquid
chromatography [100]–[103]. Protein samples
were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
(SDS-PAGE) and western blotting, as previously described [85].
Adenovirus type 3 penton dodecahedron (Pt-Dd) purification, labeling and
intracellular trafficking
HAdV3 Pt-Dd was produced in recombinant baculovirus-infected insect cells
coexpressing HAdV3 penton base and fibre proteins, as previoulsy described [40], [77]–[79]. HAdV3
Pt-Dd was purified by sucrose gradient density, and dialysed against HEPES-NaCl
buffer (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl). Fluorescent-labeled Pt-Dd was
obtained by incubation of a Pt-Dd protein solution at 1 mg/ml with
Cy5-monoNHS-Ester at 1 mM (GE Healthcare, PA15101) for 2 h at room temperature,
followed by extensive dialysis against PBS to remove unbound dye. Cy5-labeled
Pt-Dd (10 µg/ml) was incubated at 37°C for 10 min to 2 h with CHO-CD46
cells transduced one day before with recombinant baculovirus suspension
expressing the Lamp1 fluorescent marker of the late endosome/lysosome
compartment (CellLight™ Lysosomes-RFP *BacMam 2.0*; Invitrogen),
as described above. After removal of Cy5-labeled Pt-Dd and rinsing the cell
monolayer with prewarmed medium, live imaging was performed using the LSM 510
Meta inverted confocal laser scanning microscope (Carl Zeiss, IAB) as above,
with the RFP and Cy5 filters.
Electron microscopy (EM)
Specimens were processed for EM and observed as previously described [104], [105]. In
brief, cells were harvested at 2 h pi, pelleted, fixed with 2.5%
glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.5, post-fixed with osmium
tetroxide (2% in H20) and treated with 0.5% tannic acid solution
in H20. The specimens were dehydrated and embedded in Epon (Epon-812; Fulham,
Latham, NY). Ultrathin sections were stained with 2.6% alkaline lead
citrate and 0.5% uranyl acetate in 50% ethanol, and post-stained
with 0.5% uranyl acetate solution in H2O. Grids were examined
under a Jeol JEM-1400 electron microscope, equipped with an ORIUS™
digitalized camera (Gatan France, 78113-Grandchamp). For statistical EM
analyses, a minimum of 50 grid squares containing 5 to 10 cell sections each
were examined for counting virions in different cell compartments.
Statistics
Results were expressed as mean ± SEM. of n observations. Sets of data were
compared with an analysis of variance (ANOVA) or a Student's
t test. Differences were considered statistically
significant when P<0.05. Symbols used in figures were
(*) for P<0.05, (**) for
P<0.01, (***) for P<0.001,
and ns for no significant difference, respectively. All statistical tests were
performed using GraphPad Prism version 4.0 for Windows (Graphpad Software).
Authors: Nathan C Shaner; Robert E Campbell; Paul A Steinbach; Ben N G Giepmans; Amy E Palmer; Roger Y Tsien Journal: Nat Biotechnol Date: 2004-11-21 Impact factor: 54.908
Authors: P Henning; M K Magnusson; E Gunneriusson; S S Hong; P Boulanger; P-A Nygren; L Lindholm Journal: Hum Gene Ther Date: 2002-08-10 Impact factor: 5.695
Authors: Alan L Parker; John H McVey; Jessica H Doctor; Oscar Lopez-Franco; Simon N Waddington; Menzo J E Havenga; Stuart A Nicklin; Andrew H Baker Journal: J Virol Date: 2007-01-24 Impact factor: 5.103
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