| Literature DB >> 23691494 |
Christoph Metzner1, Feliks Kochan, John A Dangerfield.
Abstract
Gene delivery vectors based on retroviral or lentiviral particles are considered powerful tools for biomedicine and biotechnology applications. Such vectors require modification at the genomic level in the form of rearrangements to allow introduction of desired genes and regulatory elements (genotypic modification) as well as engineering of the physical virus particle (phenotypic modification) in order to mediate efficient and safe delivery of the genetic information to the target cell nucleus. Phenotypic modifications are typically introduced at the genomic level through genetic manipulation of the virus producing cells. However, this paper focuses on methods which allow modification of viral particle surfaces after they have exited the cell, that is, directly on the viral particles in suspension. These methods fall into three categories: (i) direct covalent chemical modification, (ii) membrane-topic reagents, and (iii) adaptor systems. Current applications of such techniques will be introduced and their advantages and disadvantages will be discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23691494 PMCID: PMC3652111 DOI: 10.1155/2013/253521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Overview of postexit modification of R/LV vector surfaces.
Approaches to post-exit modification of R/LV vector surfaces.
| Type | Virus/vector | Modification | Objective | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Covalent chemical | ||||
| Iodination | (AV), VSV, | Radionuclides | L | [ |
| Reductive amination |
| Lactose | R | [ |
| Conjugation |
| Poly (ethylene) glycol | H | [ |
| Biotinylation |
| Biotin, different secondary | R | [ |
| PAL chemistry* |
| Biotin, Alexa fluorophore | P, L | [ |
| Membrane-topic | ||||
| FSL | VSV, MV, IV | Fluorescein, Biotin | L | [ |
| Molecular painting |
| CD59, GFP | L, H | [ |
| Membrane-traversing** | HV | Radionuclides | L | [ |
| Synthetic GPI** | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | [ |
| Oleyl/PEG** | n.a. | Streptavidin, GFP, mAB | L | [ |
| Myristyl/peptide** | n.a. | CD59 | (H) | [ |
| Adaptor-based | ||||
| (Strept)avidin (soluble) |
| Streptavidin, MHC | R | [ |
| (Strept)avidin (membr.)*** |
| Biotinylated radionuclids, antibodies and ligands | L, R | [ |
| Biotinylation | See above | |||
| Biotin acceptor peptide*** |
| Biotin, different secondary | P, R | [ |
| Bridging molecules |
| Heregulin | R | [ |
| Bispecific antibodies** | (AV) | AntiCD40 | R, H | [ |
| Antibody binding (membr.)*** |
| AntiHER2 | R | [ |
| “Clickable” Adaptors** | (AV) | TAMRA | (L) | [ |
| Split inteins∗∗/∗∗∗ | n.a. | GFP | (L) | [ |
*Mostly pre-exit, **not tried on R/LV, ***requires genetic modifications (transfection/transduction) to deliver part of the system. RV: retrovirus, LV: lentivirus, VSV: vesicular stomatitis virus, MV: measles virus, IV: influenza virus, HV: herpes virus, BV: baculovirus, AV: adenovirus. Lenti/retroviruses are in bold and underlined, viruses in brackets are naked viruses. P: preparation, L: labeling, H: host responses, R: range of infectivity. Objectives in brackets have not been carried out on enveloped viruses. CD59 protectin, GFP green fluorescent protein, MHC major histocompatibility complex, EGF epidermal growth factor, VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor, CEA carcinoembryonic antigen, HER human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, P-GP permeability glycoprotein, TAMRA Carboxytetramethylrhodamine.