| Literature DB >> 30819613 |
Juliette Hordeaux1, Yuan Yuan1, Peter M Clark1, Qiang Wang1, R Alexander Martino1, Joshua J Sims1, Peter Bell1, Angela Raymond2, William L Stanford2, James M Wilson3.
Abstract
Efficient delivery of gene therapy vectors across the blood-brain barrier (BBB) is the holy grail of neurological disease therapies. A variant of the neurotropic vector adeno-associated virus (AAV) serotype 9, called AAV-PHP.B, was shown to very efficiently deliver transgenes across the BBB in C57BL/6J mice. Based on our recent observation that this phenotype is mouse strain dependent, we used whole-exome sequencing-based genetics to map this phenotype to a specific haplotype of lymphocyte antigen 6 complex, locus A (Ly6a) (stem cell antigen-1 [Sca-1]), which encodes a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored protein whose function had been thought to be limited to the biology of hematopoiesis. Additional biochemical and genetic studies definitively linked high BBB transport to the binding of AAV-PHP.B with LY6A (SCA-1). These studies identify, for the first time, a ligand for this GPI-anchored protein and suggest a role for it in BBB transport that could be hijacked by viruses in natural infections or by gene therapy vectors to treat neurological diseases.Entities:
Keywords: AAV-PHP.B; AAV-PHP.eB; CNS; LY6A; blood-brain barrier; gene therapy
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30819613 PMCID: PMC6520463 DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2019.02.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ther ISSN: 1525-0016 Impact factor: 11.454