| Literature DB >> 31909084 |
Pauline F Schmit1, Simon Pacouret1,2, Eric Zinn1, Elizabeth Telford1, Fotini Nicolaou1, Frédéric Broucque2, Eva Andres-Mateos1, Ru Xiao1, Magalie Penaud-Budloo2, Mohammed Bouzelha2, Nicolas Jaulin2, Oumeya Adjali2, Eduard Ayuso2, Luk H Vandenberghe1,3,4,5.
Abstract
Generation and screening of libraries of adeno-associated virus (AAV) variants have emerged as a powerful method for identifying novel capsids for gene therapy applications. For the majority of libraries, vast population diversity requires multiplexed production, in which a library of inverted terminal repeat (ITR)-containing plasmid variants is transfected together into cells to generate the viral library. This process has the potential to be confounded by cross-packaging and mosaicism, in which particles are comprised of genomes and capsid monomers derived from different library members. Here, we investigate the prevalence of cross-packaging and mosaicism in simplified, minimal libraries using novel assays designed to assess capsid composition and packaging fidelity. We show that AAV library variants are prone to cross-packaging and capsid mosaic formation when produced at high plasmid levels, although to a lesser extent than in a recombinant context. We also provide experimental evidence that dilution of input library DNA significantly increases capsid monomer homogeneity and increases capsid:genome correlation in AAV libraries. Lastly, we determine that similar dilution methods yield higher-quality libraries when used for in vivo screens. Together, these findings quantitatively characterized the prevalence of cross-packaging and mosaicism in AAV libraries and established conditions that minimize related noise in subsequent screens.Entities:
Keywords: aav; adeno-associated virus; barcode; capsid; capsid mosaics; cross-packaging; library; mosaic; viral genome
Year: 2019 PMID: 31909084 PMCID: PMC6938944 DOI: 10.1016/j.omtm.2019.11.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ther Methods Clin Dev ISSN: 2329-0501 Impact factor: 6.698