Jiten Doshi, Emma Couto, Jillian Staiti, Luk H Vandenberghe, Nerea Zabaleta
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引用次数: 0
摘要
复制缺陷腺相关病毒(AAV)被广泛用作基因治疗的研究工具或载体。AAV 的生产过程仍然错综复杂、成本高昂,而且在机理上尚未得到充分探索。为了提高 AAV 在哺乳动物细胞中的生产效率,我们重新审视了围绕 AAV 生产过程中对各种腺病毒辅助基因的要求所提出的问题并进行了优化。首先,我们将 HEK293 AAV 生产中的最小腺病毒基因集细化为 E2A、L4-22 K /33 K 和 VA RNA I。此外,我们还发现 L4-22 K 基因是生产 AAV 的关键辅助基因。接下来,我们设计了一种包含 E2A、L4-22 K 和 VA RNA I 基因的最小腺病毒辅助质粒,并证明它能在 HEK293 瞬时转染中产生高滴度和强效的 AAV 预制品。最后,研究表明,携带可诱导 E2A 和 L4-22 K 基因的稳定包装细胞在 10 周的培养期内可保持与瞬时转染相当的 AAV 产量。这些研究结果进一步加深了我们对哺乳动物 AAV 生产中腺病毒辅助功能的理解,并提供了新型质粒和细胞系试剂,其安全性得到了改善,有望广泛应用于研究和基因治疗领域。
E2A, VA RNA I, and L4-22k adenoviral helper genes are sufficient for AAV production in HEK293 cells.
The replication-defective adeno-associated virus (AAV) is extensively utilized as a research tool or vector for gene therapy. The production process of AAV remains intricate, expensive, and mechanistically underexplored. With the aim of enhancing AAV manufacturing efficiencies in mammalian cells, we revisited the questions and optimization surrounding the requirement of the various adenoviral helper genes in enabling AAV production. First, we refined the minimal set of adenoviral genes in HEK293 AAV production to E2A, L4-22K/33K, and VA RNA I. These findings challenge the previously accepted necessity of adenoviral E4orf6 in AAV production. In addition, we identified L4-22K genes as crucial helpers for AAV production. Next, a revised minimal adenoviral helper plasmid comprising E2A, L4-22K, and VA RNA I genes was designed and demonstrated to yield high titer and potent AAV preps in HEK293 transient transfection. Lastly, stable packaging cells harboring inducible E2A and L4-22K genes were shown to maintain AAV production yields comparable to transient transfection over a culture period of ∼10 weeks. Combined, these findings further our understanding of adenoviral helper function in mammalian AAV production and provide novel plasmid and cell-line reagents with an improved safety profile for potential broad applicability in the research and gene therapy community.
期刊介绍:
The aim of Molecular Therapy—Methods & Clinical Development is to build upon the success of Molecular Therapy in publishing important peer-reviewed methods and procedures, as well as translational advances in the broad array of fields under the molecular therapy umbrella.
Topics of particular interest within the journal''s scope include:
Gene vector engineering and production,
Methods for targeted genome editing and engineering,
Methods and technology development for cell reprogramming and directed differentiation of pluripotent cells,
Methods for gene and cell vector delivery,
Development of biomaterials and nanoparticles for applications in gene and cell therapy and regenerative medicine,
Analysis of gene and cell vector biodistribution and tracking,
Pharmacology/toxicology studies of new and next-generation vectors,
Methods for cell isolation, engineering, culture, expansion, and transplantation,
Cell processing, storage, and banking for therapeutic application,
Preclinical and QC/QA assay development,
Translational and clinical scale-up and Good Manufacturing procedures and process development,
Clinical protocol development,
Computational and bioinformatic methods for analysis, modeling, or visualization of biological data,
Negotiating the regulatory approval process and obtaining such approval for clinical trials.