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Capsid Engineering Overcomes Barriers Toward Adeno-Associated Virus Vector-Mediated Transduction of Endothelial Cells

Authors :
Zhang, L.
Rossi, A.
Lange, L.
Meumann, N.
Koitzsch, U.
Christie, K.
Nesbit, M. A.
Moore, C. B. T.
Hacker, U. T.
Morgan, M.
Hoffmann, D.
Zengel, J.
Carette, J. E.
Schambach, A.
Salvetti, A.
Odenthal, M.
Buening, H.
Zhang, L.
Rossi, A.
Lange, L.
Meumann, N.
Koitzsch, U.
Christie, K.
Nesbit, M. A.
Moore, C. B. T.
Hacker, U. T.
Morgan, M.
Hoffmann, D.
Zengel, J.
Carette, J. E.
Schambach, A.
Salvetti, A.
Odenthal, M.
Buening, H.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Endothelial cells (EC) are targets in gene therapy and regenerative medicine, but they are inefficiently transduced with adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors of various serotypes. To identify barriers hampering efficient transduction and to develop an optimized AAV variant for EC transduction, we screened an AAV serotype 2-based peptide display library on primary human macrovascular EC. Using a new high-throughput selection and monitoring protocol, we identified a capsid variant, AAV-V-EC, which outperformed the parental serotype as well as first-generation targeting vectors in EC transduction. AAV vector uptake was improved, resulting in significantly higher transgene expression levels from single-stranded vector genomes detectable within a few hours post-transduction. Notably, AAV-V-EC transduced not only proliferating EC but also quiescent EC, although higher particle-per-cell ratios had to be applied. Also, induced pluripotent stem cell-derived endothelial progenitor cells, a novel tool in regenerative medicine and gene therapy, were highly susceptible toward AAV-V-EC transduction. Thus, overcoming barriers by capsid engineering significantly expands the AAV tool kit for a wide range of applications targeting EC.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1201313929
Document Type :
Electronic Resource