首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Recombinant adenoviruses have emerged as promising agents in therapeutic gene transfer, genetic vaccination, and viral oncolysis. Therapeutic applications of adenoviruses, however, would benefit substantially from targeted virus cell entry, for example, into cancer or immune cells, as opposed to the broad tropism that adenoviruses naturally possess. Such tropism modification of adenoviruses requires the deletion of their natural cell binding properties and the incorporation of cell binding ligands. The short fibers of subgroup F adenoviruses have recently been suggested as a tool for genetic adenovirus detargeting based on the reduced infectivity of corresponding adenovectors with chimeric fibers in vitro and in vivo. The goal of our study was to determine functional insertion sites for peptide ligands in the adenovirus serotype 41 (Ad41) short fiber knob. With a model peptide, CDCRGDCFC, we could demonstrate that ligand incorporation into three of five analyzed loops of the knob, namely, EG, HI, and IJ, is feasible without a loss of fiber trimerization. The resulting adenovectors showed enhanced infectivity for various cell types, which was superior to that of viruses with the same peptide fused to the fiber C terminus. Strategies to further augment gene transfer efficacy by extension of the fiber shaft, insertion of tandem copies of the ligand peptide, or extension of the ligand-flanking linkers failed, indicating that precise ligand positioning is pivotal. Our study establishes that internal ligand incorporation into a short-shafted adenovirus fiber is feasible and suggests the Ad41 short fiber with ligand insertion into the top (IJ loop) or side (EG and HI loops) of the knob domain as a novel platform for genetic targeting of therapeutic adenoviruses.  相似文献   

2.
Adenovirus (Ad) vectors are most potent for use as gene delivery vehicles to infect human cells in vitro and in vivo with high efficiency. The main limitation in utilization of Ad as a gene transfer vector is the lack of specificity. Genetic modifications of Ad capsid proteins resulting in incorporation of foreign polypeptide ligand sequences can redirect the vector towards target cells. However, in many cases the incorporated ligands lose specificity or lead to conformational changes influencing virion integrity. In order to select target-specific ligands a priori structurally compatible with Ad, we propose a system for displaying polypeptide sequences in the context of the Ad fiber knob on the surfaces of filamentous bacteriophages. To establish this concept, we displayed the wild-type Ad serotype 5 knob and knobs containing c-Myc epitopes and six-histidine sequences in the pJuFo phage system. The knobs remained trimeric and bound the coxsackievirus-Ad receptor, and the phage knob-displayed ligands recognized and bound their cognates in the phage-displayed knob context. Further development of this system may be useful for candidate ligand fidelity and Ad structural compatibility validation prior to Ad modification.  相似文献   

3.

Background

We studied the ability of adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) to encapsidate new cellular ligands carried by their fibers to yield functional retargeted vectors for gene therapy. Recombinant Ad5 fibers containing shaft repeats 1 to 7 and an extrinsic trimerization motif, and terminated by its native knob or amino acid motifs containing RGD, have been rescued into infectious virions.

Methods

Polypeptide ligands of cell surface molecules, including single‐chain antibodies or epidermal growth factor, were cloned into recombinant fibers. Phenotypic analysis of fiber constructs and rescuing into the Ad5 genome were performed. Recombinant viruses were characterized with reference to fiber content, growth rate and infectivity.

Results

A major limiting factor for recovering viable recombinant Ad5 carrying fiber‐fused polypeptide ligands was apparently the ability of the ligand to fold correctly within the cellular cytoplasm. This constraint has previously not been systematically evaluated in the literature. Phenotypic analysis of the fiber‐ligand fusions showed that their degree of cytoplasmic solubility correlated with their ability to yield viable Ad5 vectors. Our results suggested that the fiber manipulations diminish virus growth rate, probably through different, opposing effects: (i) the reduced shaft length increases fiber solubility in the absence of the knob but (ii) diminishes virus entry, and (iii) the absence of the knob alters the overall protein composition of the virion and decreases its fiber copy number.

Conclusions

Based on our findings, cytoplasmic solubility and cytoplasmic ligand reactivity of fiber‐ligand fusion proteins are the best prediction criterion for viability and recovery of genetically retargeted Ad vectors. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
  相似文献   

4.
A major limitation of adenovirus type 5 (Ad5)-based gene therapy, the inability to target therapeutic genes to selected cell types, is attributable to the natural tropism of the virus for the widely expressed coxsackievirus-adenovirus receptor (CAR) protein. Modifications of the Ad5 fiber knob domain have been shown to alter the tropism of the virus. We have developed a novel system to rapidly evaluate the function of modified fiber proteins in their most relevant context, the adenoviral capsid. This transient transfection/infection system combines transfection of cells with plasmids that express high levels of the modified fiber protein and infection with Ad5.beta gal.Delta F, an E1-, E3-, and fiber-deleted adenoviral vector encoding beta-galactosidase. We have used this system to test the adenoviral transduction efficiency mediated by a panel of fiber protein mutants that were proposed to influence CAR interaction. A series of amino acid modifications were incorporated via mutagenesis into the fiber expression plasmid, and the resulting fiber proteins were subsequently incorporated onto adenoviral particles. Mutations located in the fiber knob AB and CD loops demonstrated the greatest reduction in fiber-mediated gene transfer in HeLa cells. We also observed effects on transduction efficiency with mutations in the FG loop, indicating that the binding site may extend to the adjacent monomer in the fiber trimer and in the HI loop. These studies support the concept that modification of the fiber knob domain to diminish or ablate CAR interaction should result in a detargeted adenoviral vector that can be combined simultaneously with novel ligands for the development of a systemically administered, targeted adenoviral vector.  相似文献   

5.
Recombinant adenoviruses (Ad) have become the vector system of choice for a variety of gene therapy applications. However, the utility of Ad vectors is limited due to the low efficiency of Ad-mediated gene transfer to cells expressing marginal levels of the coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (CAR). In order to achieve CAR-independent gene transfer by Ad vectors in clinically important contexts, we proposed modification of viral tropism via genetic alterations to the viral fiber protein. We have shown that incorporation of an Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-containing peptide in the HI loop of the fiber knob domain results in the ability of the virus to utilize an alternative receptor during the cell entry process. We have also demonstrated that due to its expanded tissue tropism, this novel vector is capable of efficient transduction of primary tumor cells. An increase in gene transfer to ovarian cancer cells of 2 to 3 orders of magnitude was demonstrated by the vector, suggesting that recombinant Ad containing fibers with an incorporated RGD peptide may be of great utility for treatment of neoplasms characterized by deficiency of the primary Ad type 5 receptor.  相似文献   

6.
Vectors based on the chicken embryo lethal orphan (CELO) avian adenovirus (Ad) have two attractive properties for gene transfer applications: resistance to preformed immune responses to human Ads and the ability to grow in chicken embryos, allowing low-cost production of recombinant viruses. However, a major limitation of this technology is that CELO vectors demonstrate decreased efficiency of gene transfer into cells expressing low levels of the coxsackie-Ad receptor (CAR). In order to improve the efficacy of gene transfer into CAR-deficient cells, we modified viral tropism via genetic alteration of the CELO fiber 1 protein. The alphav integrin-binding motif (RGD) was incorporated at two different sites of the fiber 1 knob domain, within an HI-like loop that we identified and at the C terminus. Recombinant fiber-modified CELO viruses were constructed containing secreted alkaline phosphatase (SEAP) and enhanced green fluorescent protein genes as reporter genes. Our data show that insertion of the RGD motif within the HI-like loop of the fiber resulted in significant enhancement of gene transfer into CAR-negative and CAR-deficient cells. In contrast, CELO vectors containing the RGD motif at the fiber 1 C terminus showed reduced transduction of all cell lines. CELO viruses modified with RGD at the HI-like loop transduced the SEAP reporter gene into rabbit mammary gland cells in vivo with an efficiency significantly greater than that of unmodified CELO vector and similar to that of Ad type 5 vector. These results illustrate the potential for efficient CELO-mediated gene transfer into a broad range of cell types through modification of the identified HI-like loop of the fiber 1 protein.  相似文献   

7.
The development of genetically modified adenovirus (Ad) vectors with specificity for a single cell type will require both the introduction of novel tropism determinants and the ablation of endogenous tropism. Consequently, it will not be possible to exploit the native cellular entry pathway in the propagation of these targeted Ad vectors. Based on the concept that Ad enters cells by a two-step process in which a primary receptor serves as a high affinity binding site for the Ad fiber knob, with subsequent internalization mediated by alpha v integrins, we designed two artificial primary receptors. The extracellular domain of one of these synthetic receptors was derived from a single-chain antibody (sFv) with specificity for Ad5 knob, while the second receptor consisted of an icosapeptide identified by biopanning a phage display library against Ad5 knob. Expression of either of these artificial virus-binding receptors in fiber receptor-negative cells possessing alpha v integrins conferred susceptibility to Ad infection. We then created a novel mechanism for cell binding by genetically modifying both the vector and the target cell. In this approach, six histidine (His) residues were incorporated at the C-terminal of the Ad fiber protein. The resultant Ad vector was able to infect nonpermissive cells displaying the cognate artificial receptor, containing an anti-His sFv. This strategy, comprising a genetically engineered Ad virion and a modified cell line, should be useful in the propagation of targeted Ad vectors that lack the ability to bind the native fiber receptor.  相似文献   

8.
Adenoviral (Ad) vectors have been widely used in human gene therapy clinical trials. However, their application has frequently been restricted by the unfavorable expression of cell surface receptors critical for Ad infection. Infections by Ad2 and Ad5 are largely regulated by the elongated fiber protein that mediates its attachment to a cell surface receptor, coxsackie and adenovirus receptor (CAR). The fiber protein is a homotrimer consisting of an N-terminal tail, a long shaft, and a C-terminal knob region that is responsible for high-affinity receptor binding and Ad tropism. Consequently, the modification of the knob region, including peptide insertion and C-terminal fusion of ligands for cell surface receptors, has become a major research focus for targeting gene delivery. Such manipulation tends to disrupt fiber assembly since the knob region contains a stabilization element for fiber trimerization. We report here the identification of a novel trimerization element in the Ad fiber shaft. We demonstrate that fiber fragments containing the N-terminal tail and shaft repeats formed stable trimers that assembled onto Ad virions independently of the knob region. This fiber shaft trimerization element (FSTE) exhibited a capacity to support peptide fusion. We showed that Ad, modified with a chimeric protein by direct fusion of the FSTE with a growth factor ligand or a single-chain antibody, delivered a reporter gene selectively. Together, these results indicate that the shaft region of Ad fiber protein contains a trimerization element that allows ligand fusion, which potentially broadens the basis for Ad vector development.  相似文献   

9.
The binding of adenovirus (Ad) fiber knob to its cellular receptor, the coxsackievirus and Ad receptor (CAR), promotes virus attachment to cells and is a major determinant of Ad tropism. Analysis of the kinetics of binding of Ad type 5 (Ad5) fiber knob to the soluble extracellular domains of CAR together (sCAR) and each immunoglobulin (Ig) domain (IgV and IgC2) independently by surface plasmon resonance demonstrated that the IgV domain is necessary and sufficient for binding, and no additional membrane components are required to confer high-affinity binding to Ad5 fiber knob. Four Ad5 fiber knob mutations, Ser408Glu and Pro409Lys in the AB loop, Tyr477Ala in the DG loop, and Leu485Lys in beta strand F, effectively abolished high-affinity binding to CAR, while Ala406Lys and Arg412Asp in the AB loop and Arg481Glu in beta strand E significantly reduced the level of binding. Circular dichroism spectroscopy showed that these mutations do not disorder the secondary structure of the protein, implicating Ser408, Pro409, Tyr477, and Leu485 as contact residues, with Ala406, Arg412, and Arg481 being peripherally or indirectly involved in CAR binding. The critical residues have exposed side chains that form a patch on the surface, which thus defines the high-affinity interface for CAR. Additional site-directed mutagenesis of Ad5 fiber knob suggests that the binding site does not extend to the adjacent subunit or toward the edge of the R sheet. These findings have implications for our understanding of the biology of Ad infection, the development of novel Ad vectors for targeted gene therapy, and the construction of peptide inhibitors of Ad infection.  相似文献   

10.
The efficient uptake of adenovirus into a target cell is a function of adenovirus capsid proteins and their interaction with the host cell. The capsid protein fiber mediates high-affinity attachment of adenovirus to the target cell. Although the cellular receptor(s) for adenovirus is unknown, evidence indicates that a single receptor does not function as the attachment site for each of the 49 different serotypes of adenovirus. Sequence variation of the fiber ligand, particularly in the C- terminal knob domain, is associated with serotype-specific binding specificity. Additionally, this domain of fiber functions as a major serotype determinant. Fiber involvement in cell targeting and its function as a target of the host immune response make the fiber gene an attractive target for manipulation, both from the perspective of adenovirus biology and from the perspective of using adenovirus vectors for gene transfer experiments. We have constructed a defective chimeric adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) reporter virus by replacing the Ad5 fiber gene with the fiber gene from Ad7A. Using the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene, we have characterized this virus with respect to infectivity both in vitro and in vivo. We have also characterized the role of antifiber antibody in the host neutralizing immune response to adenovirus infection. Our studies demonstrate that exchange of fiber is a strategy that will be useful in characterizing receptor tropism for different serotypes of adenovirus. Additionally, the neutralizing immune response to Ad5 and Ad7 does not differentiate between two viruses that differ only in their fiber proteins. Therefore, following a primary adenovirus inoculation, antibodies generated against fiber do not constitute a significant fraction of the neutralizing antibody population.  相似文献   

11.
Intranuclear crystalline inclusions have been observed in the nucleus of epithelial cells infected with Adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5) at late steps of the virus life cycle. Using immuno-electron microscopy and confocal microscopy of cells infected with various Ad5 recombinants modified in their penton base or fiber domains, we found that these inclusions represented crystals of penton capsomers, the heteromeric capsid protein formed of penton base and fiber subunits. The occurrence of protein crystals within the nucleus of infected cells required the integrity of the fiber knob and part of the shaft domain. In the knob domain, the region overlapping residues 489-492 in the FG loop was found to be essential for crystal formation. In the shaft, a large deletion of repeats 4 to 16 had no detrimental effect on crystal inclusions, whereas deletion of repeats 8 to 21 abolished crystal formation without altering the level of fiber protein expression. This suggested a crucial role of the five penultimate repeats in the crystallisation process. Chimeric pentons made of Ad5 penton base and fiber domains from different serotypes were analyzed with respect to crystal formation. No crystal was found when fiber consisted of shaft (S) from Ad5 and knob (K) from Ad3 (heterotypic S5-K3 fiber), but occurred with homotypic S3K3 fiber. However, less regular crystals were observed with homotypic S35-K35 fiber. TB5, a monoclonal antibody directed against the Ad5 fiber knob was found by immunofluorescence microscopy to react with high efficiency with the intranuclear protein crystals in situ. Data obtained with Ad fiber mutants indicated that the absence of crystalline inclusions correlated with a lower infectivity and/or lower yields of virus progeny, suggesting that the protein crystals might be involved in virion assembly. Thus, we propose that TB5 staining of Ad-infected 293 cells can be used as a prognostic assay for the viability and productivity of fiber-modified Ad5 vectors.  相似文献   

12.
Adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5) vectors containing Ad B-group fibers have become increasingly popular as gene transfer vectors because they efficiently transduce human cell types that are relatively refractory to Ad5 infection. So far, most B-group fiber-containing vectors have been first-generation vectors, deleted of E1 and/or E3 genes. Transduction with these vectors, however, results in viral gene expression and is associated with cytotoxicity and immune responses against transduced cells. To circumvent these problems, we developed fiber-chimeric Ad vectors devoid of all viral genes that were produced either by the homologous recombination of first-generation vectors or by using the Cre/lox-based helper virus system. In this study we compared early steps of infection between first-generation (35-kb genome) and Ad vectors devoid of all viral genes with genome sizes of 28 kb and 12.6 kb. All vectors possessed an Ad35-derived fiber knob domain, which uses CD46 as a primary attachment receptor. Using immortalized human hematopoietic cell lines and primary human CD34-positive hematopoietic cells, we found that the Ad genome size did not affect the efficiency of virus attachment to and internalization into cells. Furthermore, independently of the genome length and structure, all vectors migrated to the nucleus through late endosomal and lysosomal cellular compartments. However, the vector containing the short 12.6-kb genome was unable to efficiently escape from endosomes and deliver its DNA into the nucleus. Moreover, compared to other vectors, these Ad particles were less stable and had an abnormal capsid protein composition, including a lack of capsid-stabilizing protein IX. Our data indicate that the size and structure of the packaged viral genomes can affect the integrity of Ad particles, which in turn results in lower infectivity of Ad vectors.  相似文献   

13.
General strategy for broadening adenovirus tropism   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
In spite of its broad host range, adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) transduces a number of clinically relevant tissues and cell types inefficiently, mostly because of low expression of the coxsackievirus-adenovirus receptor (CAR). To improve gene transfer to such cells, we modified the Ad5 fiber knob to recognize novel receptors. We expressed a functional Ad5 fiber knob domain on the capsid of phage lambda and employed this display system to construct a large collection of ligands in the HI loop of the Ad5 knob. Panning this library on the CAR-negative mouse fibroblast cell line NIH 3T3 resulted in the identification of three clones with increased binding to these cells. Adenoviruses incorporating these ligands in the fiber gene transduced NIH 3T3 cells 2 or 3 orders of magnitude better than the parent vector. The same nonnative tropism was revealed in other cell types, independently of CAR expression. These Ad5 derivatives proved capable of transducing mouse and human primary immature dendritic cells with up to 100-fold increased efficiency.  相似文献   

14.
A potential barrier to the development of genetically targeted adenovirus (Ad) vectors for cell-specific delivery of gene therapeutics lies in the fact that several types of targeting protein ligands require posttranslational modifications, such as the formation of disulfide bonds, which are not available to Ad capsid proteins due to their nuclear localization during assembly of the virion. To overcome this problem, we developed a new targeting strategy, which combines genetic modifications of the Ad capsid with a protein bridge approach, resulting in a vector-ligand targeting complex. The components of the complex associate by virtue of genetic modifications to both the Ad capsid and the targeting ligand. One component of this mechanism of association, the Fc-binding domain of Staphylococcus aureus protein A, is genetically incorporated into the Ad fiber protein. The ligand is comprised of a targeting component fused with the Fc domain of immunoglobulin, which serves as a docking moiety to bind to these genetically modified fibers during the formation of the Ad-ligand complex. The modular design of the ligand solves the problem of structural and biosynthetic compatibility with the Ad and thus facilitates targeting of the vector to a variety of cellular receptors. Our study shows that targeting ligands incorporating the Fc domain and either an anti-CD40 single-chain antibody or CD40L form stable complexes with protein A-modified Ad vectors, resulting in significant augmentation of gene delivery to CD40-positive target cells. Since this gene transfer is independent of the expression of the native Ad5 receptor by the target cells, this strategy results in the derivation of truly targeted Ad vectors suitable for tissue-specific gene therapy.  相似文献   

15.
Human adenovirus (Ad) is extensively used for a variety of gene therapy applications. However, the utility of Ad vectors is limited due to the low efficiency of Ad-mediated gene transfer to target cells expressing marginal levels of the Ad fiber receptor. Therefore, the present generation of Ad vectors could potentially be improved by modification of Ad tropism to target the virus to specific organs and tissues. The fact that coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (CAR) does not play any role in virus internalization, but functions merely as the virus attachment site, suggests that the extracellular part of CAR might be utilized to block the receptor recognition site on the Ad fiber knob domain. We proposed to design bispecific fusion proteins formed by a recombinant soluble form of truncated CAR (sCAR) and a targeting ligand. In this study, we derived sCAR genetically fused with human epidermal growth factor (EGF) and investigated its ability to target Ad infection to the EGF receptor (EGFR) overexpressed on cancer cell lines. We have demonstrated that sCAR-EGF protein is capable of binding to Ad virions and directing them to EGFR, thereby achieving targeted delivery of reporter gene. These results show that sCAR-EGF protein possesses the ability to effectively retarget Ad via a non-CAR pathway, with enhancement of gene transfer efficiency.  相似文献   

16.
The utility of the present generation of adenovirus (Ad) vectors for gene therapy applications could be improved by restricting native viral tropism to selected cell types. In order to achieve modification of Ad tropism, we proposed to exploit a minor component of viral capsid, protein IX (pIX), for genetic incorporation of targeting ligands. Based on the proposed structure of pIX, we hypothesized that its C terminus could be used as a site for incorporation of heterologous peptide sequences. We engineered recombinant Ad vectors containing modified pIX carrying a carboxy-terminal Flag epitope along with a heparan sulfate binding motif consisting of either eight consecutive lysines or a polylysine sequence. Using an anti-Flag antibody, we have shown that modified pIXs are incorporated into virions and display Flag-containing C-terminal sequences on the capsid surface. In addition, both lysine octapeptide and polylysine ligands were accessible for binding to heparin-coated beads. In contrast to virus bearing lysine octapeptide, Ad vector displaying a polylysine was capable of recognizing cellular heparan sulfate receptors. We have demonstrated that incorporation of a polylysine motif into the pIX ectodomain results in a significant augmentation of Ad fiber knob-independent infection of CAR-deficient cell types. Our data suggest that the pIX ectodomain can serve as an alternative to the fiber knob, penton base, and hexon proteins for incorporation of targeting ligands for the purpose of Ad tropism modification.  相似文献   

17.
Most of the presently used adenovirus (Ad) vectors are based on serotype 5. However, the application of these vectors is limited by the native tropism of Ad5. To address this problem, a series of fiber chimeric vectors were produced to take advantage of the different cellular receptors used by Ad of different subgroups. In this study we utilize an Ad5-based chimeric vector containing sequences encoding the Ad35 fiber knob domain instead of the Ad5 knob (Ad5/35L) to analyze factors responsible for selection of intracellular trafficking routes by Ads. By competition analysis with recombinant Ad5 and Ad35 knobs we showed that the Ad5/35L vector infected cells through a receptor different from the Ad5 receptor. Intracellular trafficking of Ad5 and Ad5/35L viruses was analyzed in HeLa cells by tracking fluorophore-conjugated Ad particles, by immunostaining for capsid hexon protein, by electron microscopy, and by Southern blotting for viral DNA. These studies showed that the interaction with the Ad35 receptor(s) predestines Ad5/35L vector to intracellular trafficking pathways different from those of Ad5. Ad5 efficiently escaped from the endosomes early after infection. In contrast, Ad5/35L remained longer in late endosomal/lysosomal compartments and used them to achieve localization to the nucleus. However, a significant portion of Ad5/35L particles appeared to be recycled back to the cell surface. This phenomenon resulted in significantly less efficient Ad5/35L-mediated gene transfer compared to that of Ad5. We also demonstrated that the selection of intracellular trafficking routes was determined by the fiber knob domain and did not depend on the length of the fiber shaft. This study contributes to a better understanding of the mechanisms that govern the infection of retargeted, capsid-modified vectors which have potential application for hematopoietic stem cell and tumor gene therapy.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated the mechanism of adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5)-mediated maturation of bone marrow-derived murine dendritic cells (DC) using (i) Ad5 vectors with wild-type capsid (AdE1 degrees, AdGFP); (ii) Ad5 vector mutant deleted of the fiber C-terminal knob domain (AdGFPDeltaknob); and (iii) capsid components isolated from Ad5-infected cells or expressed as recombinant proteins, hexon, penton, penton base, full-length fiber, fiber knob, and fiber mutants. We found that penton capsomer (penton base linked to its fiber projection), full-length fiber protein, and its isolated knob domain were all capable of inducing DC maturation, whereas no significant DC maturation was observed for hexon or penton base alone. This capacity was severely reduced for AdGFPDeltaknob and for fiber protein deletion mutants lacking the beta-stranded region F of the knob (residues Leu-485-Thr-486). The DC maturation effect was fully retained in a recombinant fiber protein deleted of the HI loop (FiDeltaHI), a fiber (Fi) deletion mutant that failed to trimerize, suggesting that the fiber knob-mediated DC activation did not depend on the integrity of the HI loop and on the trimeric status of the fiber. Interestingly, peptide-pulsed DC that had been stimulated with Ad5 knob protein induced a potent CD8+ T cell response in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
The utility of the present generation of recombinant adenovirus vectors for gene therapy applications could potentially be improved by designing targeted vectors capable of gene delivery to selected cell types in vivo. In order to achieve such targeting, we are investigating the possibilities of incorporation of ligands in the adenovirus fiber protein, which mediates primary binding of adenovirus to its cell surface receptor. Based on the proposed structure of the cell-binding domain of the fiber, we hypothesized that the HI loop of the fiber knob can be utilized as a convenient locale for incorporation of heterologous ligands. In this study, we utilized recombinant fiber proteins expressed in baculovirus-infected insect cells to demonstrate that the incorporation of the FLAG octapeptide into the HI loop does not ablate fiber trimerization and does not disturb formation of the cell-binding site localized in the knob. We then generated a recombinant adenovirus containing this modified fiber and showed that the short peptide sequence engineered in the knob is compatible with the biological functions of the fiber. In addition, by using a ligand-specific antibody, we have shown that the peptide incorporated into the knob remains available for binding in the context of mature virions containing modified fibers. These findings suggest that heterologous ligands can be incorporated into the HI loop of the fiber knob and that this locale possesses properties consistent with its employment in adenovirus retargeting strategies.Recombinant adenovirus vectors have found wide employment for a number of gene therapy applications (22, 36, 40). This fact has derived principally from the high levels of gene transfer achievable with this vector approach both in vitro and in vivo. Indeed, recombinant adenovirus vectors are distinguished from other available systems by their unique ability to accomplish in situ gene delivery to differentiated target cells in a variety of organ contexts (5, 6, 9, 10, 12, 21, 26, 28, 30, 32). Despite this property, specific aspects of the adenovirus biology have prevented the full realization of the potential of such vectors. In this regard, the broad tropism profile of the parent virus for cells of diverse tissues potentially allows unrestricted gene delivery. Thus, for the many gene therapy applications requiring targeted, cell-specific gene delivery, the promiscuous tropism of the adenovirus vector represents a confounding factor. Based on this concept, strategies to modify the native tropism of adenovirus have been developed to allow the derivation of vectors capable of targeted gene delivery.Strategies to achieve this end are directed at modifying specific steps in the adenovirus infection pathway. Adenoviruses of serotypes 2 and 5 normally achieve initial recognition and binding to target cells by means of interactions between the carboxy-terminal knob domain of the fiber protein and the primary receptor (4, 19, 39). After binding, RGD motifs in the penton base interact with cellular integrins of the αVβ3 and αVβ5 types (13, 43, 44). This interaction triggers cellular internalization whereby the virions achieve localization within the endosome. Acidification of the endosome elicits conformational changes in capsid proteins, allowing their interaction with the endosome membrane in a manner that achieves vesicle disruption and particle escape (41). Following endosomolysis, the virion translocates to the nucleus, where the subsequent steps of the viral life cycle occur. This understanding of the key role played by capsid proteins in the viral infectious pathway has suggested strategies to alter this process via modifications of these proteins.In this regard, genetic retargeting of adenovirus vectors via modification of viral genes encoding coat proteins, if successful, offers a simple way to achieve a significant improvement in the present generation of these gene-delivery vehicles. To this end, several groups have reported genetic modifications to the knob domain of adenovirus fiber protein and incorporation of such chimeric fibers into virions. For instance, Stevenson et al. (37) and Krasnykh et al. (25) reported successful generation of adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) virions containing fibers consisting of the tail and shaft domains of Ad5 fiber and the knob domain of Ad3, respectively. In addition, Michael et al. (31) demonstrated the incorporation of the gastrin-releasing peptide into the carboxy terminus of recombinant Ad5 fiber. This finding was extended by Legrand et al. (30a), who achieved rescue of recombinant adenovirus vectors containing such fibers. Another report published by Wickham et al. (45) described the generation of recombinant virus containing fibers with carboxy-terminal polylysine sequences. These studies have established key feasibility issues with respect to this genetic approach but have also demonstrated a number of potentially limiting factors.Of note, all the modifications of adenovirus fiber reported so far were directed towards the carboxy terminus of the protein. In addition, these efforts were initiated without prior knowledge of the three-dimensional (3D) structure of the fiber knob. Thus, the employment of the carboxy terminus of the fiber represented a choice of convenience without consideration of the knob tertiary structure. Clearly, 3D structural information has important bearing upon the placement of heterologous protein sequences within the knob for targeting purposes. Such localization of targeting ligands would ideally be achieved in such a manner as to allow their surface presentation and to minimally perturb the fiber quaternary structure. Thus, the recent crystallization of the fiber knob by Xia et al. (47, 48) has provided a level of structural resolution potentially allowing such a rational modification of the fiber protein. According to the proposed 3D model of the knob (Fig. (Fig.1),1), the HI loop possesses a number of features which predict its utility as an alternative site for ligand incorporation. Specifically, the HI loop does not contribute to intramolecular interactions in the knob. Therefore, incorporation of additional protein sequence should not affect the trimerization of the fiber. In addition, the loop consists mostly of hydrophilic amino acid residues and is exposed outside the knob. It thus potentially demonstrates a high degree of flexibility, creating an optimal environment for ligand incorporation. Furthermore, the lengths of HI loops vary significantly in knobs of different adenovirus serotypes. This fact suggests that alterations of the original structure of the loop, such as insertions and deletions, should be compatible with the correct folding of the entire knob domain. Finally, the HI loop is not involved in the formation of the putative cell-binding site localized in the knob. Open in a separate windowFIG. 13D model of the Ad5 fiber knob. The trimer forms a propeller-like structure when it is viewed along the threefold-symmetry axis from above. The HI loop, exposed outside the knob, connects the β-strands H and I, which are involved in the formation of the cell-binding site. (Reproduced from reference 47 by permission.)Based on these considerations, we endeavored to develop a novel approach to modify the adenovirus fiber protein by employing the HI loop of the knob for this purpose. We show in this report that it is possible to incorporate heterologous amino acid sequences into the HI loop without affecting the correct folding of the fiber polypeptide and its biological functions. Further, our results suggest that this locale may offer advantages for strategies designed to achieve tropism modification based on genetic alteration of capsid proteins.  相似文献   

20.
人C组5型腺病毒(Ad5)载体能够有效感染上皮来源的细胞,但对造血细胞的感染效率很低,限制了其在造血调控基础研究以及血液病基因治疗中的应用。为了建立高效感染血液细胞的新型靶向性腺病毒载体系统,对5型腺病毒载体的纤维顶球进行了改造,以AdEasy系统为基础,应用递归PCR的方法人工合成人B组11p型腺病毒的部分纤维(fiber)基因,采用一系列分子生物学方法将其替换AdEasy骨架质粒中的人5型腺病毒的fiber基因,得到新的腺病毒骨架质粒命名为pAdEasy-1/F11p,应用带有GFP报告基因的穿梭质粒pShuttle-GFP与AdEasy-1/F11p腺病毒DNA在BJ5183细菌内重组得到重组腺病毒质粒,将其转染293细胞获得重组腺病毒,命名为Ad5F11p-GFP。以Ad5-GFP作对照,同时感染K562、U937等白血病细胞系,流式细胞仪检测GFP的表达。初步检测结果显示:在10MOI时,Ad5F11p-GFP能够有效感染K562、U937等白血病细胞系,感染细胞效率>90%,对照Ad5-GFP感染细胞效率<30%,这表明改建后的腺病毒AdEasy-1/F11p可以高效介导基因转移到血液细胞,是一种很好的血液细胞靶向性腺病毒载体。  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号