调节 VSV-G 表达可提高杆状病毒的完整性、稳定性和哺乳动物细胞转导效率

Viruses Pub Date : 2024-09-17 DOI:10.3390/v16091475
Martina Mattioli, Renata A. Raele, Gunjan Gautam, Ufuk Borucu, Christiane Schaffitzel, Francesco Aulicino, Imre Berger
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摘要

从加州自花幼虫多核多角体病毒(Autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus,AcMNPV)衍生而来的杆状病毒载体(Baculoviral vectors,BVs)是在哺乳动物细胞中进行多基因传递的一种极具吸引力的工具,这与 CRISPR 技术尤为相关。在哺乳动物细胞中的大多数应用都依赖于用水泡性口炎病毒 G 蛋白(VSV-G)伪型的 BV,以促进有效的内体释放。VSV-G 的表达通常是在超活性 polH 启动子的控制下进行的。在本研究中,我们证明了 polH 驱动的 VSV-G 表达会导致 BV 稳定性降低、形态受损,并且在目标哺乳动物细胞中的高转导倍数(MOT)下 VSV-G 会诱发毒性。为了克服这些缺点,我们探索了五种可供选择的病毒启动子,目的是优化假型 BV 上显示的 VSV-G 水平。我们报告说,Orf-13 和 Orf-81 启动子将 VSV-G 的表达量减少到 polH 的 5%以下,从而挽救了 BV 的形态和稳定性。我们在一组人类细胞系中阐明,VSV-G 表达减少的 BV 可支持高效的基因递送和 CRISPR 介导的基因编辑,其水平与之前用 polH VSV-G 伪型 BV(polH VSV-G BV)获得的水平相当。这些结果表明,哺乳动物细胞的高效转导并不需要 VSV-G 的过度表达。相比之下,减少 VSV-G 表达可获得类似的转导动态,同时大大改善 BV 的完整性、结构和稳定性。
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Tuning VSV-G Expression Improves Baculovirus Integrity, Stability and Mammalian Cell Transduction Efficiency
Baculoviral vectors (BVs) derived from Autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus (AcMNPV) are an attractive tool for multigene delivery in mammalian cells, which is particularly relevant for CRISPR technologies. Most applications in mammalian cells rely on BVs that are pseudotyped with vesicular stomatitis virus G-protein (VSV-G) to promote efficient endosomal release. VSV-G expression typically occurs under the control of the hyperactive polH promoter. In this study, we demonstrate that polH-driven VSV-G expression results in BVs characterised by reduced stability, impaired morphology, and VSV-G induced toxicity at high multiplicities of transduction (MOTs) in target mammalian cells. To overcome these drawbacks, we explored five alternative viral promoters with the aim of optimising VSV-G levels displayed on the pseudotyped BVs. We report that Orf-13 and Orf-81 promoters reduce VSV-G expression to less than 5% of polH, rescuing BV morphology and stability. In a panel of human cell lines, we elucidate that BVs with reduced VSV-G support efficient gene delivery and CRISPR-mediated gene editing, at levels comparable to those obtained previously with polH VSV-G-pseudotyped BVs (polH VSV-G BV). These results demonstrate that VSV-G hyperexpression is not required for efficient transduction of mammalian cells. By contrast, reduced VSV-G expression confers similar transduction dynamics while substantially improving BV integrity, structure, and stability.
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