Recombinant adeno-associated viruses (rAAV) are promising for applications in many genome editing techniques through their effectiveness as carriers of DNA homologous donors into primary hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), but they have many outstanding concerns. Specifically, their biomanufacturing and the variety of factors that influence the quality and consistency of rAAV preps are in question. During the process of rAAV packaging, a cell line is transfected with several DNA plasmids that collectively encode all the necessary information to allow for viral packaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlu retrotransposons, which form the largest family of mobile DNA elements in the human genome, have recently come to attention as a potential source of regulatory novelties, most notably by participating in enhancer function. Even though Alu transcription by RNA polymerase III is subjected to tight epigenetic silencing, their expression has long been known to increase in response to various types of stress, including viral infection. Here we show that, in primary human fibroblasts, adenovirus small e1a triggered derepression of hundreds of individual Alus by promoting TFIIIB recruitment by Alu-bound TFIIIC.
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