AI Article Synopsis

  • Self-complementary adeno-associated viral (scAAV) vectors have a smaller packaging capacity (about 2.4 kb) compared to traditional AAV vectors (approx. 4.8 kb), leading to challenges in gene delivery.
  • The study showed that scAAV vectors with genomes smaller than 3.3 kb achieved higher transduction efficiency, whereas larger genomes (3.5 kb and beyond) were primarily single-stranded, which negatively impacted their effectiveness.
  • The choice of helper plasmid greatly influences the type of viral genome produced, with the right one enabling up to 90% of genomes to be double-stranded, highlighting the careful consideration needed for optimizing scAAV vector production.

Article Abstract

Self-complementary adeno-associated viral (scAAV) vectors bypass the requirement for viral second-strand DNA synthesis, but the packaging capacity of these vectors ( approximately 2.4 kb) is significantly smaller than that of conventional AAV vectors ( approximately 4.8 kb). We constructed human recombinant green fluorescent protein (hrGFP) expression cassettes ranging from 2.3 to 4.1 kb. Each vector was biologically active, but the transduction efficiency of vectors containing <3.3-kb genomes was significantly higher than those containing 3.5-kb genomes or larger. However, scAAV vectors containing up to approximately 3.3-kb genomes also contained single-stranded genomes, and 3.5-kb and larger genomes were packaged only as single-stranded DNA. These data suggest that the maximum packaging capacity of scAAV vectors is approximately 3.3 kb. The production of single-stranded genomes was not due to repair of the terminal resolution site (trs) in the inverted terminal repeats in the AAV genome, but rather was partly due to the use of AAV helper plasmid, known to lead to higher levels of expression of Rep proteins. The use of a helper plasmid known to lead to reduced levels of Rep proteins led to the generation of scAAV vectors that contained approximately 90% of the viral genomes in double-stranded forms. These studies demonstrate the feasibility of achieving encapsidation of larger genomes into scAAV vectors than was suggested originally, but underscore the need to exercise caution in using the appropriate helper plasmid to generate scAAV stocks capable of high-efficiency transduction that are relatively free of single-stranded DNA-containing vectors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/hum.2006.088DOI Listing

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