AI Article Synopsis

  • Baculovirus vectors (BVs) can safely deliver and express foreign genes in mammalian cells, but their effectiveness is often hindered by serum complement, a part of the immune system that attacks viruses.
  • To combat this issue, researchers created a BAC system that combines complement regulatory proteins (CRPs) and the Plasmodium circumsporozoite protein (CSP) for enhanced resistance and transduction efficiency in liver cells.
  • The study found that a similar BV with both CSP and CRPs significantly improved gene delivery in human liver cells, highlighting the potential of using insect cells to enhance BV performance against immune responses.

Article Abstract

Baculovirus vectors (BVs) are safely able to transduce foreign genes and express them in mammalian cells. However, the transduction activity of BVs is strongly reduced by the attack of serum complement, which is one of the major obstacles in the use of BVs for in vivo gene transfer. One strategy to overcome this problem is the display of complement regulatory proteins (CRPs) on BV virions. We previously developed CD46-decay accelerating factor (DAF)-CD59 triple fusion type BV showing potent complement resistance. We also developed BVs expressing Plasmodium circumsporozoite protein (CSP) to enhance transduction efficacy in hepatic cells. In this study, we investigated the combination of CSP and CRPs in a BV system to evaluate transduction efficacy along with complement resistance. To accomplish the combination of CSP and CRPs, we generated insect Sf9 cells stably expressing CRPs, to which CSP type BV was infected. The BVs collected from these infected cells were confirmed to possess both CSP and CRPs in virions. We demonstrated that CSP-CD46-DAF-CD59 type BV, containing both CSP and CD46-DAF-CD59, showed a significant increase in transduction efficacy in human hepatoma HepG2 cells under intact serum exposure compared with control type BV or CSP type BV, retaining both advantages of CSP and CD46-DAF-CD59. Collectively, these results demonstrated that the utilization of stably expressing Sf9 cells to introduce the protein products of interest, e.g., CRPs into BVs, would be useful strategy to generate BVs with novel functions such as resistance against serum complement attack.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1248/bpb.b20-00684DOI Listing

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