4.7 Article

Oversized AAV Transductifon Is Mediated via a DNA-PKcs-independent, Rad51C-dependent Repair Pathway

Journal

MOLECULAR THERAPY
Volume 21, Issue 12, Pages 2205-2216

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1038/mt.2013.184

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Jain Foundation
  2. Northwest Genome Engineering Consortium
  3. NIH [R01 AI080726, DK084033, AI072176, U54 AR056953]
  4. [RO1 AI072176]

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A drawback of gene therapy using adeno-associated virus (AAV) is the DNA packaging restriction of the viral capsid (<4.7kb). Recent observations demonstrate oversized AAV genome transduction through an unknown mechanism. Herein, AAV production using an oversized reporter (6.2kb) resulted in chloroform and DNase-resistant particles harboring distinct fragment AAV (fAAV) genomes (5.0, 2.4, and 1.6kb). Fractionation experiments determined that only the larger fragments mediated transduction in vitro, and relatively efficient transduction was also demonstrated in the muscle, the eye, and the liver. In contrast with concatemerization-dependent large-gene delivery by split AAV, fAAV transduction is independent of the catalytic subunit of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs) in vitro and in vivo while disproportionately reliant on the DNA strand annealing protein Rad51C. Importantly, fAAV's unique dependence on DNA repair proteins, compared with intact AAV, strongly suggests that the majority of oversized AAV transduction is mediated by fragmented genonnes. Although fAAV transduction is less efficient than intact AAV, it is enhanced fourfold in muscle and sevenfold in the retina compared with split AAV transduction. Furthermore, fAAV carrying codon-optimized therapeutic dysferlin cDNA in a 7.5 kb expression cassette restored dysferlin levels in a dystrophic model. Collectively, oversized AAV genome transduction requires unique DNA repair pathways and offers an alternative, more efficient strategy for large-gene therapy.

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