4.6 Article

Retrograde Transgene Expression via Neuron-Specific Lentiviral Vector Depends on Both Species and Input Projections

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13071387

Keywords

lentiviral vector; pseudotyping; retrograde gene transfer; cerebral cortex; thalamus; neuron specificity; inflammation; primates

Categories

Funding

  1. MEXT/JSPS KAKENHI [JP26112002, JP15H05879, JP17H05565, JP19H05467]
  2. AMED [JP17dm0207052, JP21dm0207077]

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The NeuRet vector generally exhibits higher retrograde gene transfer efficiency compared to the HiRet vector, but its retrograde transgene expression in macaque brains is unexpectedly low. However, the NeuRet vector demonstrates higher neuron specificity and causes minimal inflammatory/immune responses in primate brains. The efficiency of retrograde gene transfer with the NeuRet vector varies depending on the species and input projections.
For achieving retrograde gene transfer, we have so far developed two types of lentiviral vectors pseudotyped with fusion envelope glycoprotein, termed HiRet vector and NeuRet vector, consisting of distinct combinations of rabies virus and vesicular stomatitis virus glycoproteins. In the present study, we compared the patterns of retrograde transgene expression for the HiRet vs. NeuRet vectors by testing the cortical input system. These vectors were injected into the motor cortex in rats, marmosets, and macaques, and the distributions of retrograde labels were investigated in the cortex and thalamus. Our histological analysis revealed that the NeuRet vector generally exhibits a higher efficiency of retrograde gene transfer than the HiRet vector, though its capacity of retrograde transgene expression in the macaque brain is unexpectedly low, especially in terms of the intracortical connections, as compared to the rat and marmoset brains. It was also demonstrated that the NeuRet but not the HiRet vector displays sufficiently high neuron specificity and causes no marked inflammatory/immune responses at the vector injection sites in the primate (marmoset and macaque) brains. The present results indicate that the retrograde transgene efficiency of the NeuRet vector varies depending not only on the species but also on the input projections.

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