4.6 Review

A Small Virus to Deliver Small Antibodies: New Targeted Therapies Based on AAV Delivery of Nanobodies

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9091956

Keywords

adeno-associated virus; AAV; nanobody; antibody; gene therapy

Categories

Funding

  1. Instituto Salud Carlos III
  2. Feder Funds (A way to make Europe) [PI20/00415]
  3. Gobierno de Navarra
  4. European Regional Development Fund through the FEDER Operational Program 2014-2020 of Navarra: European Union. European Regional Development Fund. A way to make Europe [64/2019]
  5. Ayudas predoctorales de investigacion biomedica AC fellowship

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Nanobodies, camelid-derived single-domain antibodies, offer advantages over conventional antibodies in terms of smaller size, higher tissue penetrability, stability, and hydrophilicity. Delivery of nanobodies via AAV vectors allows for sustained gene expression and has shown promising therapeutic potential in various diseases.
Nanobodies are camelid-derived single-domain antibodies that present some advantages versus conventional antibodies, such as a smaller size, and higher tissue penetrability, stability, and hydrophilicity. Although nanobodies can be delivered as proteins, in vivo expression from adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors represents an attractive strategy. This is due to the fact that AAV vectors, that can provide long-term expression of recombinant genes, have shown an excellent safety profile, and can accommodate genes for one or several nanobodies. In fact, several studies showed that AAV vectors can provide sustained nanobody expression both locally or systemically in preclinical models of human diseases. Some of the pathologies addressed with this technology include cancer, neurological, cardiovascular, infectious, and genetic diseases. Depending on the indication, AAV-delivered nanobodies can be expressed extracellularly or inside cells. Intracellular nanobodies or intrabodies carry out their function by interacting with cell proteins involved in disease and have also been designed to help elucidate cellular mechanisms by interfering with normal cell processes. Finally, nanobodies can also be used to retarget AAV vectors, when tethered to viral capsid proteins. This review covers applications in which AAV vectors have been used to deliver nanobodies, with a focus on their therapeutic use.

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