4.5 Article

AAV-p40 Bioengineering Platform for Variant Selection Based on Transgene Expression

Journal

HUMAN GENE THERAPY
Volume 33, Issue 11-12, Pages 664-682

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/hum.2021.278

Keywords

AAV; capsid bioengineering; novel vectors; adeno-associated viral vectors; vector development; directed evolution

Funding

  1. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [APP1108311, APP1156431, APP1161583]
  2. Paediatric Precision Medicine Program [PPM1 K5116/RD274]
  3. LogicBio Therapeutics
  4. Luminesce Alliance-Innovation for Children's Health [PPM1 K5116/RD274]
  5. NSW Government

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This study validated a functional transduction (FT)-based method for rapid identification of novel AAV variants. Compared with existing replication-competent (RC) strategies, the mRNA-based FT selection was found to be the most optimal AAV selection method. The study also revealed that the AAV-p40 promoter is a ubiquitously active promoter that can be modified for cell-type-specific expression by incorporating specific binding sites.
The power of adeno-associated viral (AAV)-directed evolution for identifying novel vector variants with improved properties is well established, as evidenced by numerous publications reporting novel AAV variants. However, most capsid variants reported to date have been identified using either replication-competent (RC) selection platforms or polymerase chain reaction-based capsid DNA recovery methods, which can bias the selection toward efficient replication or unproductive intracellular trafficking, respectively. A central objective of this study was to validate a functional transduction (FT)-based method for rapid identification of novel AAV variants based on AAV capsid mRNA expression in target cells. We performed a comparison of the FT platform with existing RC strategies. Based on the selection kinetics and function of novel capsids identified in an in vivo screen in a xenograft model of human hepatocytes, we identified the mRNA-based FT selection as the most optimal AAV selection method. Lastly, to gain insight into the mRNA-based selection mechanism driven by the native AAV-p40 promoter, we studied its activity in a range of in vitro and in vivo targets. We found AAV-p40 to be a ubiquitously active promoter that can be modified for cell-type-specific expression by incorporating binding sites for silencing transcription factors, allowing for cell-type-specific library selection.

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