4.6 Article

Genome concentration, characterization, and integrity analysis of recombinant adeno-associated viral vectors using droplet digital PCR

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0280242

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In this study, a simple and robust ddPCR protocol was developed for AAV characterization, which involved dilution of AAV into the ddPCR concentration range, thermal capsid lysis, and amplification of various regions of the AAV vector genome. Furthermore, different methods of genome integrity analysis were compared, and it was found that determining integrity based on the excess number of positive droplets yielded expected values, while using the double positive droplet percentage produced inconsistent results.
Precise, reproducible characterization of AAV is critical for comparing preclinical results between laboratories and determining a safe and effective clinical dose for gene therapy applications. In this study, we systematically evaluated numerous parameters to produce a simple and robust ddPCR protocol for AAV characterization. The protocol uses a low ionic strength buffer containing Pluronic-F68 and polyadenylic acid to dilute the AAV into the ddPCR concentration range and a 10-minute thermal capsid lysis prior to assembling ddPCR reactions containing MspI. A critical finding is that the buffer composition affected the ITR concentration of AAV but not the ITR concentration of a double stranded plasmid, which has implications when using a theoretical, stoichiometric conversion factor to obtain the titer based on the ITR concentration. Using this protocol, a more comprehensive analysis of an AAV vector formulation was demonstrated with multiple ddPCR assays distributed throughout the AAV vector genome. These assays amplify the ITR, regulatory elements, and eGFP transgene to provide a more confident estimate of the vector genome concentration and a high-resolution characterization of the vector genome identity. Additionally, we compared two methods of genome integrity analysis for three control sample types at eight different concentrations for each sample. The genome integrity was independent of sample concentration and the expected values were obtained when integrity was determined based on the excess number of positive droplets relative to the number of double positive droplets expected by chance co-encapsulation of two DNA targets. The genome integrity was highly variable and produced unexpected values when the double positive droplet percentage was used to calculate the genome integrity. A protocol using a one-minute thermal capsid lysis prior to assembling ddPCR reactions lacking a restriction enzyme used the non-ITR assays in a duplex ddPCR milepost experiment to determine the genome integrity using linkage analysis.

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