Affiliation:
1. Department
of Medicine, Division of Hematology, University of Washington, Seattle,
Washington 98195
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The
molecular mechanisms responsible for random integration and gene
targeting by recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors are
largely unknown, and whether vectors derived from autonomous
parvoviruses transduce cells by similar pathways has not been
investigated. In this report, we constructed vectors based on the
autonomous parvovirus minute virus of mice (MVM) that were designed to
introduce a neomycin resistance expression cassette (
neo
) into
the X-linked human hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase
(
HPRT
) locus. High-titer, replication-incompetent MVM vector
stocks were generated with a two-plasmid transfection system that
preserved the wild-type characteristic of packaging only one DNA
strand. Vectors with inserts in the forward or reverse orientations
packaged noncoding or coding strands, respectively. In human HT-1080
cells, MVM vector random integration frequencies
(
neo
+
colonies) were comparable to those
obtained with AAV vectors, and no difference was observed for noncoding
and coding strands.
HPRT
gene-targeting frequencies
(
HPRT
mutant colonies) were lower with MVM
vectors, and the noncoding strand frequency was threefold greater than
that of the coding strand. Random integration and gene-targeting events
were confirmed by Southern blot analysis of G418- and 6-thioguanine
(6TG)-resistant clones. In separate experiments, correction of an
alkaline phosphatase (AP) gene by gene targeting was nine times more
effective with a coding strand vector. The data suggest that
single-stranded parvoviral vector genomes are substrates for gene
targeting and possibly for random integration as
well.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
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