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Endosomal processing limits gene transfer to polarized airway epithelia by adeno-associated virus
Dongsheng Duan, … , Jusan Yang, John F. Engelhardt
Dongsheng Duan, … , Jusan Yang, John F. Engelhardt
Published June 1, 2000
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2000;105(11):1573-1587. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI8317.
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Article

Endosomal processing limits gene transfer to polarized airway epithelia by adeno-associated virus

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Abstract

The restriction of viral receptors and coreceptors to the basolateral surface of airway epithelial cells has been blamed for the inefficient transfer of viral vectors to the apical surface of this tissue. We now report, however, that differentiated human airway epithelia internalize rAAV type-2 virus efficiently from their apical surfaces, despite the absence of known adeno-associated virus–2 (AAV-2) receptors or coreceptors at these sites. The dramatically lower transduction efficiency of rAAV infection from the apical surface of airway cells appears to result instead from differences in endosomal processing and nuclear trafficking of apically or basolaterally internalized virions. AAV capsid proteins are ubiquitinated after endocytosis, and gene transfer can be significantly enhanced by proteasome or ubiquitin ligase inhibitors. Tripeptide proteasome inhibitors increased persistent rAAV gene delivery from the apical surface >200-fold, to a level nearly equivalent to that achieved with basolateral infection. In vivo application of proteasome inhibitor in mouse lung augmented rAAV gene transfer from undetectable levels to a mean of 10.4 ± 1.6% of the epithelial cells in large bronchioles. Proteasome inhibitors also increased rAAV-2–mediated gene transfer to the liver tenfold, but they did not affect transduction of skeletal or cardiac muscle. These findings suggest that tissue-specific ubiquitination of viral capsid proteins interferes with rAAV-2 transduction and provides new approaches to circumvent this barrier for gene therapy of diseases such as cystic fibrosis.

Authors

Dongsheng Duan, Yongping Yue, Ziying Yan, Jusan Yang, John F. Engelhardt

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Figure 1

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Southern blot analysis of AAV genomes in polarized airway epithelia. Dif...
Southern blot analysis of AAV genomes in polarized airway epithelia. Differentiated human bronchial epithelial cultures were infected with AV.GFP3ori at an moi of 10,000 particles per cell from either the apical (lanes 1 and 3) or basolateral (lanes 2 and 4) surface. Fifty days after infection, Hirt DNA was harvested and electrophoresed in a 1% agarose gel. Each lane represents combined Hirt DNA from two transwell cultures, and the two gels are derived from two independent tissue samples. The Southern blot was hybridized to a [P32]-labeled EGFP probe and exposed to film for 48 hours. Molecular weight standards are marked to the left of the autoradiogram. The single-stranded and circular monomer forms of AAV viral DNA migrate at 1.6 kb and 2.8 kb, respectively. ssDNA, single-stranded viral DNA; CM, circular monomer; CC, circular concatamer.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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