Efficient Gene Transfer to Kidney Using a Lentiviral Vector Pseudotyped with Zika Virus Envelope Glycoprotein

Gene therapy's entrance into clinical settings has made it an ever more attractive field of study for various diseases. However, relatively little progress has been made in targeting kidney diseases due to poor gene delivery efficiency in renal cells. The development of novel gene therapy vecto...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human gene therapy 2022-12, Vol.33 (23-24), p.1269-1278
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Jun, Mao, Yingying, Li, Qingqing, Qiu, Zhenzhen, Li, Jingjing, Li, Xiaoxin, Liang, Wenhan, Xu, Mingyu, Li, Andrew, Cai, Xiangsheng, Wu, Wangsheng, Chen, Huangyao, Yan, Renhe, Li, Jinlong, Gu, Weiwang, Li, Hongwei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Gene therapy's entrance into clinical settings has made it an ever more attractive field of study for various diseases. However, relatively little progress has been made in targeting kidney diseases due to poor gene delivery efficiency in renal cells. The development of novel gene therapy vectors for medical intervention to treat kidney diseases is needed. In this study, we designed and produced a pseudotyped lentiviral vector with envelope glycoproteins of Zika virus (ZIKV), and evaluated its potential use in viral vector entry, neutralization assay, and gene delivery especially in the renal context. The lentiviral vector, simplified as ZIKV-E, is pseudotyped with Env/G-TC representing the transmembrane (TM) and cytoplasmic ( Y) domains of Env replaced with the TM and CY domains of the glycoprotein (G) of the vesicular stomatitis virus. results show that ZIKV-E induced efficient transduction in tubular epithelial cells in mouse kidneys, demonstrating >100-fold higher expression of exogenous green fluorescent protein gene compared with that achieved by vesicular stomatitis virus G (VSV-G) protein pseudotyped lentiviral vector. The results also showed that the vector ZIKV-E transduced cells in a pH-independent manner and the transduction was inhibited by anti-ZIKV Env domain III antibodies. Results also show that ZIKV-E can be used as a surrogate for studies of ZIKV entry mechanisms and neutralization antibody assay. In all, this study successfully demonstrated a novel pseudotyped lentiviral vector ZIKV-E for inducing high transduction efficiency in renal tubular epithelial cells that could serve as a foundation for gene therapy for the treatment of inherited renal diseases in humans.
ISSN:1043-0342
1557-7422
DOI:10.1089/hum.2022.053