Chandipura viral glycoprotein (CNV-G) promotes Gectosome generation and enables delivery of intracellular therapeutics

Overexpression of vesicular stomatitis virus G protein (VSV-G) elevates the secretion of EVs known as gectosomes, which contain VSV-G. Such vesicles can be engineered to deliver therapeutic macromolecules. We investigated viral glycoproteins from several viruses for their potential in gectosome prod...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular therapy 2024-07, Vol.32 (7), p.2264-2285
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Xiaojuan, Xu, Quanbin, Liu, Zeyu, Ball, Jayson B., Black, Brandon, Ganguly, Saheli, Harland, Michael E., Blackman, Samuel, Bryant, Stephanie, Anseth, Kristi, Watkins, Linda, Liu, Xuedong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Overexpression of vesicular stomatitis virus G protein (VSV-G) elevates the secretion of EVs known as gectosomes, which contain VSV-G. Such vesicles can be engineered to deliver therapeutic macromolecules. We investigated viral glycoproteins from several viruses for their potential in gectosome production and intracellular cargo delivery. Expression of the viral glycoprotein (viral glycoprotein from the Chandipura virus [CNV-G]) from the human neurotropic pathogen Chandipura virus in 293T cells significantly augments the production of CNV-G-containing gectosomes. In comparison with VSV-G gectosomes, CNV-G gectosomes exhibit heightened selectivity toward specific cell types, including primary cells and tumor cell lines. Consistent with the differential tropism between CNV-G and VSV-G gectosomes, cellular entry of CNV-G gectosome is independent of the Low-density lipoprotein receptor, which is essential for VSV-G entry, and shows varying sensitivity to pharmacological modulators. CNV-G gectosomes efficiently deliver diverse intracellular cargos for genomic modification or responses to stimuli in vitro and in the brain of mice in vivo utilizing a split GFP and chemical-induced dimerization system. Pharmacokinetics and biodistribution analyses support CNV-G gectosomes as a versatile platform for delivering macromolecular therapeutics intracellularly. [Display omitted] Liu and colleagues investigated CNV-G for its remarkable capability to generate CNV-G gectosomes. These gectosomes offer a more cell type-selective approach, exhibiting a preference for neuronal cells, which distinguishes them from traditional VSV-G gectosomes.
ISSN:1525-0016
1525-0024
1525-0024
DOI:10.1016/j.ymthe.2024.04.034