Intracellular Trafficking of a Fiber-modified Adenovirus Using Lipid Raft/Caveolae Endocytosis

Most adenoviral vectors (HAdvs) elaborated for gene therapy are derived from serotype 5 viruses that use clathrin-coated vesicle endocytosis for cell entry. However, it appears that adenoviral vectors are able to take advantage of lipid raft/caveolae endocytosis to infect cells. In vivo targeting of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular therapy 2007-11, Vol.15 (11), p.1963-1972
Hauptverfasser: Rogée, Sophie, Grellier, Elodie, Bernard, Claudine, Loyens, Anne, Beauvillain, Jean-Claude, D'halluin, Jean-Claude, Colin, Morvane
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Most adenoviral vectors (HAdvs) elaborated for gene therapy are derived from serotype 5 viruses that use clathrin-coated vesicle endocytosis for cell entry. However, it appears that adenoviral vectors are able to take advantage of lipid raft/caveolae endocytosis to infect cells. In vivo targeting of a therapeutic gene to specific cells by vector engineering has become a major focus of gene therapy research. Yet, modification of adenoviral tropism, especially fiber gene engineering, can induce deficient intracellular trafficking of the viral particle, with a shift in subcellular localization resulting in extensive exocytosis. In this study we demonstrate that uptake of a fiber-modified adenovirus using lipid raft/caveolae endocytosis leads to non-altered intracellular trafficking without endosomal retention. Moreover, activation of lipid raft structures by this vector leads to the formation of “mega-caveosomes”. These results demonstrate that, by forcing adenoviruses to take advantage of a non-clathrin, non-classical endocytic pathway, it is possible to compensate for the deficiency in endosomolysis that is associated with the use of some of the fiber-modified adenoviral constructs. Moreover, it renders such vectors ideal candidates for infecting human coxsackie and adenoviruses receptor (hCAR) negative cells.
ISSN:1525-0016
1525-0024
DOI:10.1038/sj.mt.6300283