TY - JOUR
T1 - Herpes simplex virus type 1 DNA amplified as bacterial artificial chromosome in Escherichia coli
T2 - Rescue of replication-competent virus progeny and packaging of amplicon vectors
AU - Saeki, Yoshinaga
AU - Ichikawa, Tomotsugu
AU - Saeki, Akane
AU - Chiocca, E. Antonio
AU - Tobler, Kurt
AU - Ackermann, Mathias
AU - Breakefield, Xandra O.
AU - Fraefel, Cornel
PY - 1998/12/10
Y1 - 1998/12/10
N2 - Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1)-based amplicon vectors contain only ~ 1% of the 152-kb HSV-1 genome, and consequently, replication and packaging into virions depends on helper functions. These helper functions have been provided conventionally by a helper virus, usually a replication-defective mutant of HSV-1, or more recently, by a set of five cosmids that overlap and represent the genome of HSV-1 deleted for DNA cleavage/packaging signals (pac). In the absence of pac signals, potential HSV-1 genomes that are reconstituted from the cosmids via homologous recombination are not packageable. The resulting amplicon stocks are, therefore, virtually free of contaminating helper virus. To simplify this packing system, the HSV-1 genome was cloned and maintained stably as a single-copy, F plasmid-based bacterial artificial chromosome in E. coli. Such a plasmid containing the HSV-1 genome deleted for the pac signals (fHSV Δ pac) did not generate replication-competent progeny virus on transfection into mammalian cells, but rather, it was able to support the packaging of cotransfected amplicon DNA that contained a functional pac signal. The resulting amplicon vector stocks had titers of up to 107 transducing units per milliliter of culture medium and efficiently transduced neural cells in the rat brain, as well as hepatocytes in the rat. The capacity of generating infectious and replication-competent HSV-1 progeny following transfection into mammalian cells was restored after insertion of a pac signal into fHSV Δ pac.
AB - Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1)-based amplicon vectors contain only ~ 1% of the 152-kb HSV-1 genome, and consequently, replication and packaging into virions depends on helper functions. These helper functions have been provided conventionally by a helper virus, usually a replication-defective mutant of HSV-1, or more recently, by a set of five cosmids that overlap and represent the genome of HSV-1 deleted for DNA cleavage/packaging signals (pac). In the absence of pac signals, potential HSV-1 genomes that are reconstituted from the cosmids via homologous recombination are not packageable. The resulting amplicon stocks are, therefore, virtually free of contaminating helper virus. To simplify this packing system, the HSV-1 genome was cloned and maintained stably as a single-copy, F plasmid-based bacterial artificial chromosome in E. coli. Such a plasmid containing the HSV-1 genome deleted for the pac signals (fHSV Δ pac) did not generate replication-competent progeny virus on transfection into mammalian cells, but rather, it was able to support the packaging of cotransfected amplicon DNA that contained a functional pac signal. The resulting amplicon vector stocks had titers of up to 107 transducing units per milliliter of culture medium and efficiently transduced neural cells in the rat brain, as well as hepatocytes in the rat. The capacity of generating infectious and replication-competent HSV-1 progeny following transfection into mammalian cells was restored after insertion of a pac signal into fHSV Δ pac.
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U2 - 10.1089/hum.1998.9.18-2787
DO - 10.1089/hum.1998.9.18-2787
M3 - Article
C2 - 9874276
AN - SCOPUS:0032506707
SN - 1043-0342
VL - 9
SP - 2787
EP - 2794
JO - Human Gene Therapy
JF - Human Gene Therapy
IS - 18
ER -