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Using a barcoded AAV capsid library to select for clinically relevant gene therapy vectors.

Citation
Pekrun, K., et al. “Using A Barcoded Aav Capsid Library To Select For Clinically Relevant Gene Therapy Vectors.”. Jci Insight.
Center Stanford University
Author Katja Pekrun, Gustavo De Alencastro, Qing-Jun Luo, Jun Liu, Youngjin Kim, Sean Nygaard, Feorillo Galivo, Feijie Zhang, Ren Song, Matthew R Tiffany, Jianpeng Xu, Matthias Hebrok, Markus Grompe, Mark A Kay
Keywords diabetes, Embryonic stem cells, gene therapy, Therapeutics
Abstract

While gene transfer using recombinant adeno-associated viral (rAAV) vectors has shown success in some clinical trials, there remain many tissues that are not well transduced. Because of the recent success in reprogramming islet-derived cells into functional β cells in animal models, we constructed 2 highly complex barcoded replication competent capsid shuffled libraries and selected for high-transducing variants on primary human islets. We describe the generation of a chimeric AAV capsid (AAV-KP1) that facilitates transduction of primary human islet cells and human embryonic stem cell-derived β cells with up to 10-fold higher efficiency compared with previously studied best-in-class AAV vectors. Remarkably, this chimeric capsid also enabled transduction of both mouse and human hepatocytes at very high levels in a humanized chimeric mouse model, thus providing a versatile vector that has the potential to be used in both preclinical testing and human clinical trials for liver-based diseases and diabetes.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
JCI insight
Volume
4
Issue
22
Date Published
11/2019
ISSN Number
2379-3708
DOI
10.1172/jci.insight.131610
Alternate Journal
JCI Insight
PMID
31723052
PMCID
PMC6948855
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