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Adeno-associated viral vectors for functional intravenous gene transfer throughout the non-human primate brain.

Miguel R ChuapocoNicholas C FlytzanisNick GoedenJ Christopher OcteauKristina M RoxasKen Y ChanJon ScherrerJanet WinchesterRoy J BlackburnLillian J CamposKwun Nok Mimi ManJunqing SunXinhong ChenArthur LefevreVikram Pal SinghCynthia M ArokiarajTimothy F MilesJulia VendemiattiMin J JangJohn K MichYemeserach BishawBryan B GoreVictoria OmsteadNaz TaskinNatalie WeedBoaz P LeviJonathan T TingCory T MillerBenjamin E DevermanJames PickelLin TianAndrew S FoxViviana Gradinaru
Published in: Nature nanotechnology (2023)
Crossing the blood-brain barrier in primates is a major obstacle for gene delivery to the brain. Adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) promise robust, non-invasive gene delivery from the bloodstream to the brain. However, unlike in rodents, few neurotropic AAVs efficiently cross the blood-brain barrier in non-human primates. Here we report on AAV.CAP-Mac, an engineered variant identified by screening in adult marmosets and newborn macaques, which has improved delivery efficiency in the brains of multiple non-human primate species: marmoset, rhesus macaque and green monkey. CAP-Mac is neuron biased in infant Old World primates, exhibits broad tropism in adult rhesus macaques and is vasculature biased in adult marmosets. We demonstrate applications of a single, intravenous dose of CAP-Mac to deliver functional GCaMP for ex vivo calcium imaging across multiple brain areas, or a cocktail of fluorescent reporters for Brainbow-like labelling throughout the macaque brain, circumventing the need for germline manipulations in Old World primates. As such, CAP-Mac is shown to have potential for non-invasive systemic gene transfer in the brains of non-human primates.
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