Evaluation of Baculoviruses as Gene Therapy Vectors for Brain Cancer.
Matías Garcia FallitMatias L PidreAntonela S AsadJorge A Peña AgudeloMariana B VeraAlejandro J Nicola CandiaSofia B SagripantiMelanie Pérez KüperLeslie C Amorós MoralesAbril MarchesiniNazareno GonzalezCarla M CarusoVíctor RomanowskiAdriana SeilicovichGuillermo A Videla-RichardsonFlavia A ZanettiMarianela CandolfiPublished in: Viruses (2023)
We aimed to assess the potential of baculoviral vectors (BV) for brain cancer gene therapy. We compared them with adenoviral vectors (AdV), which are used in neuro-oncology, but for which there is pre-existing immunity. We constructed BVs and AdVs encoding fluorescent reporter proteins and evaluated their transduction efficiency in glioma cells and astrocytes. Naïve and glioma-bearing mice were intracranially injected with BVs to assess transduction and neuropathology. Transgene expression was also assessed in the brain of BV-preimmunized mice. While the expression of BVs was weaker than AdVs in murine and human glioma cell lines, BV-mediated transgene expression in patient-derived glioma cells was similar to AdV-mediated transduction and showed strong correlation with clathrin expression, a protein that interacts with the baculovirus glycoprotein GP64, mediating BV endocytosis. BVs efficiently transduced normal and neoplastic astrocytes in vivo, without apparent neurotoxicity. BV-mediated transgene expression was stable for at least 21 days in the brain of naïve mice, but it was significantly reduced after 7 days in mice systemically preimmunized with BVs. Our findings indicate that BVs efficiently transduce glioma cells and astrocytes without apparent neurotoxicity. Since humans do not present pre-existing immunity against BVs, these vectors may constitute a valuable tool for the delivery of therapeutic genes into the brain.
Keyphrases
- gene therapy
- poor prognosis
- binding protein
- white matter
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- lps induced
- resting state
- high fat diet induced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- dna methylation
- crispr cas
- type diabetes
- papillary thyroid
- genome wide
- gene expression
- squamous cell
- metabolic syndrome
- young adults
- wastewater treatment
- insulin resistance
- risk assessment
- transcription factor
- living cells
- protein protein
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- childhood cancer
- fluorescent probe