Adenoviral Vectors
20240191255 ยท 2024-06-13
Assignee
Inventors
- Adrian Francis Stewart (Dresden, DE)
- Jun Fu (Dresden, DE)
- Anja Ehrhardt (Witten, DE)
- Eric Ehrke-Schulz (Witten, DE)
- Wenli Zhang (Witten, DE)
Cpc classification
C12N2310/20
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N7/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/22
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N2710/10021
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N2800/80
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/11
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N2710/10041
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/86
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C12N15/86
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N7/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/22
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
The invention relates to adenoviral vectors, cells for use in generating adenoviral vectors, methods for generating adenoviral vectors, and therapeutic uses of adenoviral vectors in gene therapy, tumour therapy and as vaccines.
Claims
1.-73. (canceled)
74. A method for cloning an adenoviral sequence, wherein the adenoviral sequence is a full length adenoviral genome sequence, comprising: a) providing a first linear nucleic acid molecule which comprises the full length adenoviral genome sequence; b) providing a linearized medium copy plasmid which shares at least two regions of sequence homology with the first linear nucleic acid molecule; and c) bringing the first linear nucleic acid molecule and the linearized medium copy plasmid into contact in the presence of a 5 to 3 exonuclease and an annealing protein such that the first linear nucleic acid molecule and the linearized medium copy plasmid recombine to form a circular plasmid containing the full length adenoviral genome sequence; wherein the 5 to 3 exonuclease is RecE of SEQ ID NO: 1412, or a protein with at least 90% sequence identity to SEQ ID NO:1412, and the annealing protein is RecT, and wherein a first region of the at least two regions of sequence homology is a region with sequence homology to only the 5 ITR of the adenoviral sequence in the first linear nucleic acid molecule, and a second region of the at least two regions of sequence homology is a region with sequence homology to only the 3 ITR of the adenoviral sequence in the first linear nucleic acid molecule.
75. The method of claim 74, wherein the first linear nucleic acid molecule is present in a mixture.
76. The method of claim 74, wherein the linearized medium copy plasmid is a p15A origin-based vector.
77. The method of claim 74, further comprising the generation of an adenoviral vector from the circular medium-copy plasmid comprising the full length adenoviral genome sequence, comprising: a) providing a second linear nucleic acid molecule which shares at least two regions of sequence homology with the circular medium-copy plasmid comprising the full length adenoviral genome sequence, wherein the second linear nucleic acid molecule comprises one or more transgenes of interest situated between two regions of sequence homology; and b) bringing the circular medium-copy plasmid comprising the full length adenoviral genome sequence and the second linear nucleic acid molecule into contact in the presence of a 5 to 3 exonuclease and an annealing protein such that sequences between the regions of homology in the second linear nucleic acid molecule are introduced into the circular medium-copy plasmid; wherein: i) the 5 to 3 exonuclease is RecE and the annealing protein is RecT; or ii) the 5 to 3 exonuclease is Red alpha and the annealing protein is Red beta.
78. The method of claim 77, further comprising a step of releasing the adenoviral vector in linear form from the circular medium copy plasmid.
79. The method of claim 77, wherein the one or more transgenes include one or more reporter genes.
80. The method of claim 79, wherein the one or more reporter genes comprises one or more genes encoding a fluorescent protein and/or a luciferase gene.
81. The method of claim 74, further comprising a step of creating a library comprising two or more medium copy plasmids each comprising a full length adenoviral genome sequence.
82. The method of claim 81, wherein the cloned adenoviruses in the library are tagged with one or more reporter genes.
83. The method of claim 82, wherein the one or more reporter genes comprises one or more genes encoding a fluorescent protein and/or a luciferase gene.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0313]
[0314]
[0315]
[0316]
[0317]
[0318]
[0319]
[0320]
[0321]
[0322]
[0323]
[0324]
[0325]
[0326]
[0327]
[0328]
[0329]
[0330]
[0331] The process begins with wild-type adenovirus amplification in respective permissive cell lines (e.g. HeLa, HEK, A549). After virion purification the adenovirus genomic DNA is isolated and verified by sequencing and restriction enzyme digest. According to the sequence identification the shuttle vector p15A-cm-adHA is computationally designed, and constructed by co-electroporation of four DNA fragments containing homologous arms (HA) to each other into the RecET expressed E. coli strain, where LLHR takes place. In the next step, the adenoviral genome is incorporated into the linearised shuttle vector containing HA to each ITR end via LLHR. Sequence-verified plasmids harbouring adenoviral genomes are collected together building up an engineered adenoviral library. To prove integrity of the cloned adenovirus genomes rescue experiments were performed. Marker gene GFP/LUC tagging was mediated by linear-circular homologous recombination (LCHR). The E3 region was first deleted by integration of the ccdB-Amp cassette, which was then replaced by a P2A peptide-mediated bicistronic-expression cassette expressing a Turbo Green fluorescent protein and a NanoLuc luciferase (tGFP-Nluc) to generate p15A-cm-AdV-tGFP-Nluc. The tagged adenovirus AdV-delE3-tGFP-Nluc can be reconstituted in its permissive cell line and further evaluated in vivo.
[0332]
[0333]
[0334] Cloning of three guide RNAs and the Cas9 coding sequence expressed under the control of a constitutive or an inducible promotor into the shuttle vector.
[0335]
[0336] Cloning of three guide RNAs and the Cas9 coding sequence expressed under the control of a constitutive or an inducible promotor into the high-capacity adenoviral vector.
[0337]
[0338] Production of high-capacity adenoviral vectors containing the CRISPR/Cas9 machinery.
[0339]
[0340] After cloning the gene of interest into the shuttle vector pHM5-FRT-IR it can be transferred to the high-capacity adenoviral vector by recombineering.
[0341]
[0342]
[0343]
[0344]
[0345]
[0346]
[0347]
[0348]
[0349]
[0350]
[0351]
[0352]
[0353] Viral genomes were detected by real-time quantitative PCR in various organs (liver, heart, lung, artery, kidney, pancreas, spleen, intestine and brain) harvested 72 hrs after systemic administration of 2?10.sup.9 transducing units per mouse of HAdV17GFP into both CD46 transgenic mice and wild-type mice. HAdV5GFP was administered to wild-type mice as a control (n=3 mice per group).
[0354]
[0355] Mice were sacrificed at 3 days after vector injection, and livers were excised for histology.
[0356] The top panel shows colocalisation of viral transgene (GFP) expression (green) with endothelial markers (CD31, red) from CD46 transgenic mice injected with HAdV17GFP. Single stained and merged images at 20? magnification are presented. The scale bar of images is 100 ?m.
[0357] The 4.sup.th panel from the top is from wild type mice injected with HAdV17GFP. The 5.sup.th panel from the top is from wild type mice injected with HAdV5GFP. PBS treated transgenic mice (3.sup.rd panel from the top) and PBS treated wild type mice (6.sup.th panel from the top) are controls. The 2.sup.nd panel from the top is from CD46 transgenic mice injected with HAdV17GFP without CD31 primary antibody treatment.
[0358] The 7.sup.th and 8.sup.th panels from the top are views at a higher magnification (60?) of the first panel. Images are representative of multiple fields of view. The scale bar of images is 25 ?m.
[0359]
[0360]
[0361]
[0362]
[0363]
[0364]
[0365]
[0366]
[0367]
[0368]
[0369]
[0370]
[0371] Transgene expression efficiency of different adenovirus types (Ad type number) was tested in a panel of disease-specific cell lines. Levels were compared to the commonly used adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) and indicated as fold change. Luciferase expression was measured by addition of Furimazine substrate and expressed as relative light units (RLU). In all cell lines error bars represent mean?SD with the exception that in A549 and MG-63 is mean?SEM.
[0372]
[0373]
[0374]
[0375]
[0376]
[0377]
[0378] Oncolysis assay performed in A549 cells as oncolytic assay control. Crystal violet staining of viable cells was used to evaluate oncolytic activity 7 days after infection.
[0379]
[0380] Ad5, Ad21 and Ad37 showed high luciferase (26 hs p.i.) and GFP expression (2 ds p.i.), albeit without being significant. All three viruses reached about the same dimension of efficiency. Furthermore Ad20 reached more than 20% of the efficiency of Ad5. Luciferase expression was measured by addition of Furimazine subtract and expressed as relative light units (RLU). Transgene expression levels were compared to the commonly used adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) and indicated as fold change. Error bars represent standard error of the mean (SEM). Data were analysed by two-tailed unpaired t-test. P-values for analyzed virus types compared to Ad5 were <0.05 if not otherwise stated. NS means not significant (p>=0.05).
[0381] The invention is further described with reference to the following non-limiting examples:
EXAMPLES
Example 1Cloning Adenoviral Genomes
[0382] Clinical isolates of wild type (WT) Ad were amplified in permissive cell lines (e.g. HeLa, HEK, A549) using serial amplification steps. After large-scale amplification Ads were purified by cesium chloride gradients (
[0383] Next, isolated linear Ad genomes were cloned into this plasmid using LLHR.
[0384] Integrity of all cloned Ad genomes was checked by diagnostic restriction enzyme digests and compared to originally isolated Ad genomes from virions (
[0385] To further explore the cloned human Ad library, viral genomes were tagged with a 2A peptide-mediated multicistronic-expression cassette (GLN, SEQ ID NO:227) providing a TurboGFP fluorescent protein as an in vitro marker, a NanoLuc luciferase for in vivo studies and kanamycin/neomycin as a selection marker. As schematically outlined in
[0386] Tagging of Ad enabled in vitro and in vivo characterisation of chosen Ad types. After infection of cell lines originating from different cell types derived from different organs (epithelium, endothelium, muscle, blood, liver) and measurement of luciferase and GFP expression it was found that tagged Ad show a distinct tropism (
METHODS FOR EXAMPLE 1 AND OTHER EXAMPLES
[0387] Cell cultureHuman Hela cells, A549 cells, HEK293, and EA.hy926 cells were grown in high glucose Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Medium (DMEM, PAN BIOTECH) supplemented with 10% FBS (GE Healthcare), 100 U ml-1 penicillin (PAN-BIOTECH), and 100 ?g ml-1 streptomycin (PAN BIOTECH). For human hepatocyte Huh7, Non-Essential Amino Acid (NEAA) was added. For Jurkat cells, RPMI-1640 based Medium supplemented with 10% FBS, 100 U ml-1 penicillin and 100 ?g ml-1 streptomycin was used. For the murine cell line Neuro2a (N2a) cells, Eagle's Minimum Essential Medium (EMEM, GE Healthcare), supplemented with 10% FBS, 100 U ml-1 penicillin and 100 ?g ml-1 streptomycin was used. For the murine myoblast C2C12 cells, DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS, 100 U ml-1 penicillin and 100 ?g ml-1 streptomycin was used.
[0388] Wild type adenovirusesHAdV-C5 (ATCC? VR5?) strain and HAdV-F41 (ATCC? VR930?) was obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC). HAdV-A12, -A18,-A31, -B3, -B16, B21, -B11, -B14, -B35, -C6, -D9, -D10, -D13, -D17, -D20, -D24, -D25, -D26, -D27, -D33, -D37, -D69 and -E4 were clinical isolates obtained from the diagnostic group of the Max von Pettenkofer-Institute (Department of Virology) at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich in Germany. HAdV-B7, -B50, -B34, -C1, -C2, -D8 and -G52 were kindly provided by the Heinrich Pette Institut (HPI) Hamburg, Germany.
[0389] Ad amplification, purification and titrationWT human Ad from clinical isolates were first pre-amplified in individual permissive cell lines (50?80% confluence), with serial infection circles to achieve 90% cytopathic effect (CPE). Each virus was amplified to large scale in 10-20 15 cm tissue culture dishes. For virus amplification DMEM supplemented with 2% FBS was used. Crude cell lysates were used to purify viruses by a CsCl gradient-based ultracentrifugation method (Beckman Coulter), followed by a desalting step based on disposable PD-10 desalting columns (GE Healthcare). The purified virus was aliquoted and stored at ?80? C. for further use. Ad particle concentrations were determined by measuring the optical density at 260 nm and expressed as viral particles (VPs) per milliliter.
[0390] Adenoviral genomic DNA isolation from virionsFor cloning of viral genomes, viral genomic DNA was extracted from purified particles by the addition of proteinase K, subsequent phenol-chloroform extraction, and ethanol precipitation. A detailed protocol for isolating viral genomic DNA is found in Example 7. To confirm the Ad type on genome level, multiplex PCR and sequencing were performed using the primer pair hexon-fwd (ATGGCCACCCCATCGATGATGC) and hexon-rev (TTATGTGGTGGCGTTGCCGGCC) amplifying the hexon regions of the viral genomes. To verify the end-sequence of the adenoviral genome for the following homologous recombineering step, primers reading into the ITR region were designed.
[0391] Plasmid constructionp15A-cm-MCS; p15A-amp-ccdB; pR6K-spect-adapter; pR6K-GLN; Linear-linear homologous recombination (LLHR)mediated adenoviral genome cloning. Linear-circular homologous recombination (LCHR)mediated adenovirus genome tagging.
[0392] PCRHomology arm (HA)-containing long primer-mediated PCR was performed with Phusion? High-Fidelity DNA Polymerase (New England Biolabs, Frankfurt, Germany) according to the manufacture's protocol. Notably, only the primer binding sequence (?20 bp) was used for calculating the annealing temperature. The PCR product purified with the Wizard? SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System (Promega, Mannheim, Germany) and eluted in ddH2O was used for electroporation. To check virus reconstitution and amplification, OneTaq? 2? Master Mix (New England Biolabs, Frankfurt, Germany) was used according to the manufacture's standard protocol.
[0393] NGS and bioinformatics analysesFor sequencing of plasmids, 200 ng purified DNA was subjected to standard Illumina DNA library preparation. In brief, DNA was enzymatically sheared (NEBnext dsDNA Fragmentase, New England Biolabs). After XP bead purification (Beckman Coulter), ends were polished and A-tailed and universal adapters were ligated (Ultra Directional DNA Library Prep Kit, New England Biolabs). For adapter ligation, custom adaptors were used (Adaptor-Oligo 1: 5-ACA-CTC-TTT-CCC-TAC-ACG-ACG-CTC-TTC-CGA-TCT-3, Adaptor-Oligo 2: 5-P-GAT-CGG-AAG-AGC-ACA-CGT-CTG-AAC-TCC-AGT-CAC-3). After ligation, adapters were depleted by XP bead purification (Beckman Coulter). Sample indexing was done in the following PCR enrichment (15 cycles). For Illumina flow cell production, samples were equimolar pooled and distributed on two Illumina MiSeq flow cells for 300 bp paired-end sequencing. The Illumina TruSeq adapter and regions of low quality (phred quality <20) were trimmed with cutadapt requiring a minimum length of 50 bp. Trimmed reads were mapped with BWA onto the reference sequence of the vector and reads consisting entirely of vector sequence were discarded whereas reads without or with only partial vector sequence were kept. Each adenovirus dataset was assembled with IVA de novo as well using the respective GenBank sequence as anchor. The better assembly was chosen based on number of sequences, total length and presence of vector sequence at the flanks of the assembled sequence. The remaining vector sequence was identified with BLAT and removed with in-house Perl scripts and the final assembled sequence was orientated according to the respective GenBank reference sequence. Annotation of coding sequences (CDS) was done with Glimmer in two steps. First, known adenovirus CDS from the GenBank were compared to the assembled sequences using exonerate. The resulting alignments served as training set for Glimmer which then predicted the final CDS regions. Functional identification of CDS was based on BLASTP against known adenovirus protein sequences from GenBank. To align and visualize the adenovirus sequences obtained by NGS against their respective GenBank reference sequences, we used the zPicture program (webpage: http://zpicture.dcode.org/). Sequence alignments between adenovirus sequence and GenBank reference were done with BLASTZ. As cut-off value, we used a minimum sequence identity of 99% which minimizes false-positive alignments but still allows for studying single nucleotide variants between adenovirus sequences and respective GenBank references. Multiple sequence alignments for conserved E3 and ITR sequences were generated using clustal Omega (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/msa/clustalo/) with default parameters and for visualized extent of conservation in aligned sequence sets we used WebLogo (webpage: http://weblogo.berkeley.edu/logo.cgi).Plasmid DNA transfection and virus rescue10 ?g of the p15A-based adenovirus genome containing plasmids were either digested with a combination of two restriction enzymes (PmeI/SbfI or PacI/SwaI) releasing the adenovirus backbone, or with the restriction enzyme I-SceI linearizing the p15A-based Ad genome. To purify and concentrate digested DNA, ethanol precipitation was performed for DNA digested with PmeI/SbfI and PacI/SwaI, and for I-SceI digested DNA a phenol-chloroform extraction followed by ethanol precipitation was conducted.
[0394] A549 cells were plated in 6-well plates and at 50-80% confluency 3 ?g of digested viral DNA was transfected using Superfect transfection Reagent (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's protocol. After 24-48 hrs, when the cells grew to up to >90% confluency, the medium was changed to 2% FBS-supplemented DMEM. The cells were maintained for up to two weeks, until cytopathic effect (CPE) was observed. If no CPE was obtained, the cell/virus lysate was collected and ? or ? of the lysate was used to infect a new well of A549 cells at a confluency of 90-95%. To release the virus from infected cells, the crude lysate was subjected to three freeze/cycles in liquid nitrogen and in a 37? C. water bath. A small aliquot of cells was collected for qPCR analysis.
[0395] gPCR analysisTo monitor virus replication during rescue, quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) was performed using the CFX96 Touch? Real-Time PCR Detection System (Bio-Rad). Previously described primer pairs and probes (Damen, M et al, 2008, JoCM) binding to the hexon of Ad were used to determine the copy number of Ad genomes in infected cells. The PCR was based on the following program: pre-incubation/activation at 95? C. for 5 min, amplification and data collection during 40 cycles (95? C. for 15 s and 60? C. for 30 s). The Sso Fast? Probes Supermix (Bio-Rad) was used for these PCRs.
[0396] Characterization of tagged Ad in vitro and in vivoAll reconstituted GLN-tagged viruses were confirmed by hexon-PCR of isolated adenoviral genomes. Adenovirus particle concentrations were determined by measuring the optical density at 260 nm and expressed as viral particles (vps) per millilitre.
[0397] Nano-Glo Luciferase assayIndividual tested cells were grown to confluence in 96-well tissue culture plate and infected with different viral partials (VPs) per cells. 26 h after infection NLuc activity was measured with the Nano-Glo assay system (Promega), and luminescence was detected with a plate reader (Tecan).
[0398] Genome uptake measured by internalization assayTo quantify the cell entry efficiency, a defined number of Ad particles (vp) was used to infect pre-seeded tumor cells and incubated for 2 hours. Cell monolayers was digested and flushed off with trypsin, followed by extensive washing with PBS. Genomic DNA was extracted by incubation in TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM EDTA, PH 8.0) with 0.5% SDS and 0.5 mg/ml proteinase K. Subsequently a phenol-chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation was performed. To monitor virus genome uptake efficiency, quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) detecting the transgene (GLN gene cassette) was performed.
[0399] Oncolytic assays with most promising Ad candidatesOncolytic assay was performed in 24 well plates. A 10-fold dilution series of individual Ads was prepared freshly to infect pre-seeded cancer cells. Cytopathic effect (CPE) was checked daily until at least one of the viruses on one plate at the lowest dosage showed CPE or until maximal 14 days. The cells were first fixed with 3.7% formaldehyde then stained with crystal violet solution.
[0400] StatisticsStatistical analyses were conducted with Microsoft Excel. Experimental differences were evaluated by a Student's one-tailed t-test assuming equal variance.
Example 2Gene Annotation
[0401] Genes were predicted using Gene Locator and Interpolated Markov ModelER (Glimmer).sup.38. For each sequenced genome, protein sequences of known genes of the respective reference from GenBank were aligned with exonerate.sup.39 to the assembled genome sequence. The coordinates of the best hits were then used to build a Glimmer model which was subsequently used for prediction of location and orientation of genes in the sequenced genome.
[0402] Next, protein sequences were compared between virus genomes. The result of this analysis is given in
[0403] Shading of a gene reflects its maximum sequence divergence across all 28 viruses determined through an all-vs-all Blast analysis.
Example 3Cell Tropism of Human Adenovirus D17
[0404] A new first generation adenovirus based on human adenovirus D17 was constructed and labelled with a green fluorescent protein (GFP) marker using the recombineering technology described in Example 1. The early E1 gene was deleted in the HAdV17 vector, and a corresponding E1-deleted, GFP-labeled HAdV5 vector was constructed for comparison.
[0405] Viruses were rescued in complementary E1-expressing stable cell lines, and then screened against a panel of different cell lines by fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis and quantitative PCR. HAdV17 was found to have a tropism for endothelial cells, whereas endothelial cells are normally refractory to HAdV5 infection. This finding was further verified using primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC).
[0406] Competition assays based on soluble recombinant fiber knob blocking reagents.sup.40, 17 (5knob, 17knob, JO4, Augmab) were used to characterize the receptor interaction with these vectors in vitro. It was found that HAdV17 could utilize both CD46 (a membrane cofactor protein which is expressed on all nucleated cells) and CAR (coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor) as cell attachment receptors. The endothelial cell tropism was CD46-dependent and could be blocked by the CD46 blocking reagent Augmab.
[0407] In vivo biodistribution analyses were performed after intravenous injection of recombinant viruses into both normal and CD46-transgenic mice. These studies showed significantly increased vector genome copies (VCN) in various organs of CD46-transgenic mice compared to normal mice, indicating the involvement of CD46 as a receptor. These results were confirmed by quantitative PCR (qPCR) and immunohistology analysis.
[0408] Neutralising antibody assays revealed that there was less seroprevalence with HAdV17 compared to HAdV5 in humans.
[0409] Accordingly, HAdV17-based vectors, which can use both hCAR and CD46 as receptors and display an endothelial cell tropism, hold great promise for gene therapy in endothelial disease.
[0410] See also
Example 4Delivery of all Components of the CRISPR/Cas9 System Using High-Capacity Adenoviral Vectors
[0411] A new CRISPR/Cas9 shuttle plasmid toolbox was generated, containing the Cas9 nuclease gene, either utilising a constitutive or an inducible promoter, and a gRNA expression unit. The toolbox allows cloning or recombining of all CRISPR/Cas9 components into the HCAdV genome in one step. To use several gRNA expression units for multiplexing the CRISPR/Cas9 system, further gRNA expression units can be easily included. To enable fast assembly of recombinant CRISPR-HCAdV genomes, DNA recombineering was used to introduce all CRISPR/Cas9 expression units into the HCAdV genome contained in the bacterial artificial chromosome pBHCA. For insertion of multiple gRNA expression units into the HCAdV genome, the established pAdV-FTC plasmid was used in concert with homing endonuclease directed cloning. CRISPR-HCAdVs were produced using a shortened amplification and purification procedure.
[0412] The toolbox was used to produce several CRISPR-HCAdVs carrying single and multiplex gRNA units specific for different targets including hCCR5, hDMD, and HPV16- and HPV18-E6 genes, yielding sufficient titers within a short time. T7E1 assays.sup.41 were applied to prove CRISPR/Cas9-mediated cleavage of respective targets. Infection of cultured human cells with respective CRISPR-HCAdVs resulted in efficient site-specific gene editing.
[0413] In summary, this new platform enables customisation, cloning and production of CRISPR-HCAdV vectors for single or multiplex approaches within a short time. It simplifies the delivery of the CRISPR/Cas9 machinery by only using one single viral vector. Inducible Cas9 expression helps to avoid targeting of the genome of producer cell lines during vector production and may be beneficial for special approaches where constitutive expression is unwanted.
Example 5Enhanced Oncolytic Activity Mediated by a Novel Human Adenovirus Type 6-Based Vector
[0414] Most existing oncolytic adenoviruses (AdV) are based on human AdV type 5 (hAdV-5). Clinical efficacy of hAdV-5 based oncolytic viruses is limited by variable expression levels of coxsackie- and adenovirus receptor (CAR) in different tumour cells, and insufficient replication rates. Additionally, high prevalence of neutralising antibodies against hAdV-5, resulting in lower efficiency, makes hAdV-5 a less suitable candidate for systemic application. Recent studies have highlighted human adenovirus type 6 (hAdV-6) as a promising candidate for oncolytic and vaccine vectors. Thus, development of novel oncolytic AdV based on hAdV-6 may help to overcome these limitations. Oncolytic efficacy of the candidate virus can be augmented by expression of RNAi suppressor protein P19, as has been shown previously for hAdV-5.sup.31. In this example, a novel hAdV-6-based, p19-containing oncolytic AdV was evaluated as a candidate for oncolytic applications in different tumour cell lines.
[0415] A P19-containing hAdV-6 based virus (hAdV-6FP19) was cloned by a novel seamless recombineering technique (see Example 1). In order to allow P19 expression from the adenoviral vector genome, the P19 cDNA was fused via an internal ribosome entry site (IRES) to the late fiber gene. After release of the respective recombinant adenoviral genomes from plasmids containing the complete DNA molecule, linearised viral DNA was transfected into HEK 293 cells for virus reconstitution. After initial amplification steps which were monitored by virus specific PCRs, upscaling and virus purification using cesium chloride density gradient ultracentrifugation was performed. Rescue and amplification efficiencies were comparable to commonly used hAdV-5 based vectors.
[0416] Various cancer cell lines from different origin were used to perform oncolysis assays. These included: A549 (lung carcinoma), HCT 116 (colon carcinoma), HeLa (cervical carcinoma) and Huh7 (hepatocellular carcinoma). Cells were infected with hAdV-6FP19, hAdV-6 and hAdV-5 at various multiplicities of infection (MOI). Two to three days after infection, cells were fixed and stained with methylene blue. Significantly higher cell lysis (up to 100-fold) was observed for hAdV-6FP19-infected cells as compared to hAdV-5 and 6 at identical MOIs. Higher cell lysis rates for hAdV-6FP19 compared to wildtype virus were present in all evaluated cell lines, suggesting significantly enhanced oncolytic potential for hAdV-6FP19. In summary, hAdV6-based vectors hold great promise for oncolytic applications and their oncolytic effectiveness can be further improved by RNAi suppression.
Example 6High Throughput Screening (HTS) of Adenovirus Library as a Novel Resource for Disease-Specific Targeting
[0417] To fully explore our cloned Ad library as a resource for developing of novel translational approaches, the library was further tested on a panel of cell lines using an HTS approach. Cell lines originating from different cell types were infected with the reporter-labelled virus types of the Ad library. Transduction efficiencies measured by luciferase expression levels were compared to the commonly used adenoviral vector type 5 (Ad5). Initial screening revealed that species B adenoviruses have high transduction efficiencies in epithelial (A549, HCT 116, ARPE-19) and endothelial (EA.hy926) cells. While in the liver originated cell lines SK-HEP-1 and Huh-7, the common used vector type 5 (Ad5) highest infection efficiencies (
[0418] Therefore, Ad21 was further pursued as a potential oncolytic agent to treat osteosarcoma, because this type of cancer is the most frequent primary cancer of bone which predominantly occurring in the second decade of life. Regarding the age group from 15-19 years, osteosarcomas represent >10% of all solid cancers. Therefore, a panel of osteosarcoma cell lines with different grading related features, including Saos-2 and U-2 OS cells, was further examined.
[0419] As displayed in
[0420] Using the same methodology,
Example 7Protocol to Isolate Adenoviral Genomic DNA for Use in the Cloning Step
[0421] 1. Incubate certain volume of purified virus for 2 hours (or overnight) with proteinase K-SDS solution pH 7.5-8 (TE buffer, 0.5% SDS, 100?500 ?g/ml proteinase K) at 56? C., with low speed shake (300 rpm). [0422] 2. Add equal volume mixture of phenol:chloroform:isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) to the sample from step 1. In doing this, go inside to the mixture, and do not take the surface layer. To increase the recovery rate, use a phase lock gel tube (Phase Lock Gel Heavy 1.5 ml, https://uk.vwr.com/store/product/826754/phase-lock-gel) [0423] 3. Centrifuge for 5 min at full speed (15,000 g) at room temperature in a microcentrifuge and then transfer the aqueous phases to another clean eppendorf tubes. [0424] 4. Precipitate viral DNA by adding 1/10 volume of 3 M sodium acetate (pH 5), 2 ?g glycogen and 2.5?3 times of precooled EtOH (>99.8%; stored at ?20? C.). Mix gently by inverting the tube several times). To increase the recovery rate, put the mixture in ?20? C. for 30 mins. [0425] 5. Centrifuge for 10 min at full speed (15,000 g) at room temperature in a microcentrifuge and discard the supernatant by pipetting. [0426] 6. Add 600 ?l of 70% ethanol and mix gently by inverting the tube several times. After centrifugation at 15,000 g at room temperature for 5 min, remove the supernatant by pipetting. [0427] 7. Repeat step 6 [0428] 8. Air-dry the DNA pellet briefly and resuspend in 20?50 ?l of sterilized dH2O low speed shake (300 rpm) at room temperature for 15 mins.
[0429] In this protocol, which is provided by way of example, it is important that the large genomic DNA is never vortexed or vigorously pipetted during isolation.
REFERENCES
[0430] .sup.1Aiuti, A. et al. Lentiviral hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy in patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. Science 341, 1233151, (2013). [0431] .sup.2Nathwani, A. C. et al. Adenovirus-associated virus vector-mediated gene transfer in hemophilia B. The New England journal of medicine 365, 2357-2365, (2011). [0432] .sup.3Biffi, A. et al. Lentiviral hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy benefits metachromatic leukodystrophy. Science 341, 1233158, (2013). [0433] .sup.4Wiley, J. M. Gene Therapy Clinical Trials Worldwide. J. Gene Med., (2015). [0434] .sup.5Crystal, R. G. Adenovirus: the first effective in vivo gene delivery vector. Human gene therapy 25, 3-11, (2014). [0435] .sup.6Zabner, J. et al. Adenovirus-mediated gene transfer transiently corrects the chloride transport defect in nasal epithelia of patients with cystic fibrosis. Cell 75, 207-216 (1993). [0436] .sup.7Wilson, J. M. Gendicine: the first commercial gene therapy product. Human gene therapy 16, 1014-1015, (2005). [0437] .sup.8Kaufman, H. L., Kohlhapp, F. J. & Zloza, A. Oncolytic viruses: a new class of immunotherapy drugs. Nature reviews. Drug discovery 14, 642-662, (2015). [0438] .sup.9Hage, E. et al. Human Adenovirus type 70: A novel, multiple recombinant species D adenovirus isolated from diarrheal faeces of a haematopoietic stem cell transplantation recipient. J. Gen. Virol. 96, 2734-2742, (2015). [0439] .sup.10Davison, A. J., et al. Genetic content and evolution of adenoviruses. J. Gen. Virol. 84, 2895-2908, (2003). [0440] .sup.11Fu, J. et al. Full-length RecE enhances linear-linear homologous recombination and facilitates direct cloning for bioprospecting. Nature biotech. 30, 440-446, (2012). [0441] .sup.12Wang, H. et al. Improved seamless mutagenesis by recombineering using ccdB for counterselection. Nucleic acids research 42, e37, (2014). [0442] .sup.13Harrach, B. et al. Adenoviridae. In Virus Taxonomy (ed. King, A. M. Q., Adams, M. J., Carstens, E. B. and Lefkowitz, E. J.), 125-141 (Elsevier, 2011). [0443] .sup.14Bradley, R R. et al. Adenovirus serotype 5 neutralizing antibodies target both hexon and fiber following vaccination and natural infection. J. Virol. 86, 625-629, (2012) [0444] .sup.15Zhang, Y. and Bergelson, J. M. Adenovirus receptors. J. Virol. 79, 12125-12131, (2005). [0445] .sup.16Ghebremedhin, B. Human adenovirus: viral pathogen with increasing importance. Eur. J. Microbiol. Immunol. 4, 26-33, (2014). [0446] .sup.17Wang, H. et al. Desmoglein 2 is a receptor for adenovirus serotypes 3, 7, 11 and 14. Nat. Med. 17, 96-105, (2011) [0447] .sup.18Tuve, S. et al. A new group B adenovirus receptor is expressed at high levels on human stem and tumor cells. J. Virol. 80, 12109-12120, (2006). [0448] .sup.19Danthinne, X. and Imperiale, MJ. Production of first generation adenovirus vectors: a review. Gene Ther. 7, 1707-1714, (2000). [0449] .sup.20WO 2011/154927 [0450] .sup.21Cong, L. et al. Multiplex Genome Engineering using CRISPR/Cas Systems. Science 15, 819-823, (2013). [0451] .sup.22Li, X. et al. PiggyBac transposase tools for genome engineering. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 110, E2279-E2287, (2013). [0452] .sup.23Hausl, M. et al. Development of Adenovirus Hybrid Vectors for Sleeping Beauty Transposition in Large Mammals. Curr. Gene Ther. 11, 363-374, (2011). [0453] .sup.24Penaloza-MacMaster, P. Alternative serotype adenovirus vaccine vectors elicit memory T cells with enhanced anamnestic capacity compared to Ad5 vectors. J. Virol. 87, 1373-1384, (2013). [0454] .sup.25Wold, W. S. M. and Toth, K. Adenovirus vectors for gene therapy, vaccination and cancer gene therapy. Curr. Gene Ther. 13, 421-433 (2013). [0455] .sup.26Barouch, D. H. Novel adenovirus vector-based vaccines for HIV-1. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS 5, 386-390, (2010) [0456] .sup.27Geisbert, T. W. et al. Recombinant adenovirus serotype 26 (Ad26) and Ad35 vaccine vectors bypass immunity to Ad5 and protect nonhuman primates against Ebolavirus challenge. J. Virol. 85, 4222-4233, (2011). [0457] .sup.28Barnes, E. et al. Novel adenovirus-based vaccines induce broad and sustained T cell responses to HCV in man. Sci. Transl. Med. 4, 115ra1, (2012) [0458] .sup.29Yamamoto, M. and Curiel, D. T. Current issues and future directions of oncolytic adenoviruses. Mol Ther. 18, 243-250, (2010). [0459] .sup.30Cheong, S. C. et al. E1A-expressing adenoviral E3B mutants act synergistically with chemotherapeutics in immunocompetent tumor models. Cancer Gene Ther. 15, 40-50, (2008). [0460] .sup.31Rauschhuber, C. et al. RNAi suppressor P19 can be broadly exploited for enhanced adenovirus replication and microRNA knockdown experiments. Sci. rep. 3, 1363 (2013). [0461] .sup.32Rodriguez, R. et al. Prostate attenuated replication competent adenovirus (ARCA) CN706: a selective cytotoxic for prostate-specific antigen-positive prostate cancer cells. Cancer Res. 57, 2559-2563, (1997). [0462] .sup.33Cody, J. J. and Douglas, J. T. Armed replicating adenoviruses for cancer virotherapy. Cancer Gene Ther. 16, 473-488, (2009). [0463] .sup.34Green, N. K. et al. Extended plasma circulation time and decreased toxicity of polymer-coated adenovirus. Gene Ther. 11, 1256-1263, (2004). [0464] .sup.35Doronin, K. et al. Chemical modification with high molecular weight polyethylene glycol reduces transduction of hepatocytes and increases efficacy of intravenously delivered oncolytic adenoviruses. Hum. Gene Ther. 20, 975-988, (2009). [0465] .sup.36WO 2009/104094 [0466] .sup.37Wang, H. et al. Improved seamless mutagenesis by recombineering using ccdB for counterselection. Nucleic Acids Res. 42, e37, (2014) [0467] .sup.38Salzberg, S. L. et al. Microbial gene identification using interpolated Markov models. Nucleic Acids Research 26, 544-548, (1998) [0468] .sup.39Slater, G. and Birney, E. Automated generation of heuristics for biological sequence comparison. BMC Bioinformatics 6, 31, (2005) [0469] .sup.40Gaggar, A. et al. CD46 is a cellular receptor for group B adenoviruses. Nat. Med. 9, 1408-1412 (2003). [0470] .sup.41Mashal R. D. et al. Detection of mutations by cleavage of DNA heteroduplexes with bacteriophage resolvases. Nat. Genet. 9, 177-183, (1995).