Researchers reprogram gene therapy viral vectors to bind specific protein targets
A new screening method zeroes in on adeno-associated viruses that enter the brain through a defined mechanism.
Scientists have engineered adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) to package and deliver gene therapies to cells in the body. But the field has struggled to develop AAVs that can efficiently target different cell types and organs such as the brain, driving scientists to look for better ways of developing new viral vectors.
A team of researchers at the ӳý of MIT and Harvard has built a more focused and efficient method of engineering AAVs. Previous methods introduce millions of AAV capsids — the outer shells of the virus that bind to target proteins — into animals and rely on iterative rounds of screening to find AAVs that reach specific cells. The new approach, developed by the lab of Ben Deverman, an institute scientist and senior director of vector engineering at ӳý, instead looks for AAVs that bind to known proteins on the surface of target cells or organs.
Using their method, the team found AAVs that bind to two proteins on the surface of cells that line blood vessels in the brain, allowing them to cross the blood-brain barrier in mice. The researchers’ approach, published today in , could be used to engineer AAVs that target proteins on human cells, potentially accelerating the development of gene therapies.
“This is a really nice demonstration that when we engineer AAVs by designing them to interact with certain proteins, we are better able to predict what their activity will be when they’re delivered in vivo,” Deverman said. Qin Huang, a senior research scientist in Deverman’s group, is the first author on the study.
Protein binding
Existing approaches to AAV engineering are not only labor-intensive but also don’t reveal how specific AAVs are able to reach specific cells, often resulting in AAVs that only work in certain species.
“In vivo selection is quite straightforward, but mouse data doesn’t necessarily lead to something that will work in humans, which is a problem if you want to use it in gene therapy,” Huang said.
Funding
This work was supported by the Stanley Family Foundation and Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research, The Somatic Cell Genome Editing Program through the Common Fund and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke at the National Institutes of Health, and Apertura Gene Therapy.
Paper cited
Huang Q et al. Targeting AAV vectors to the central nervous system by engineering capsid-receptor interactions that enable crossing of the blood-brain barrier. . Online July 19, 2023. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002112