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Cell Press, Molecular Therapy, 4(23), p. 675-682, 2015

DOI: 10.1038/mt.2015.3

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High Capsid–Genome Correlation Facilitates Creation of AAV Libraries for Directed Evolution

Journal article published in 2015 by Mathieu Nonnenmacher, Harm van Bakel ORCID, Roger J. Hajjar, Thomas Weber
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Directed evolution of adeno-associated virus (AAV) through successive rounds of phenotypic selection is a powerful method to isolate variants with improved properties from large libraries of capsid mutants. Importantly, AAV libraries used for directed evolution are based on the "natural" AAV genome organization where the capsid proteins are encoded in cis from replicating genomes. This is necessary to allow the recovery of the capsid DNA after each step of phenotypic selection. For directed evolution to be used successfully it is essential to minimize the random mixing of capsomers and the encapsidation of non-matching viral genomes during the production of the viral libraries. Here, we demonstrate that multiple AAV capsid variants expressed from Rep/Cap containing viral genomes result in near-homogeneous capsids that display an unexpectedly high capsid-DNA correlation. Next-generation sequencing of AAV progeny generated by bulk transfection of a semi-random peptide library showed a strong counter-selection of capsid variants encoding premature stop codons, which further supports a strong capsid-genome identity correlation. Overall, our observations demonstrate that production of "natural" AAVs results in low capsid mosaicism and high capsid-genome correlation. These unique properties allow the production of highly diverse AAV libraries in a one-step procedure with a minimal loss in phenotype-genotype correlation.Molecular Therapy (2015); doi:10.1038/mt.2015.3.