4.7 Article

Her2-specific Multivalent Adapters Confer Designed Tropism to Adenovirus for Gene Targeting

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 405, Issue 2, Pages 410-426

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2010.10.040

Keywords

DARPins; targeted gene delivery; affinity; knob; viral vectors

Funding

  1. Public Health Service [R01 CA116621, R01 CA128807]
  2. University Cancer Foundation at The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
  3. University of Zurich
  4. Schweizerische Nationalfonds (SNF) [31-128671/1, 31-115982]
  5. Cancer Center Support [P30 CA16672]

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Adenoviruses (Ads) hold great promise as gene vectors for diagnostic or therapeutic applications. The native tropism of Ads must be modified to achieve disease site-specific gene delivery by Ad vectors and this should be done in a programmable way and with technology that can realistically be scaled up. To this end, we applied the technologies of designed ankyrin repeat proteins (DARPins) and ribosome display to develop a DARPin that binds the knob domain of the Ad fiber protein with low nanomolar affinity (K-D 1.35 nM) and fused this protein with a DARPin specific for Her2, an established cell-surface biomarker of human cancers. The stability of the complex formed by this bispecific targeting adapter and the Ad virion resulted in insufficient gene transfer and was subsequently improved by increasing the valency of adapter virus binding. In particular, we designed adapters that chelated the knob in a bivalent or trivalent fashion and showed that the efficacy of gene transfer by the adapter Ad complex increased with the functional affinity of these molecules. This enabled efficient transduction at low stoichiometric adapter-to-fiber ratios. We confirmed the Her2 specificity of this transduction and its dependence on the Her2-binding DARPin component of the adapters. Even the adapter molecules with four fused DARPins could be produced and purified from Escherichia coli at very high levels. In principle, DARPins can be generated against any target and this adapter approach provides a versatile strategy for developing a broad range of disease-specific gene vectors. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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