4.6 Article

Synthetic AAV/CRISPR vectors for blocking HIV-1 expression in persistently infected astrocytes

期刊

GLIA
卷 66, 期 2, 页码 413-427

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/glia.23254

关键词

adeno-associated viral vector; astrocytes; CRISPR/Cas9; HIV

资金

  1. Helmholtz Initiative on Synthetic Biology: Novel synthetic tools for analysis, design and control in health, disease and biotechnology
  2. German Center for Infection Research (DZIF) within TTU HIV [TTU 04.803]
  3. German Center for Infection Research (BMBF) within TTU HIV [TTU 04.803]
  4. Heidelberg University Innovation Fund FRONTIER
  5. Cluster of Excellence CellNetworks (DFG) [EXC81]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Astrocytes, the most abundant cells in the mammalian brain, perform key functions and are involved in several neurodegenerative diseases. The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can persist in astrocytes, contributing to the HIV burden and neurological dysfunctions in infected individuals. While a comprehensive approach to HIV cure must include the targeting of HIV-1 in astrocytes, dedicated tools for this purpose are still lacking. Here we report a novel Adeno-associated virus-based vector (AAV9P1) with a synthetic surface peptide for transduction of astrocytes. Analysis of AAV9P1 transduction efficiencies with single brain cell populations, including primary human brain cells, as well as human brain organoids demonstrated that AAV9P1 targeted terminally differentiated human astrocytes much more efficiently than neurons. We then investigated whether AAV9P1 can be used to deliver HIV-inhibitory genes to astrocytes. To this end we generated AAV9P1 vectors containing genes for HIV-1 proviral editing by CRISPR/Cas9. Latently HIV-1 infected astrocytes transduced with these vectors showed significantly diminished reactivation of proviruses, compared with untransduced cultures. Sequence analysis identified mutations/deletions in key HIV-1 transcriptional control regions. We conclude that AAV9P1 is a promising tool for gene delivery to astrocytes and may facilitate inactivation/destruction of persisting HIV-1 proviruses in astrocyte reservoirs.

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