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Journal of Virology, November 1999, p. 9589-9598, Vol. 73, No. 11
Bone Marrow Transplant Program, Department of
Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin
Received 10 June 1999/Accepted 6 August 1999
A lentivirus-based packaging system was designed to reduce the
chance of recombination between helper and gene transfer vector sequences by using the constitutive transport element (CTE) derived from Mason-Pfizer monkey virus for expression of the viral proteins and
the Rev-Rev response element (RRE) combination for expression of the
gene transfer vector. Using this approach, we evaluated a series of
human immunodeficiency virus type 1 packaging constructs that express
one or more accessory proteins (Vif, Vpr, and Vpu), in addition to the
Gag and Pol proteins, for particle formation and virus stock production
for gene transfer. Constructs that also express Vpr or both Vpr and Vpu
produced more particles, as measured by a p24 assay, than did plasmids
that did not contain these sequences. Transactivation experiments
showed that the packaging plasmids that encode Vpr or both Vpr and Vpu
also expressed a functional single-exon Tat protein. For these
constructs, high-titer virus stocks could be prepared in the absence of
a cotransfected Tat-expressing plasmid.
Amphotropic-envelope-pseudotyped virus stocks prepared with all of the
packaging constructs, irrespective of whether any of the accessory
proteins were coexpressed, were equally efficient in transducing
growth-arrested HeLa cells. The combination/mixed packaging system was
compared to systems that were based on either the CTE alone or Rev and
RRE for expression of both the packaging plasmid as well as the gene
transfer vector. The combination/mixed packaging system was comparable
to the other systems for production of virus stocks, suggesting that
this design may prove to be safer for the eventual deployment of
lentivirus vectors for therapeutic purposes.
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
A Lentivirus Packaging System Based on Alternative RNA Transport
Mechanisms To Express Helper and Gene Transfer Vector RNAs and
Its Use To Study the Requirement of Accessory Proteins for Particle
Formation and Gene Delivery
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Vanderbilt
University Medical Center, MRB2, Room 536, Nashville, TN 37232-6305. Phone: (615) 936-1804. Fax: (615) 936-1812.
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