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Journal of Virology, September 2000, p. 8635-8647, Vol. 74, No. 18
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Mutational Analysis of the Adeno-Associated Virus Type 2 (AAV2)
Capsid Gene and Construction of AAV2 Vectors with Altered
Tropism
Pei
Wu,1,2
Wu
Xiao,2,3
Thomas
Conlon,2,4
Jeffrey
Hughes,2,3
Mavis
Agbandje-McKenna,5,6,7
Thomas
Ferkol,
Terence
Flotte,1,2,4 and
Nicholas
Muzyczka1,2,6,*
Department of Molecular Genetics and
Microbiology,1 Department of
Pediatrics,4 Department of Molecular
Pharmaceutics,3 Department of
Biochemistry,5 Powell Gene Therapy
Center,2 UF Brain
Institute,6 and Center for
Structural Biology,7 University of Florida,
Gainesville, Florida 32610-0266, and Division of Pediatric
Pulmonology, Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, Cleveland,
Ohio 44106-60068
Received 1 March 2000/Accepted 8 June 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
Adeno-associated virus type 2 (AAV2) has proven to be a valuable
vector for gene therapy. Characterization of the functional domains of
the AAV capsid proteins can facilitate our understanding of viral
tissue tropism, immunoreactivity, viral entry, and DNA packaging, all
of which are important issues for generating improved vectors. To
obtain a comprehensive genetic map of the AAV capsid gene, we have
constructed 93 mutants at 59 different positions in the AAV capsid gene
by site-directed mutagenesis. Several types of mutants were studied,
including epitope tag or ligand insertion mutants, alanine scanning
mutants, and epitope substitution mutants. Analysis of these
mutants revealed eight separate phenotypes. Infectious titers of the
mutants revealed four classes. Class 1 mutants were viable, class 2 mutants were partially defective, class 3 mutants were temperature
sensitive, and class 4 mutants were noninfectious. Further analysis
revealed some of the defects in the class 2, 3, and 4 mutants. Among
the class 4 mutants, a subset completely abolished capsid formation.
These mutants were located predominantly, but not exclusively, in what
are likely to be
-barrel structures in the capsid protein VP3. Two
of these mutants were insertions at the N and C termini of VP3,
suggesting that both ends of VP3 play a role that is important for
capsid assembly or stability. Several class 2 and 3 mutants produced capsids that were unstable during purification of viral particles. One
mutant, R432A, made only empty capsids, presumably due to a defect in
packaging viral DNA. Additionally, five mutants were defective in
heparan binding, a step that is believed to be essential for viral
entry. These were distributed into two amino acid clusters in what is
likely to be a cell surface loop in the capsid protein VP3. The first
cluster spanned amino acids 509 to 522; the second was between amino
acids 561 and 591. In addition to the heparan binding clusters,
hemagglutinin epitope tag insertions identified several other
regions that were on the surface of the capsid. These included
insertions at amino acids 1, 34, 138, 266, 447, 591, and 664. Positions
1 and 138 were the N termini of VP1 and VP2, respectively; position 34 was exclusively in VP1; the remaining surface positions were located in
putative loop regions of VP3. The remaining mutants, most of them
partially defective, were presumably defective in steps of viral entry
that were not tested in the preliminary screening, including
intracellular trafficking, viral uncoating, or coreceptor binding.
Finally, in vitro experiments showed that insertion of the serpin
receptor ligand in the N-terminal regions of VP1 or VP2 can change the
tropism of AAV. Our results provide information on AAV capsid
functional domains and are useful for future design of AAV vectors for
targeting of specific tissues.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Adeno-associated virus type 2 (AAV2) belongs to the human parvovirus family, which requires a helper
virus for productive replication (5, 7, 8). The nonenveloped
capsid adopts an icosahedral structure with a diameter of approximately
20 nm. Packaged within the capsid is a single-stranded DNA genome of 4.7 kb that contains two large open reading frames (ORFs),
rep and cap (35). Three structural
proteins, designated VP1, VP2, and VP3, are encoded in the
cap ORF and made from the p40 promoter by use of alternative
splicing and alternative start codons. The three proteins share the
same ORF and end at the same stop codon. The C-terminal regions common
to all three capsid proteins fold into a
-barrel structure that is
present in several viruses (31). Their molecular masses are
87, 73, and 62 kDa, and their relative abundances within the capsid are
approximately 5, 5, and 90%, respectively (26). Recently,
AAV has attracted a significant amount of interest as a vector for gene
therapy (6, 26). It has a number of unique advantages that
are potentially useful for gene therapy applications, including the
ability to infect nondividing cells, a lack of pathogenicity, and the
ability to establish long-term gene expression.
Early genetic studies on deletion mutants of AAV revealed that capsid
proteins were required for accumulation of single-stranded DNA and
production of infectious particles (19, 38). Mutations in
the C-terminal region common to all three proteins also abolished virion formation and failed to accumulate single-stranded DNA (32). VP1 was thought to be important for virus infectivity or stability because mutations in the N-terminal region unique to VP1
produced DNA-containing particles with significantly reduced infectivity (19, 38). In vitro assembly studies
(33) and capsid initiation codon mutagenesis studies
(25) suggested that both VP2 and VP3 were required for
capsid formation and production of infectious particles, and either VP1
or VP2 was required for nuclear localization of VP3. Recently, Hoque et
al. (19b) have shown that the VP2 N-terminal residues 29 to
34 are sufficient for nuclear translocation and suggested that the
major function of VP2 is to translocate VP3 into the nucleus. A recent
insertional mutation study on AAV capsid protein revealed that
mutations in the capsid gene could affect AAV capsid assembly and
infection (30). Since the crystal structure of AAV was still
unavailable, the functional domains of the AAV capsid proteins were
mostly predicted based on information derived from other related
autonomous parvoviruses, canine parvovirus (CPV), feline panleukopenia
virus, and B19, whose crystal structures were available (1, 2, 40,
41). Sequence comparison of AAV to these viruses revealed a few
conserved functional domains (9, 10), but the exact functions of these domains were not clear.
While certain groups of cells cannot be transduced by AAV (22,
27), AAV can transduce a wide variety of tissues, including brain, muscle, liver, lung, vascular endothelial, and hematopoietic cells (12-14, 16, 21, 45, 48). Recently, Summerford and Samulski (37) reported that heparan sulfate proteoglycan is the primary cellular receptor for AAV, and their group further revealed
that the binding site lies within VP3 (30). In addition, human fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 and
v
5 integrin were identified as
coreceptors for AAV (28, 36). Attempts to alter the AAV
capsid also have been made in order to expand the tropism of AAV. Yang
et al. (47) showed improved infectivity of hematopoietic progenitor cells by generating a chimeric recombinant AAV (rAAV) having
the single-chain antibody against human CD34 protein. Girod et al.
(15) showed that insertion of the L14 epitope into the capsid coding region can expand the tropism of this virus to cells nonpermissive for AAV infection that bear the L14 receptor. However, in
both cases the normal AAV tropism was not disrupted. Ideally, for the
purpose of retargeting, the normal AAV receptor binding would need to
be modified so that rAAV infects only targets bearing the receptors for
the engineered epitope.
In this study, we used site-directed mutagenesis to mutate the capsid
ORF. Initially, 48 alanine scanning mutations were made in which two to
five charged amino acids in the AAV capsid ORF were mutated to alanine
residues by site-directed mutagenesis. We reasoned that since the
mutations were an average of 15 to 20 amino acids (aa) apart and
spanned the whole capsid gene, some of them would inevitably fall in or
near the functional domains of AAV capsid. In addition, over 40 substitution and insertion mutations were made in a search for regions
that could tolerate insertions for the purpose of retargeting AAV
vectors. By analyzing these mutants, we obtained a preliminary
functional map of the AAV capsid protein. Our results identified
critical regions within the capsid that were potentially responsible
for receptor binding, DNA packaging, capsid formation, and infectivity.
In addition, we identified sites that were suitable for epitope
insertions that might be useful for targeted gene delivery.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell culture.
Low-passage-number (passages 27 to 38) HFK 293 cells (17) and HeLa cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified
Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum, penicillin
(100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 U/ml) at 37°C and 5%
CO2. IB3 cells were propagated as described elsewhere
(34).
Construction of AAV capsid mutant plasmids.
Plasmid pIM45
(previously called pIM29-45 [23]) was used as the
template for all mutant constructions. Mutagenesis was achieved by
using the Stratagene site-directed mutagenesis kit according to the
supplier's manual. For each mutant, we designed two PCR primers which
contained the sequence of alanine substitution or insertion plus a
unique endonuclease restriction site flanked by 15 to 20 homologous bp
on each side of the substitution or insertion. The restriction site was
designed to facilitate subsequent DNA sequencing of the mutants and for
potential insertion of tags or foreign epitopes. The PCR products
were digested with endonuclease DpnI to eliminate the
parental plasmid template and were propagated in Escherichia
coli XL-Blue (Stratagene). Miniprep DNAs were extracted from
ampicillin-resistant colonies and were screened by restriction endonuclease digestion. Positive clones were sequenced in the capsid
ORF region. The capsid ORF was then subcloned back into the pIM45
backbone with SmaI and SphI to eliminate
background mutations. The same mutagenesis strategy was used for
peptide substitution and insertion mutant constructions.
Production of rAAV particles.
To produce rAAV with mutant
capsid proteins, we transfected 293 cells with three plasmids: (i)
pIM45, which supplied either wild-type (wt) or mutant capsid proteins
(23); (ii) pXX6, which contained the adenovirus (Ad) helper
genes (46); and (iii) pTRUF5, which contains the green
fluorescent protein (gfp) gene driven by the cytomegalovirus
(CMV) promoter and flanked by the AAV terminal repeats (22).
In some experiments, pTRUF5 was substituted with CBA-AT, a recombinant
AAV plasmid that contains the human
1-antitrypsin (hAAT) gene under
the control of the CMV-
-actin promoter. The plasmids were mixed at
a 1:1:1 molar ratio. Plasmid DNAs used for transfection were purified
by the QIAGEN Maxi-prep kit according to the supplier's manual.
The transfections were carried out as follows. 293 cells were split 1:2
the day before the transfection so that they could reach 75%
confluency the next day. Ten 15-cm-diameter plates were transfected at
37°C, using calcium phosphate as described elsewhere (51),
and incubated at 37°C. Forty-eight hours after transfection, cells
were harvested by centrifugation at 1,140 × g for 10 min, the pellets were resuspended in 10 ml of lysis buffer (0.15 M NaCl, 50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.5]), and viruses were released by freezing and thawing three times. The crude rAAV lysates were treated with Benzonase (pure grade; Nycomed Pharma A/S) at a final concentration of
50 U/ml at 37°C for 30 min. The crude lysates were clarified by
centrifugation at 3,700 × g for 20 min, and the
supernatant was subjected to further purification by iodixanol step
gradient and heparan sulfate affinity purification as previously
described (51).
To determine whether any of the mutants were temperature sensitive, the
transfections were done in six-well dishes as duplicates
at 39.5 and
32°C. Viruses were resuspended in 250 µl of lysis
buffer. All crude
rAAV preparations were stored at

80°C until
their titers were
determined.
Gel electrophoresis, immunoblotting, and
immunoprecipitation.
Crude or purified rAAV samples were analyzed
on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-10% polyacrylamide gels. The samples
were mixed with sample buffer and boiled at 100°C for 5 min before
loading. For immunoblotting, the proteins were transferred to a
Nitro-bond membrane at 4°C, and the membrane was probed with
monoclonal antibody (MAb) B1, directed against the capsid proteins
(43). The capsid bands were visualized by peroxidase-coupled
secondary antibodies using ECL (enhanced chemiluminescence detection)
(Amersham) as suggested by the supplier.
For immunoprecipitation, heparan column-purified rAAV samples were
diluted in 10 volumes of NETN buffer (0.1 M NaCl, 1 mM
EDTA, 20 mM
Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 0.5% Nonidet P-40) and incubated
overnight at
4°C in the presence of a MAb to the hemagglutinin
(HA) epitope
conjugated to Sepharose beads (BAbCo). For a negative
control, MAb
AU1-conjugated beads (BAbCo) were used. AU1 is a
commonly used
epitope, DTYRYI. After incubation, the samples were
centrifuged for
5 min at 17,600 ×
g at 4°C. The beads were washed
three times with 1 ml of NETN for 10 min at room temperature and
resuspended in protein loading buffer. After centrifugation, the
supernatant was precipitated with 15% trichloroacetic acid on
ice for
1 h and centrifuged for 45 min at 4°C, and the pellet
was
resuspended in loading buffer. The samples then were boiled
in sample
buffer and analyzed by Western blotting with MAb B1
as described
above.
Virus titers.
The infectious titers of rAAV-containing wt
and mutant capsids were measured at two temperatures, 39.5 and 32°C,
for the alanine scanning mutants and at 37°C for all other mutants by
using the fluorescent cell assay, which detects expression of the
gfp gene. This was done essentially as described previously
by Zolotukhin et al. (51). Briefly, 293 cells were seeded in
a 96-well dish the day before infection so that they would reach about
75% confluence the next day. Serial dilutions of wt and mutant
rAAV-GFP crude preparations were added to the cells in the presence of
Ad5 at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 10. The cells and viruses were incubated at 37°C (or 32° and 39.5°C) for 48 h, and the
titers were determined by counting the number of green cells with the fluorescence microscope. For each mutant, the infections were done
twice and the average was taken. For mutants that contained a packaged
CBA-AT gene, infectivity was measured by the infectious center assay on
293 cells as previously described (51) and by enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay (ELISA) measurement of hAAT secreted into culture
media from infected cells as described elsewhere (34).
To determine the rAAV physical particle titer, we used the A20 ELISA
kit (American Research Bioproducts). The crude rAAV stocks
were
serially diluted and incubated with the A20 kit plate. The
readings
that fell into the linear range were taken, and the titers
were read
off the standard according to the manufacturer's instructions.
The A20
antibody detects both full and empty particles (
44).
To determine the titer of rAAV physical particles that were full (i.e.,
contained DNA), we used the quantitative competitive
PCR (QC-PCR) assay
as described previously (
51). The crude rAAV
stocks (100 µl) were digested first with DNase I to eliminate
contaminating
unpackaged DNA in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)-10 mM
MgCl
2 for
1 h at 37°C and then incubated with proteinase K (Boehringer)
in
10 mM Tris HCl (pH 8.0)-10 mM EDTA-1% SDS for 1 h at 37°C.
Viral DNA was extracted twice in phenol-chloroform and once with
chloroform and then precipitated by ethanol in the presence of
glycogen
(10%). The DNA was washed with ethanol, dried, and dissolved
in 100 µl of H
2O, and 1 µl of the viral DNA was used for
QC-PCR.
Serial dilutions of the internal standard plasmid DNA with a
deletion
of GFP were included in the reaction, and the PCR products
were
separated by 2% agarose gel electrophoresis. The densities of
the
target and competitor bands in each lane were measured using
ZERO-Dscan
image analysis system software (version 1.0; Scanalytics)
to determine
the DNA concentration of the virus
stock.
Heparan column binding assay.
The ability of mutants to bind
to heparan sulfate was tested essentially as previously described
(51). Crude rAAV preparations containing wt or mutant
capsids were first subjected to iodixanol gradient purification. The
40% layer was then collected and loaded onto a 1-ml preequilibrated
heparan column at room temperature (immobilized on cross-linked 4%
beaded agarose; Sigma H-6508). The flowthrough fraction, wash (3 column
volumes), and 1 M NaCl eluate were collected, and equivalent amounts of
each sample were mixed with SDS sample buffer and electrophoresed on
SDS-polyacrylamide gels. The yield of capsid proteins in each fraction
was monitored with MAb B1 by Western blotting and ECL detection.
EM.
Electron microscopy (EM) was done in the ICBR EM lab of
the University of Florida. Iodixanol gradient and heparan
column-purified wt or mutant GFP-rAAVs were desalted and concentrated
by using a Centricon 10 filter (Amicon). About a 5-µl drop of the
virus sample was spotted onto carbon-coated grids and left for 1 min at
room temperature. Excess fluid was drawn off, and the sample was washed
three times with phosphate-buffered saline; 5 µl of 1% uranyl
acetate was added for 10 s, and the grid was dried at room
temperature for 10 min before viewing under EM.
 |
RESULTS |
Generation of AAV capsid mutations.
We began our studies by
using alanine scanning site-directed mutagenesis in the hope that some
of the mutants would be temperature sensitive (11). The
mutants were constructed in the noninfectious AAV plasmid, pIM45, which
contains all of the AAV DNA sequence except the AAV terminal repeats.
There are approximately 60 charged clusters in the AAV capsid gene.
Some of the clusters are overlapping; in those cases, only one cluster
was chosen. For the initial round of mutagenesis, 48 sites, named
mut1 to mut48, were targeted. These were
spaced approximately equally over the capsid gene, with 12 mutants exclusively in VP1, 5 in VP2, and the rest in VP3 (Fig.
1). With the exceptions noted below, in
each cluster, all charged amino acids were converted to alanine. The
mutations were created so that they also contained a restriction site
at the site of mutation to facilitate confirmation of the mutant sequence and subsequent insertion of foreign epitopes (Table
1). In
addition, after sequence comparison of AAV serotypes 1 to 6, several
other positions were targeted. mut28 and mut35
were made at positions where extra amino acids were found in AAV4 by
sequence comparison with AAV2. mut32 was made by replacing
TTT with AAA since TTT was not conserved among other AAV serotypes at
aa 454. Finally, in mut29 and mut31, only one Arg
residue was changed to Ala, and in mut45 and
mut48, only one Lys was changed to Ala. The positions of the
alanine scanning mutants and the specific amino acid substitutions are
summarized in Table 1 and Fig. 1.

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FIG. 1.
Distribution of alanine scanning and HA epitope
insertion mutants. Positions of the alanine scanning mutants (colored
circles or squares) and the HA insertion mutants (flagged circles or
squares) are shown on a diagram of the putative secondary structure of
the AAV capsid protein adapted from a comparison of parvovirus capsid
sequences by Chapman and Rossmann (9). Some important amino
acid positions and mutant positions are illustrated by numbers with
short lines. Heavy arrows represent putative sheets, and helices
represent putative helices. The five putative loop regions are
numbered I to V. The colors of the circles indicate the phenotypes of
the mutants as shown below:
|
| Class |
Mutant(s) |
Color |
Primary phenotype |
Defect
|
|
| 1 |
mut1,
mut2, mut3, mut9, mut11,
mut13, mut14, mut16, mut17,
mut29, mut32, mut38,
mut43, mut44, mut45 |
Red |
Wild
type |
| 2a |
mut4, mut5, mut6,
mut7, mut8, mut10, mut12,
mut15, mut18, mut30,
mut34, mut36, mut48; L1, L3, L7,
VPN1, VP1, VPN2 |
Blue |
Partially defective
|
| 2b |
mut21, mut39 |
Light blue |
Partially
defective |
Unstable capsid |
| 2c |
mut41,
L6 |
Purple |
Partially defective |
Heparan binding negative
|
| 3a |
mut26, mut27, mut28,
mut33 |
Green |
Temperature sensitive
|
| 3b |
mut35 |
Purple |
Temperature
sensitive |
Heparan binding negative |
| 4a |
mut22,
mut37; L5, L2 |
Brown |
Noninfectious
|
| 4b |
mut19, mut20, mut23,
mut24, mut25, mut42, mut46,
mut47; VPN3, VPC |
Black |
Noninfectious |
No capsid made
|
| 4c |
mut31 |
White |
Noninfectious |
Empty capsid
|
| 4d |
mut40, L4 |
Purple |
Noninfectious |
Heparan
binding negative |
|
|
|
Infectious titer assays reveal four general classes of
mutants.
To determine the effect of each mutation on viral
infectivity, we used either wt pIM45 or a mutant pIM45 plasmid to
complement the growth of pTRUF5. pTRUF5 is a recombinant AAV plasmid
that contains the gfp gene under the control of a CMV
enhancer-promoter (22). The resulting recombinant TRUF5
virus contained either wt or mutant capsid proteins and could be
titered for infectivity by counting green fluorescent cells in the
presence of an Ad5 coinfection. We had shown previously that the
fluorescent cell assay produced titers within two- to threefold of
those obtained with a conventional infectious center assay
(51). Initially, each mutant was grown and titered at either
39.5 or 32°C to determine if any of the mutants were temperature
sensitive. The experiments were done twice, and there was no
significant variation in titer. On the basis of these titers, the
mutants could be grouped into four classes (Fig.
2; Table 1). Class 1 contained mutants
that have an infectious titer similar to the wt titer (less than 1 log difference; for example, mut1 and mut2).
Class 2 contained partially defective mutants with infectious titers 2 to 3 logs lower than the wt titer (for example, mut4 and
mut5). Class 3 contained temperature-sensitive mutants;
three of these (mut26, mut27, and
mut33) were heat sensitive, and two (mut28 and
mut35) were cold sensitive. Class 4 consisted of 12 noninfectious mutants, whose titers were more than 5 logs lower than
the wt titer.

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FIG. 2.
Infectious titers of virus stocks containing wt and
mutant capsid proteins. The GFP fluorescent cell assay was used to
titer virus stocks of wt and mutant virus stocks containing the pTRUF5
genome. 293 cells were transfected with wt or mutant pIM45
complementing plasmid in the presence of pTRUF5 and pXX6 at 39.5 and
32°C. Cells were collected 48 h posttransfection and then frozen
and thawed three times. The crude lysate was used to infect 293 cells
at 39.5 and 32°C with Ad5 (MOI = 10). The log value of the
average infectious titer (infectious particles/milliliter) that was
obtained from two independent experiments is shown. There was no
significant difference between experiments. The distribution of mutants
unique to VP1, VP2, or VP3 is shown at the top. Asterisks indicate
temperature-sensitive mutants; noninfectious mutants are indicated by
check marks.
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|
Noninfectious (class 4) mutants and temperature-sensitive (class 3)
mutants were defective in packaging DNA or in forming stable virus
particles.
To determine the probable causes for the different
defective mutants, we focused first on class 3 and 4 mutants. For
convenience, we ignored the fact that the temperature-sensitive mutants
had low infectivity when grown at the partially restrictive temperature of 37°C (data not shown), and viral preparations for all class 3 and
4 mutants were made at 37°C. To determine if these mutants were able
to make capsids, we used the A20 ELISA. The A20 antibody recognizes only intact AAV particles (43) and is useful for determining the physical particle titer irrespective of whether the
capsids contain DNA (18). Eight of sixteen mutants that were
tested were negative by ELISA reading (Table
2), indicating that they were unable to
make capsids or that the capsids were unstable even in crude lysate
preparations. All of these were class 4 (noninfectious) mutants and
were classified as class 4b (Table 1; Fig. 1).
QC-PCR assays also were performed on most of the class 3 and 4 mutants.
The QC-PCR assay measures the titer of AAV particles
that contain
DNase-resistant rAAV genomes (Fig.
3). We
have shown
previously that it provides physical particle titers that
are
equivalent to those obtained by dot blot assay but has better
sensitivity at low particle titers (
51). As expected,
mutants
that were negative for the synthesis of AAV particles by A20
ELISA
were also negative by QC-PCR assay (Table
2; Fig.
3). Most of
the
remaining mutants, which were positive for A20 particles,
were also
positive for packaged viral DNA in the QC-PCR assay
(Fig.
3; Table
2).
This group of noninfectious mutants (
mut22
and
mut37) were called class 4a (Table
1; Fig.
1). Their defect
was not in packaging but rather in the binding, internalization,
or
uncoating steps of the viral entry process. One A20-positive
mutant
(
mut31) was an exception in that it was A20 positive but
DNA
negative by QC-PCR assay. This meant that
mut31 formed
intact
virus particles that were empty. To confirm this,
mut31 was examined
by EM (Fig.
4), and it did indeed make empty
particles. In contrast,
the partially defective class 2 mutant,
mut4, produced particles
similar to wt particles.
mut31 was assigned to class 4c (Fig.
1; Table
1).

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FIG. 3.
QC-PCR assay of wt and mutant virus stocks to determine
the DNA-containing particle titers. Crude viruses were treated with
DNase to digest unpackaged DNA and then treated with proteinase K to
release the packaged DNA. The viral DNA was extracted with
phenol-chloroform, precipitated with ethanol, and dissolved in water.
Equal amounts of viral DNA were incubated with (from left to right in
each panel) 100 fg, 1 pg, 10 pg, 100 pg, 1 ng, or none of the pTRUF5
plasmid DNA containing a deletion in the gfp gene and
amplified by PCR. The PCR products were separated on 2% agarose gels
and viewed by ethidium bromide staining. The arrangement of lanes in
each panel is the same. Results for wt pIM45 viral DNA at three
dilutions (1:1, 1:10, and 1:100) are also shown (top left three
panels). Molecular markers were included in the left lane of the top
left panel.
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FIG. 4.
EM analysis of wt (A) and mutant (mut4 [B]
and mut31 [C]) rAAVs. The viruses were purified by
iodixanol step gradient centrifugation and heparan column
chromatography as described elsewhere (51), concentrated in
a Centricon 10, and negatively stained with 1% uranyl acetate.
Bar = 40 nm. Although the iodixanol step gradient might be
expected to remove empty particles, these particles apparently
accumulate at the 25 to 40% interface, and a significant fraction are
recovered during this purification step.
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|
Some mutants are defective for binding the viral receptor.
One
potential cause for the reduced infectivity of class 2, 3, or 4 mutants
might be that they were unable to bind the viral cell surface receptor,
the first step of the infectious cycle. Heparan sulfate proteoglycan
has been identified as the primary cell surface receptor for AAV
(37). To test whether these mutants could bind heparan, we
developed a heparan column binding assay (Materials and Methods).
Iodixanol-purified wt or mutant rAAVs were passed through a heparan
agarose column, and the AAV capsid proteins in the starting material
and the bound (eluate) and unbound (flowthrough and wash) fractions
were monitored by Western blotting using MAb B1, which recognizes all
three capsid proteins (Fig. 5; Table 3).
As expected, wt AAV had a high affinity for the heparan column,
since little capsid protein was detected in the flowthrough and wash
fractions, and most of the capsid protein was detected in the eluate.
The same was true of most of the mutants tested (Fig. 5; Table 3). Two
mutants, however, mut35 and mut41, bound poorly
to heparan (Fig. 5). A third mutant, mut40, which is
located about 20 aa away from mut41, also bound with reduced affinity (Fig. 5). This suggested that the primary defect in these mutants was their inability to bind to heparan sulfate proteoglycan. We
classified mut35 as class 3b (temperature sensitive and
heparan binding negative), mut41 as class 2c (partially
defective and heparan binding negative), and mut40 as
class 4d (noninfectious and heparan binding negative) (Fig. 1; and
Table 1).

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FIG. 5.
Heparan binding properties of mutant viruses. Iodixanol
gradient-purified virus stocks were loaded onto a heparan column.
Equivalent volumes of the starting, 40% iodixanol material (T),
flowthrough (F), wash (W), and eluted (E) fractions were separated on
SDS-10% acrylamide gels and Western blotted with MAb B1. In some
cases, the flowthrough and wash fractions were pooled (FW) and loaded
together.
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|
Three class 4b mutants,
mut20,
mut25, and
mut46, could not be detected by Western analysis (Table
3). This was consistent
with the fact
that they made no capsid that was detectable with
the A20 antibody
(Table
2). Additionally,
mut27, a temperature-sensitive
mutant, and two class 2 mutants,
mut21 and
mut39,
did not give
any Western signal with MAb B1 (Fig.
5; Table
3). The
heat-sensitive
mutant,
mut27, was presumably unstable at the
nonpermissive temperature
used for growing this virus.
mut21
and
mut39 were partially defective
when assayed in crude
extracts (Fig.
2). The fact that they could
not be detected by capsid
antibody after iodixanol centrifugation
suggests that these capsids
were also unstable during purification.
These mutants were assigned to
class 2b on the basis of their
capsid instability (Table
1; Fig.
1).
The rest of the mutants
in class 2 that bind to heparan were classified
as class 2a, partially
defective, and heparan binding positive (Tables
1 and
3; Fig.
1). The nature of their defect was not clear but
presumably was
due to some step in the infectious process that occurs
after viral
attachment to the cell surface.
Regions tolerating alanine substitutions do not tolerate other
kinds of substitutions.
We wanted to determine whether the class 1 mutants defined positions in the capsid genes that were truly
nonessential for capsid function. To test this, we constructed a series
of mutants in which either the serpin receptor ligand, FVFLI
(50), or the FLAG antibody epitope, DYKDDDDKYK,
was substituted for capsid sequences at many of the class 1 mutant
positions (Table 4). A number of class 2 and class 4 mutants were tried as well. The serpin substitution (5 aa)
was the same size as the largest alanine substitutions. The FLAG
epitope is highly charged, as were many of the substituted wt
sequences. As expected, substitutions at class 2 (partially defective)
or class 4 (nonviable) positions did not produce infectious virus
(Table 4). Surprisingly, although many of the class 1 serpin or FLAG
substitutions produced some physical particles detectable with the A20
antibody, only one of the substitutions, serpin at aa 34 (the
mut3 position), produced infectious virus particles in
substantial yield (Table 4). Most infectious titers were reduced by 5 logs or more, and particle titers (as judged by A20 ELISA) were reduced
or undetectable as well. Thus, although modification of charged
residues in class 1 mutants to alanine was permissible, these regions
of the capsid were nevertheless essential for capsid formation and were
sensitive to other kinds of substitutions.
Putative loop regions and the N-terminal regions of VP1 and VP2 are
able to accept insertions of foreign epitopes.
We also chose
several other sites for insertion of foreign sequences. For these
mutants, we chose to insert the less charged HA epitope,
YPVDVPDYA. The target positions for insertion were the
N-terminal regions of the three capsid proteins, VP1, VP2, and VP3, the
C terminus of the cap ORF and seven positions (mutants L1 to L7) that
were believed to be in loop regions of the capsid protein based on an
alignment of the AAV capsid sequence to that of CPV (9).
Since these sites were suspected to be on the surface of the capsid,
insertions at these sites might not affect capsid assembly or stability
(Fig. 1). Mutations in the loop regions had been targeted successfully
before by Girod et al. (15), who were able to insert the L14
ligand at aa 587 without significant loss in infectivity.
Insertions at the N termini of VP1 (VPN1) and VP3 (VPN3) and the C
terminus of the cap ORF (VPC) were not well tolerated (Table
5). To eliminate the possibility that the
defect in these mutants
was due to the HA tag, other tags such as AU,
His, and Myc were
also inserted at the N termini of VP1 and VP3 and the
C terminus
of cap, and they also were not tolerated at those positions
(Table
1 and data not shown). Insertions at three of the putative loop
regions were also not viable (Table
5, mutants L2, L4, and L5).
Mutants
L4 (aa 522) and L5 (aa 553) were interesting in that they
produced a
significant yield of physical particles that were not
infectious.
However, HA insertions were well tolerated at aa 34 within the
N-terminal region of VP1, at the N terminus of VP2, and within
three of
the putative loop regions, loop I (mutant L1), loop IV
(mutants L3 and
L6), and loop V (mutant L7) (Table
5; Fig.
1).
Some HA insertion positions are on the capsid surface.
To
determine whether the HA insertion mutants contained the HA sequence
exposed on the surface of the capsid, we used batch immunoprecipitation
with HA MAb-conjugated beads. In each case virus was purified by
iodixanol density centrifugation and heparan column chromatography to
remove any soluble capsid protein that might be present in crude viral
preparations. As expected, insertion of the HA tag at the N terminus of
VP2 (mutant VPN2) produced a slight increase in the molecular weight of
VP2 and VP1 compared to wt protein, pIM45 (Fig.
6A, 1 mAb). Western blotting with the HA
MAb confirmed that the HA tag was present in both VP1 and VP2 (Fig. 6A,
HA mAb). In the case of the VP1 mutant (HA insertion at aa 34 in VP1),
only VP1 had a higher molecular weight and only VP1 contained the HA
tag (Fig. 6A), as expected. When the viable insertions, VPN2 (HA
insertion at the N terminus of VP2) and VP1 (insertion at aa 34), were
treated with HA MAb-conjugated beads, substantial amounts of both
viruses were precipitated (Fig. 6B, HA mAb). This demonstrated that in
both cases the HA epitope was on the surface of the virus particle
and accessible to the antibody. Control wt virus particles (Fig. 6B,
pIM45), were not precipitated with HA MAb to any significant extent.
The amount of virus in the starting material was monitored by Western
blotting with B1 or HA MAb.

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FIG. 6.
Immunoprecipitation analysis of VP1 and VPN2 HA
insertion mutants to determine the accessibility of the HA epitope.
(A) Western blot analysis of iodixanol gradient-purified viruses with
either B1 (left) or HA (right) MAb. (B) Iodixanol gradient and heparan
column-purified viruses were precipitated with HA antibody coupled to
agarose beads. The bound virus (Anti-HA mAb lanes) was eluted with SDS
sample buffer and detected by Western blotting using MAb B1. For
comparison, virus that had not been treated with HA MAb (Total sample)
was also Western blotted with the B1 antibody.
|
|
The putative loop HA insertion mutants, L1 to L7, were also incubated
with HA MAb-conjugated beads. Although the insertions
in some of these
mutants produced noninfectious virus, they all
produced sufficient A20
antibody-positive virus particles to test
for the presence of the HA
tag on the surface of the capsid. When
this was done, all of the
L-series insertions were shown to be
in the immunoprecipitate (bound
fraction) compared to the wt (pIM45)
control (Fig.
7A). This demonstrated that each of these
insertions
at putative loop sites resulted in the HA epitope being
on the
surface of the capsid.

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FIG. 7.
Properties of HA insertion mutants. (A)
Immunoprecipitation of HA loop insertion mutants to determine whether
HA is exposed on the capsid surface. Iodixanol gradient and heparan
column-purified viruses were incubated with HA MAb beads as described
for Fig. 6. The antibody bound (B) and unbound (UB) fractions were
separated on SDS-10% gels and detected by Western blotting with MAb
B1. As a negative control, AU MAb was used in the panel marked AU. The
pIM45 panel contained recombinant virus made with the wt helper
plasmid. (B) Heparan binding properties of wt and HA loop insertion
mutants. The virus samples were treated as described for Fig. 5. Virus
in the starting material (T), flowthrough (F), wash (W), combined
flowthrough and wash (FW), or eluate (E) was detected by Western
blotting with MAb B1. pIM45 is virus with wt capsid.
|
|
We also checked whether these loop insertions affected heparan binding
of the mutant capsids. Interestingly, two loop insertion
mutants, L4
and L6, were found to bind heparan columns with reduced
affinity (Fig.
7B), which probably accounted for the lower infectivity
of these
mutants in the standard fluorescent cell assay. The L4
and L6
insertions were near the heparan-binding-negative mutants
mut35,
mut40, and
mut41 (Fig.
1). All five of these heparan-binding-negative
mutants were located
between aa 509 and 591, suggesting that this
region within the AAV
capsid constitutes the heparan binding domain
of the capsid
protein.
Changing the tropism of AAV.
To determine whether we could
change the tropism of rAAV by inserting a novel receptor ligand into
the capsid, we constructed two mutant plasmids that contained a serpin
receptor ligand. In one case the serpin ligand FVFLI
(50) was substituted for the AAV capsid sequence immediately
after aa 34. In the second mutant an expanded serpin receptor
ligand, KFNKPFVFLI (50), was inserted at the N terminus of
VP2, aa 138 (Table 1). The mutant capsid plasmids were then used to
package CBA-AT, an rAAV genome that contained the hAAT gene under the
control of a hybrid CMV-
-actin promoter. As seen with the HA
insertion mutants described above, the serpin mutants produced rAAV
viral titers that were slightly (sixfold) lower in infectivity when
titered by the infectious center assay on 293 cells (data not shown).
However, when equal amounts of wt or mutant virus (as determined on 293 cells) were infected into IB3 cells, both mutant viruses showed
substantially higher infectivity than wt (Fig.
8). The VP2 serpin insertion was 15-fold
more infectious, and the VP1 substitution mutant was approximately
62-fold more active. This suggested that IB3 cells, a lung epithelial
cell line believed to express the serpin receptor, were a much better
target for the serpin-tagged chimeric rAAVs than wt and that the
tropism of the mutant rAAVs had been changed. Because both mutants
retained the wt heparan binding region, we also infected IB3 cells in
the presence of heparan sulfate to see if they continued to use heparan
sulfate proteoglycan for viral entry. When this was done, both wt and
mutant infectivity dropped to barely detectable levels (Fig. 8). Taken
together, these findings suggested that the serpin-tagged viruses
continued to use heparan sulfate proteoglycan as the primary receptor
and were using an alternative coreceptor, presumably the serpin
receptor.

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FIG. 8.
Infection of IB3 cells with wt and mutant viruses
containing a serpin ligand insertion. IB3 cells (1.5 × 105 per 15-mm well) were infected with Ad5 for 60 min at an
MOI of 10 and washed twice with medium. The cells then were infected
for 60 min at an MOI of 400 with rAAV containing a genome that
expressed the hAAT gene under the control of a CMV- -actin hybrid
promoter. Following infection, the cells were washed with medium and
incubated at 37°C. At 72 h postinfection, medium samples were
taken to determine the AAT concentration by ELISA. All experiments were
done in triplicate, and the average for each experiment is shown. WT
indicates that rAAV containing a wt AAV capsid (grown by
complementation with pIM45) was used. VP1 virus was grown by
complementation with a mutant plasmid containing the serpin ligand
sequence (FVFLI) substituted for the AAV capsid sequence after aa 34 of
the cap ORF. VP2 virus contained a serpin insertion (KFNKPFVFLI) at the
N terminus of VP2, aa 138 of the cap ORF. In the +HS samples, rAAV
infection was done in the presence of soluble heparan sulfate at a
concentration of 2 mg/ml.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
In this study we describe the phenotypes of 93 AAV2 capsid mutants
at 59 different positions within the capsid ORF. Several classes of
mutants were analyzed, including epitope tag or peptide ligand
insertion mutants, alanine scanning mutants, and epitope substitution mutants. From this, we could identify some eight separate
phenotypes (Fig. 1; Table 1).
Noninfectious mutants.
The bulk of the mutants that were
noninfectious either were unable to assemble capsids or the capsids
were unstable. These mutants (class 4b) were located predominantly but
not exclusively in what are likely to be
-strand structures in the
capsid proteins (Fig. 1). Two of these mutants were insertions at the
N- and C-terminal residues of VP3, suggesting that both ends of VP3
play a role that is important for capsid assembly or stability. We note
that Ruffing et al. (32) have previously characterized
deletions of the C terminus of the capsid ORF, and these deletions also were noninfectious.
One noninfectious mutant,
mut31, produced viable capsids
that were empty. This mutant, which consists of a single amino acid
substitution (R432A), was apparently defective in packaging viral
DNA
and is located in putative loop IV (Fig.
1). It is not clear
what the
mechanism of viral DNA packaging is. Ruffing et al. (
33)
demonstrated that empty capsids could assemble in the absence
of viral
DNA. Some studies have suggested that packaging is an
active process
that requires interaction of Rep proteins with
capsid proteins
(
42) or possibly is coupled with DNA replication
(
49). Further studies with
mut31 may be helpful
in understanding
the mechanism of
packaging.
Most of the remaining noninfectious mutants (Fig.
1, class 4a) were
capable of assembling capsids and packaging DNA. These
are likely to be
defective in some aspect of viral entry or uncoating
and will require
further study to uncover the mechanism of the
defect.
Receptor binding mutants.
Two of the noninfectious mutants,
mut40 and L4, were apparently noninfectious because they
were unable to bind to heparan sulfate (Fig. 1, class 4d). Heparan
sulfate proteoglycan is believed to be the primary cell surface
receptor for AAV (37). Three other mutants also were
identified as defective for binding heparan sulfate, two partially
defective mutants (Fig. 1, class 2c) and one temperature-sensitive
mutant (class 3b). Together, the five mutants were distributed into two
clusters in loop IV that were separated by 40 aa. The first cluster
spanned aa 509 to 520 (mut35 and L4); the second was between
aa 561 and 591 (mut40, mut41, and L6). Mutants L4
and L6 consisted of HA epitope insertions into the two heparan
binding clusters. These were found to be capable of being
immunoprecipitated by HA MAb, confirming that these positions were on
the surface of the capsid. We note also that Girod et al.
(15) reported that insertion of the L14 epitope at aa
587, the position of our heparan-negative mut41 mutant, was
capable of targeting the virus to the L14 receptor, thus confirming that this region is on the surface of the capsid. A heparan-negative insertion mutant also was reported by Rabinowitz et al. (30) while this report was in preparation; it fell near the first cluster at
aa 522. Taken together, analyses of these mutants suggest that the
putative loop IV region contains two blocks of residues that are on the
surface of the capsid and involved in heparan sulfate binding.
A heparan binding motif which consists of a negatively charged amino
acid cluster of the type XBBBXXBX (where B is a basic
amino acid and X
is any amino acid) has been identified in several
receptors and viruses
(
19a). Regions containing these clusters
also appear to be
sensitive to spacing changes. Although no heparan
binding consensus
motif of this kind was found in our heparan
binding mutants, there were
basic amino acids near these domains.
mut35, an insertion at
aa 509, was near basic amino acids K507
and H509. Interestingly, K507
is conserved in AAV1, -2, -3, -4,
and -6 and in AAV5 is an R. H509 is
present only in AAV2 and -3.
AAV1, -2, and -3 are known to bind to
heparan sulfate, while AAV4
and -5 do not. Additionally, L4, an
insertion at aa 520, was near
basic amino acids H526 and K527, and L6,
an insertion at aa 591,
was near R585 and R588. H526 and K527 are
conserved except for
AAV4 and -5, while R585 and R588 are unique to
AAV2. For all of
these mutants, the insertions could have disrupted
local conformation
that hindered normal heparan binding. For
mut41, R-to-A substitutions
at aa 585 and 588 might
contribute directly to reduced heparan
binding. Finally,
mut40 did not affect either basic amino acids
or spacing
within the capsid
protein.
Capsid regions that are on the surface of the virus particle.
In addition to the heparan binding clusters, several other regions were
also present on the capsid surface. These include four of the five
putative loop regions (mutants L1 to L7), the N terminus of VP2 (mutant
VPN2), and a region within the N terminus of VP1 at amino acid 34 (mutant VP1). HA epitope insertions at these positions were all
capable of being immunoprecipitated with anti-HA antibody (Fig. 6 and
7). We note that the L1 insertion mutant at aa 266 had the peculiar
phenotype of being partially viable (Table 1) but was not detectable
with the A20 MAb, an antibody that recognizes a conformational
epitope that is present only in intact viral particles. A nearby
capsid-forming mutant made by Girod et al. (15) at aa 261 was also negative for A20 antibody binding. This suggests that at least
part of the epitope for the A20 MAb consists of amino acids between
261 and 266 and confirms that this region is on the surface of the
intact particle.
Of the positions identified as being on the surface of the capsid, we
found six that potentially are capable of accepting
foreign epitope
or ligand insertions for retargeting the viral
capsid to alternative
receptors. These are the N-terminal region
of VP1 (near aa 34), the N
terminus of VP2 (aa 138), the loop
I region (aa 266), the loop IV
region (near aa 447 and 591), and
the loop V region (aa 664). All of
these locations were capable
of tolerating an HA (or serpin) insertion
and produced recombinant
virus titers that were within 1 to 2 logs of
the wt value. Furthermore,
HA epitope insertions at these positions
were capable of being
immunoprecipitated with anti-HA antibody (Fig.
6
and
7). Two of
these positions, when tested with a serpin ligand
insertion or
substitution, produced virus that was much more infectious
on
IB3 cells than wt virus. Curiously, both serpin mutants were still
inhibited by soluble heparan sulfate, suggesting that heparan
sulfate
proteoglycan was still the primary receptor for these
mutants and that
the serpin receptor was being used as an alternative
coreceptor. It is
conceivable that one or both of these capsid
positions is involved in
binding to one or both of the proteins
that normally act as coreceptors
for wt virus, fibroblast growth
factor (
28), or integrin
v
5 (
36). This would explain
their
partial defect on 293 cells and the recovery of infectivity on
IB3 cells. Further studies will be needed to test this
possibility.
Mutants with unstable capsids and temperature-sensitive
phenotypes.
Three mutants, mut21,
mut27, and mut39, were found to have capsids that
were unstable when purified through an iodixanol gradient. Iodixanol is an iso-osmotic gradient purification method that appears
to be gentler than CsCl centrifugation (51). Thus, these mutants appear to be particularly sensitive to capsid denaturation. mut21 and mut27 are in putative
sheets, and
mut39 is in loop IV. It is worth noting that Rabinowitz et
al. (30) also isolated an unstable capsid mutant at aa 247 that is near the mut21 position, aa 254. mut27 is
also one of five temperature-sensitive mutants isolated during this
study. The temperature-sensitive mutants and the unstable capsid
mutants should prove useful in future studies for identifying
steps in the capsid assembly or the infection process.
Viable and partially defective mutants.
The two largest
classes of mutants isolated were either wt (class 1) or partially
defective (class 2a) with no identifiable defect (Fig. 1). Both class 1 and class 2a mutants were distributed either in the VP1 and VP2 unique
regions or in the predicted loop regions of the capsid protein. We
naively assumed that class 1 mutant positions, which produced viable
capsids after substitution of two to five alanine residues, were
regions that were nonessential for capsid assembly or stability and
therefore should accommodate other kinds of substitutions. However,
when serpin or FLAG epitopes were substituted at many of these
sites, most of the mutants were nonviable, with the exception of aa 34 in VP1. Indeed, many of these viruses were negative for capsid assembly
and should also be useful for identifying possible intermediates in
capsid assembly.
Ruffing et al. (
33) showed previously that VP1 and VP2 but
not VP3 contained nuclear localization signals (NLS), and three
putative NLS are located in the VP1/VP2 region at aa 121 to 125,
141 to
145, and 167 to 171. Hoque et al. (
19b) have shown that
aa
167 to 172 were sufficient to target VP2 to the nucleus, although
their
experiments did not rule out possible redundancy with the
other two
putative NLS sequences. All three of these putative
signals were
targeted with alanine scanning mutants (
mut12,
mut13,
and
mut15) in our study. Two of these
mutants,
mut12 and
mut15,
were partially
defective, and the inactivation of an NLS may be
the reason for their
phenotype (
19b,
33). We note that
mut15
should
have eliminated the NLS identified by Hoque and colleagues.
The fact
that
mut15 was only partially defective suggests that
there
may be an alternative, redundant NLS sequences that are
used by
the capsid proteins. The third mutant (
mut13) was classified
as viable, but it also showed a lower than wt titer (Fig.
1).
Molecular computer graphics construction of an AAV model and
structural localization of mutant residues.
Because the AAV
crystal structure is not available, the atomic coordinates of CPV VP2
(PDB accession no. 4DPV) were interactively mutated using the program O
(20) to generate a homology-based model of the AAV capsid,
using modifications of the alignments of the AAV major capsid protein
(VP3) with the VP2 capsid protein of CPV (9, 15). The
mutations were followed by refinement constrained with standard
geometry in the O database. The model provided a means for preliminary
structural identification of the heparan receptor attachment sites in
the surface depression (dimple) near the twofold icosahedral axes of
the capsid, surface loop regions which can tolerate foreign peptide
sequence insertions, and a possible explanation for the phenotype of
mut31 (Fig. 9).

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FIG. 9.
Ribbon diagrams of a dimer of the AAV VP3 model built
based on structural alignments with the VP2 capsid protein of CPV. The
view is down an icosahedral twofold axis. The strands of the -barrel
motif are colored blue, and the portion of VP3 in green indicates the
heparan binding region. The rest of VP3 is depicted in red. The blue
ball identifies the location of residue R432 mutated to an alanine in
mut31. The gray balls identify the location of residues 266, 477, 591, and 664 (which had HA insertions in mutants L1, L3, L6, and
L7, respectively). The large triangle indicates an icosahedral
asymmetric unit.
|
|
The topographic location of the putative heparan binding region is
consistent with regions that have been suggested as being
involved in
host cellular factor(s) recognition and implicated
in tissue tropism
and
in vivo pathogenicity for other parvoviruses
(
3,
4,
24,
39). It is of interest that the putative
heparan binding site
is adjacent to a region of the AAV capsid
that contains a peptide
insert when the AAV VP3 sequence is compared
to that of CPV VP2 and the
VP2 of most of the other autonomous
parvovirus sequences
(
9). Also a similar insertion of peptide
sequences compared
to CPV (although not in a homologous region
of the VP2 to that observed
in AAV) is present in the capsid of
Aleutian mink disease parvovirus
and minute virus of mice, proximal
to residues in the dimple depression
which are implicated in tissue
tropism (
24). Thus, these
insertions may be capsid surface adaptations
that enable the capsids to
recognize different receptors during
infection. In the case of AAV, its
dimple peptide insertion, which
is absent in the other parvoviruses,
may enable it to recognize
heparan sulfate, which has not been
implicated in cellular infectivity
by any other
parvovirus.
The model also clearly shows that regions of the capsid which tolerated
the insertions of the HA epitope (i.e., at residues
266, 447, 591, and 664) are on the surface loops present between
the

strands of
the

-barrel motif (Fig.
9). The

-barrel motif
forms the core
contiguous shell of parvovirus capsids, while the
surface loops make up
the surface decorations, dictating the strain-specific
biological
properties of the members. The observation that these
surface regions
can tolerate foreign peptide insertion is an indication
that they are
not involved in the interactions that govern capsid
assembly.
Finally, the model provides a possible explanation for the observation
that
mut31 (R432A) is able to form only empty particles.
In
the unassembled VP3 monomer, the side chain of R432, points
toward the
interior of the capsid and would most likely be in
contact with DNA. If
recognition and encapsidation of AAV DNA
precede final capsid assembly
and involve oligomeric intermediates,
then R432 contacts with DNA may
be essential for initiating capsid
assembly around a nascent DNA
strand.
In summary, we have reported a preliminary analysis of mutants at
59 positions within the AAV2 capsid ORF. We have identified
regions in
the capsid proteins that affect infectivity, capsid
formation, capsid
stability, DNA packaging, and receptor binding.
These mutants should be
valuable for defining the functional domains
of AAV capsid proteins and
for dissecting the molecular mechanism
of viral entry. Additionally, we
have defined a number of regions
in the capsid gene at which foreign
ligands can be inserted and
have demonstrated that insertion of a
foreign receptor ligand
at some of these positions can change the
tropism of the virus.
This is the first step in the development of the
next generation
of AAV vectors, which can be targeted to specific
cellular receptors
or
tissues.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank J. Kleinschmidt for kindly providing MAbs A20 and B1. We
also thank R. J. Samulski for providing plasmid pXX6. We acknowledge the Vector Core Laboratory at the Powell Gene Therapy Center, University of Florida Medical School, for technical assistance on rAAV production. We thank Corrine Abernathy, Daniel Lackner, and
Eric Kolbrener for help on this project.
This work was supported by grants PO1 HL59412, PO1 HL51811, and PO1
NS36302 from the National Institutes of Health.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, P.O. Box 100266, College of
Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32610. Phone: (352)
392-5913. Fax: (352) 392-5914. E-mail:
muzyczka{at}mgm.ufl.edu.
 |
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Journal of Virology, September 2000, p. 8635-8647, Vol. 74, No. 18
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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