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Journal of Virology, March 2007, p. 2688-2699, Vol. 81, No. 6
0022-538X/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.02722-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Virotherapy Lab, Department of Dermatology, University Hospital Erlangen, Hartmannstr. 14, Erlangen, Germany,1 Helmholtz-University Group Oncolytic Adenoviruses at DKFZ and Department of Dermatology, German Cancer Research Center and Heidelberg University Hospital, Im Neuenheimer Feld 242, Heidelberg, Germany,2 Institute of Cell Biology and Immunology, University of Stuttgart, Allmandring 31, Stuttgart, Germany3
Received 11 December 2006/ Accepted 11 December 2006
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Targeting cell entry of adenoviruses requires both the ablation of the native adenovirus tropism, especially for hepatocytes, and the incorporation of targeting ligands into the virus capsid. These aims have been achieved by complexing adenoviruses with different types of bispecific adapter molecules (5). Genetic strategies of adenoviral tropism modification, however, are advantageous because they provide a one-component drug and, in the context of viral oncolysis, tropism-modified progeny viruses.
Genetic tropism modification of adenoviruses has been pursued by insertion of peptide ligands, such as RGD peptides, polylysine, or targeting peptides isolated by phage display technology, into the knob domain of the Ad5 fiber protein (14, 29, 46). Note that the insertion of recombinant antibody fragments as targeting ligands into adenovirus capsids is hampered by the improper folding of most antibodies in the cytosol, where adenovirus proteins are produced (as discussed in reference 12). Genetic deletion of the native adenovirus tropism has been pursued by mutating those motifs within the Ad5 fiber knob domain which mediate binding to the primary adenovirus receptor CAR. Ablation of CAR binding resulted in strongly reduced gene transfer efficacy in vitro but had no or only a minimal effect on hepatocyte transduction in vivo in mice, rats, and nonhuman primates (3, 22, 31, 33, 39, 40). Gene transfer efficacy was further reduced in vitro and in some, but not all, studies also in vivo by mutation of the RGD motif of the penton base, which binds to cellular integrins and thereby triggers virus internalization (1, 15, 23, 31, 37). However, ablation of integrin binding also affects postentry steps of the adenoviral life cycle, which might be required for targeted cell entry. These include endosomal release, which is penton dependent (37). Recent reports revealed that the fiber shaft plays an important role in adenovirus cell binding and entry. The mutation of a putative heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG)-binding KKTK motif in the Ad5 shaft resulted in reduced virus transduction in vitro and in vivo (31, 40, 41). Furthermore, replacement of the Ad5 fiber shaft with a short shaft derived from the Ad35 or short Ad40 fiber mediated reduced liver transduction (21, 25). Note that modification of the fiber shaft might affect virus cell binding directly, i.e., by ablation of HSPG binding, or indirectly by preventing the accessibility of the cell binding motif of the knob domain to its receptor (41, 47). In the context of genetic virus targeting, it is therefore important to ensure that ligands inserted into the knob domain retain their target cell binding capacity after modification of the fiber shaft. Finally, in addition to direct interactions between Ad5 and cellular receptors, blood factors have been described to bind to the Ad5 fiber knob and to provide a bridge for indirect cell binding and entry of Ad5 virions (38).
Recently, the short fibers of subgroup F adenovirus serotypes 40 and 41 were suggested as tools for adenovirus targeting (25). These adenovirus serotypes contain two fiber molecules, a long and a short fiber, with the former being responsible for cell binding via CAR. The function of the short fiber is not completely understood to date, and no cellular receptor has been described. Hence, it was hypothesized that it does not mediate cell binding (25, 34). In this regard, several studies observed that adenoviruses with chimeric fibers did not mediate efficient adenoviral gene transfer in vitro and in vivo (25, 31, 34, 35). In conclusion, the short fibers of subgroup F adenoviruses constitute a scaffold of interest for target ligand insertion into adenovirus capsids.
The prime objective of this study was to define insertion sites for targeting peptides in the Ad41 short fiber knob. Heretofore, functional internal ligand insertions have been reported for the long-shafted Ad5 fiber only (14, 29). Towards our goal, we inserted the RGD peptide CDCRGDCFC as a model ligand into five loops of the Ad41 short (Ad41s) fiber knob or fused it via one of two differently sized linkers to the knob's C terminus. Chimeric fibers contained the Ad41 short fiber shaft and Ad5 fiber tail domains. For one construct, we also generated a matching fiber with the Ad41s fiber tail in order to compare the efficiencies of fiber incorporation into Ad5 capsids. Recombinant fiber molecules were analyzed for trimerization and incorporation into Ad5-based virions. The transduction efficacies of the resulting viruses were assessed in melanoma cells and various primary normal cells. Finally, starting from one successful chimeric fiber with an internal peptide insertion site, we generated and characterized three derivatives, featuring a tandem RGD peptide insert, an extended, 83-amino-acid RGD-containing insert, or the long Ad5 fiber shaft with a mutated KKTK motif. We hypothesized that these derivatives might further enhance adenovirus transduction efficacy by improving the accessibility or avidity of the inserted peptide ligands for interaction with cellular integrins.
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Fiber expression plasmids. Plasmid pDV67 (45) was used for expression of the Ad5 fiber. Expression plasmids for the different Ad41 short fiber-derived constructs (see Fig. 1 for an outline) were cloned as follows. The adenovirus serotype 5 tripartite leader (first exon, first intron, and fused second and third exons) of plasmid pDV55 (45) was inserted as a BamHI/BglII fragment into the BamHI site of pcDNA3.1/Hygro+ (Invitrogen) to generate pcDNAtpl. Subsequently, pcDNAtpl was digested with BamHI, blunted, and religated to generate pcDNAtplB. Open reading frames for the different fiber constructs were inserted into pcDNAtplB as EcoRI/XbaI fragments by PCR cloning with Ad41 genomic DNA (kindly provided by J. Chroboczek, Grenoble, France). For insertion of RGD peptides, fiber constructs were generated to contain a GGSGG linker in the AB, DE, EG, HI, or IJ loop of the Ad41 short fiber knob. For C-terminal fusion, a (GS)5 linker or GSP(SA)4PGSGS long linker was introduced. The following oligonucleotides were used for PCR cloning: F41sATG_Eco, 5'-GATCGAATTCCACCATGAAAAGAACCAGAATTGAAG; F5ATG_Eco, 5'-GATCGAATTCCACCATGAAGCGCGCAAGACCGTCTG; F5/F41SRevnew, 5'-CTTGAGTGCTAATACCCCAGGGGGACTCTCTTG; F5/F41Sfornew, 5'-CCTGGGGTATTAGCACTCAAGTACACTGACC; F41rev_Xba, 5'-GATCTCTAGATCATTATTGTTCAGTTATGTAGCAAAATAC; F41revlonglink_Xba, 5'-GATCTCTAGAGGATCCGGAGCCGGGCGCGCTG; SBLF41revnew, 5'-CGATTACGTAGGATCCGGAGCCGGGCGCGCTGGCCGACGCGCTGGCGGAGGGAGATCCTTGTTCAGTTATGTAGCAAAATACAG; F41revlink_Xba, 5'-GATCTCTAGAGGATCCCGAGCCACTGCCCGACCCGGAGCCTTGTTCAGTTATGTAGCAAAATAC; F41sIJlinkfor, 5'-GAACCGGGAGGATCCGGAGGGGGAAAACCTTTTCACCCACC; F41sIJlinkrev, 5'-CCCTCCGGATCCTCCCGGTTCGGCTGACCATTTAAAAG; F41sDElinkfor, 5'-TCATCCGGAGGATCCGGAGGGACCTGGCGTTACCAGGAAACC; F41sDElinkrev, 5'-CCCTCCGGATCCTCCGGATGATTCCAAGGCACAG; F41sEGlinkfor, 5'-CCACGAGGAGGATCCGGAGGGAACAAAACCGCTCACCCGGGC; F41sEGlinkrev, 5'-CCCTCCGGATCCTCCTCGTGGATACACTGTACTGTTG; F41sHIlinkfor, 5'-GATAAACGGAGGATCCGGAGGGAGTGGGTATGCTTTTACTTTTAAATG; F41sHIlinkrev, 5'-CCCTCCGGATCCTCCGTTTATCTCGTTGTAGACGACAC; F41sABlinkfor, 5'-CATTTATGGAGGATCCGGAGGGGAAACCCAAGATGCAAACCTATTTC; and F41sABlinkrev, 5'-CCCTCCGGATCCTCCATAAATGGAGCAGTTAGGCGTAG. Subsequently, sequences encoding the CDCRGDCFC peptide were inserted into the BamHI sites of the linkers by oligonucleotide cloning. For internal insertion, oligonucleotides RGDts (5'-GATCGTGTGACTGCAGGGGAGACTGTTTCTGCG) and RGDbs (5'-GATCCGCAGAAACAGTCTCCCCTGCAGTCACAC) were used, and for C-terminal insertion, oligonucleotides RGD_stop_ts (5'-GATCGTGTGACTGCAGGGGAGACTGTTTCTGCTGATAAG) and RGD_stop_bs (5'-GATCCTTATCAGCAGAAACAGTCTCCCCTGCAGTCACAC) were used. An expression plasmid for the Ad5/41s chimeric fiber with the 83-amino-acid RGD-containing loop of the Ad5 penton base (8) in the IJ fiber loop was generated by insertion of a PCR fragment into the BamHI site of the linker, using oligonucleotides PentonRGD_Bglfor (5'-GATCAGATCTACCGAACAGGGCGGGG) and PentonRGD_Bamrev (5'-GATCGGATCCCAGGGGTTTGATCACCGGTTT). A construct encoding a chimeric fiber with the Ad5 tail and shaft containing a mutated heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan binding site (41) and the knob of the Ad41 short fiber with the RGD peptide in the IJ loop was cloned by one step with the oligonucleotides Ad41sAgeIERVfor (5'-GATCACCGGTGATATCTCGCCTACGCCTAACTGC) and F41rev_Xba (see above) and by subsequent two-step PCR with oligonucleotides F5_AgeI_for (5'-TGACACGGAAACCGGTCCTC), KKTKrev (5'-ATGTTTGAGGCTCCGGCTCCGAGAGGTGGGCTCACAGTGG), KKTKfor (5'-GGAGCCGGAGCCTCAAACATAAACCTGGAAATATCTG), and F5shaft_NruI rev (5'-GATCTCGCGACCAAATAGTTAGCTTATCATTATTTTTGTTTC).
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FIG. 1. Outline of RGD peptide insertions into various positions of the Ad41s fiber knob. (A) Expression plasmids based on pF5/41s encode recombinant fiber proteins with the Ad5 fiber tail (amino acids 1 to 46) fused to the Ad41s fiber shaft and knob (starting with amino acid 45), resulting in the fusion site sequence PPGV/LALK. Plasmid pF41sCLL-RGD is based on a construct that encodes a recombinant fiber protein with the tail, shaft, and knob domains of the Ad41s fiber. (B) A CDCRGDCFC peptide with the indicated linkers (italic) was inserted into the AB, DE, EG, HI, or IJ loop of the Ad41s fiber knob (illustrated at the top), generating pF5/41sAB-RGD, pF5/41sDE-RGD, pF5/41sEG-RGD, pF5/41sHI-RGD, and pF5/41sIJ-RGD, respectively (numbers in parentheses refer to the amino acid positions of the Ad41s fiber that flank the insertion site; amino acids that flank the insertion site are shown in single-letter code). Fusion of the peptide via a short linker and a long linker to the C terminus of the Ad41s fiber knob resulted in pF5/41sCL-RGD and pF5/41sCLL-RGD, respectively. Plasmid pF41sCLL-RGD is identical to pF5/41sCLL-RGD but contains the tail domain of the Ad41s fiber. (C) Structure of the Ad41s fiber knob (36), with positions chosen for insertion of the RGD peptide indicated in color. (Left panel) Knob monomer seen from the side (its position relative to the fiber shaft is indicated); (right panel) knob monomer seen from the top (positions of interacting monomers in the trimeric molecule are indicated). Structures were visualized using the program PyMOL (13).
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F (44) was propagated on 633 cells (45), which were treated with 0.3 µM dexamethasone for 24 h prior to and during infection. Ad5.ßgal.
F is an E1-, E3-, and fiber-deleted adenovirus vector that contains a ß-galactosidase (ß-Gal) reporter cassette in the E1 region. During propagation in 633 cells, the Ad5 fiber protein is complemented, thus generating Ad5.ßgal.
F/F+, which contains the wild-type Ad5 fiber but no fiber gene. Mutated fiber proteins were incorporated into adenoviral particles by using a transient transfection/infection system (modified by the method of Jakubczak et al. [18]). For each virus preparation, four T175 tissue culture flasks of 80% confluent 293T cells were transfected with fiber expression plasmids, using either Lipofectamine (Invitrogen) or Nanofectin (PAA) according to the manufacturer's protocol. Briefly, 100 µg DNA in 2 ml OptiMEM (Invitrogen) was mixed with 300 µl Lipofectamine in 2 ml OptiMEM and incubated for 20 min. Cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline, and subsequently, 10 ml OptiMEM and 1 ml transfection mix were added to each flask. The transfection mix was replaced by 28 ml growth medium after 4 h of incubation. For Nanofectin transfections, 100 µg DNA in 5 ml 150 mM NaCl and 200 µl Nanofectin in 5 ml 150 mM NaCl were mixed by adding the Nanofectin solution to the DNA solution and were then incubated for 20 min. The medium on the cells was replaced by 10 ml fresh growth medium and 2.5 ml transfection mixture, added dropwise to each flask. After 4 h of incubation, 18 ml of growth medium was added. Twenty-four hours after transfection, cells were infected with 2e11 viral particles (VP)/flask of Ad5.ßgal.
F/F+ in infection medium (similar to growth medium, but with 2% fetal calf serum [FCS]). Cells were carefully agitated for 1 h, and after further incubation for 2 h, the infection medium was replaced by growth medium. The medium was replaced by fresh medium the next day, and cells were harvested at 2 days postinfection, when complete cytopathic effect was observed. All viruses were purified by two rounds of cesium chloride equilibrium density gradient ultracentrifugation. Verification of adenovirus preparations and exclusion of wild-type contamination were performed by PCR. Physical particle concentrations (VP/ml) were determined by reading the optical density at 260 nm for Ad5.ßgal.
F/F+ and for viruses produced by Lipofectamine transfection. Physical particle concentrations for viruses produced by Nanofectin transfection were determined by real-time PCR. The infectious particle concentration was determined for Ad5.ßgal.
F/F+ by a 50% tissue culture infective dose assay on 633 cells, and the VP/50% tissue culture infective dose ratio was 60. Transient transfection assays. For plasmid transfection, 5 x 105 293T cells were seeded per well in a six-well plate. Cells were transfected the next day with 2 µg of plasmid per well, using Lipofectamine (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Seventy-two hours after transfection, cells were lysed in 100 µl radioimmunoprecipitation assay buffer for immunoblot analysis.
Adenoviral gene transfer assays. Cells were seeded in 48-well plates at a concentration of 1.5 x 104 cells (HUVEC) or 2 x 104 cells (NHK, NHF, and melanoma cells) in 0.5 ml of medium per well and grown overnight at 37°C and 5% CO2. The following day, the medium was removed from cell monolayers, and the cells were transduced in triplicate with adenoviruses in 0.1 ml medium containing 2% FCS. After 4 h, 0.5 ml of growth medium was added. For peptide blocking experiments, cells were incubated for 30 min on ice with 2 mg/ml GRGDS or GRGES peptide (EMC Microcollections, Tübingen, Germany) in medium containing 2% FCS or with medium only. Subsequently, viruses were added in triplicate in 50 µl of medium containing 2% FCS. After incubation for 1.5 h at 37°C and 5% CO2, peptides and viruses were removed, cells were washed once with phosphate-buffered saline, and 0.5 ml of growth medium was added. Cells were harvested for ß-Gal assay at 2 days postinfection. All experiments were repeated at least once and gave similar results. Data for representative experiments are shown.
Immunoblotting. Cell lysates with 30 µg of protein, boiled or unboiled, or 8 x 108 VP of CsCl-purified virus (boiled) were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in 10% gels and transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane (Schleicher und Schuell, Dassel, Germany). Membranes were probed with a mouse monoclonal antibody specific for monomeric or trimeric fibers (clone 4D2, which binds to the Ad5 fiber tail; Biomeda, Eching, Germany). As a loading control, membranes were probed with a mouse monoclonal antibody specific for ß-actin (for cell lysates) (clone AC-74; Sigma) or a rabbit polyclonal antibody specific for hexon (for viruses) (Abcam, Cambridge, United Kingdom). Bound antibodies were detected with a secondary horseradish peroxidase-conjugated antibody (Promega, Madison, WI) and enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham Biosciences, Freiburg, Germany).
ß-Gal assay. ß-Galactosidase activity after virus transduction was quantified using a Tropix Galacto Light Plus chemiluminescent reporter gene assay system (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Briefly, cells were washed twice with phosphate-buffered saline and were subsequently lysed in 100 µl lysis solution. Twenty microliters of lysate and 70 µl of substrate buffer were incubated for 30 min at room temperature. After the addition of 100 µl of accelerator solution, samples were applied for quantification of luminescence in a Victor 1420 multilabel counter (Wallac, Turku, Finland).
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Analysis of trimerization of recombinant fiber molecules containing the Ad41s fiber knob with RGD peptide insertions. For examination of recombinant fiber expression and trimerization, pF plasmids were transfected into 293T cells. Both untransfected cells and cells transfected with plasmid pDV67, which encodes the Ad5 fiber (45), were included as controls. At 3 days posttransfection, cell lysates, boiled or unboiled, were analyzed by immunoblot analysis with mouse monoclonal antibody clone 4D2, which binds to the Ad5 fiber tail (Fig. 2A). For various adenovirus fibers, it has been shown that trimers are not dissolved in SDS-polyacrylamide if protein samples are not boiled. Our results showed that fiber constructs with the RGD peptide inserted into the EG, HI, or IJ loop or fused to the C terminus of the Ad41s fiber knob were expressed and retained their capacity for trimerization. Fibers with the RGD peptide inserted into the AB or DE loop were not able to trimerize and also were expressed at lower concentrations. The anti-Ad5 fiber tail antibody we used bound to the monomer of recombinant F41sCLL-RGD. However, for this construct, we were unable to detect the trimeric version in unboiled lysates.
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FIG. 2. Trimerization of recombinant Ad41s fibers and incorporation into virus particles. (A) 293T cells were transfected with the indicated expression plasmids. Cells were lysed at 72 h posttransfection and were analyzed for recombinant fiber expression and trimerization by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting using monoclonal antibody clone 4D2, which binds to the Ad5 fiber tail. Lysates with 30 µg of protein were boiled (+) or not boiled () before being loaded in order to reveal fiber trimerization. Plasmid pDV67 encodes the Ad5 fiber. As a loading control, membranes were probed with a mouse monoclonal antibody specific for human ß-actin (not shown). (B) Purified adenoviruses (8 x 108 VP) were boiled and analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting with antibody 4D2 (upper panel) or with an anti-hexon antibody (lower panel) as a loading control. AdßGF5 contains the Ad5 fiber; AdßGF is fiberless. Numbers indicate molecular masses in kDa. The calculated molecular mass of the F5/41s recombinant fiber monomer is 42 kDa.
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F/F+. Ad5.ßgal.
F is an E1-, E3-, and fiber gene-deleted adenovirus vector that contains a ß-Gal reporter cassette in the E1 region (44). Ad5.ßgal.
F/F+ was produced in the E1- and fiber-complementing cell line 633 (45) and thus contained a capsid with Ad5 fiber molecules. Adenoviruses, which potentially incorporated the expression plasmid-encoded modified fiber, were harvested at 2 days postinfection. The resulting viruses were AdßGF5/41sEG-RGD, AdßGF5/41sHI-RGD, and AdßGF5/41sIJ-RGD, with internal RGD insertions into the F5/41s fiber; AdßGF5/41sCL-RGD, AdßGF5/41sCLL-RGD, and AdßGF41sCLL-RGD, with C-terminal fusions of the RGD peptide to the F5/41s or F41s fiber; AdßGF5/41s, without peptide insertion into the F5/41s fiber; AdßGF5, with the Ad5 fiber (transfection of pDV67); and fiberless AdßGF (mock transfection). The incorporation of fiber molecules into virus particles and, thus, trimerization were analyzed by Western blot analysis of purified virus particles (Fig. 2B). We observed the incorporation of all recombinant fiber molecules for which trimerization was shown after plasmid transfection, with similar efficiency. Interestingly, we detected a weak band for the fiber with the Ad41s fiber tail, indicating that this fiber can trimerize and thus be incorporated into Ad5 particles, but with a low efficiency. The same results were obtained with a second set of virus preparations that were generated with a different transient transfection/infection protocol using Nanofectin (PAA) instead of Lipofectamine (not shown). However, this method resulted in lower virus titers that required quantification by real-time PCR. We concluded from our data that insertion of the CDCRGDCFC peptide into the EG, HI, or IJ loop of the Ad41s fiber knob or fusion of this peptide via differently sized linkers to the knob C terminus is feasible without a loss of the fibers' capacity for trimerization and incorporation into virus particles. Furthermore, fiber molecules with the Ad41s fiber tail were incorporated into Ad5 particles, but with a low efficiency. In contrast, peptide insertion into the AB or DE loop of the Ad41s fiber knob was detrimental to fiber trimerization.
Transduction efficacies of adenoviruses containing Ad41s fiber-derived molecules with RGD peptide insertions in the knob domain. To determine adenovirus tropism modification by the various peptide insertion strategies, we next analyzed the gene transfer efficacies of adenoviruses with modified fibers by means of a ß-Gal assay 2 days after virus transduction. Established (SK-MEL-28) or primary (PMel) melanoma cells, primary fibroblasts (NHF), primary keratinocytes (NHK), and primary endothelial cells (HUVEC) were transduced with adenoviruses AdßGF5/41sEG-RGD, AdßGF5/41sHI-RGD, AdßGF5/41sIJ-RGD, AdßGF5/41sCL-RGD, AdßGF5/41sCLL-RGD, and AdßGF41sCLL-RGD or with control viruses AdßGF5/41s, AdßGF5, and AdßGF. Our data (Fig. 3) revealed the highest gene transfer efficiencies for viruses with internal insertion of the RGD peptide into the Ad41s fiber knob. The virus with the HI loop insertion always gave the highest readings. In CAR-negative PMel cells, transduction by these viruses was enhanced by 1 to 2 orders of magnitude relative to that by both AdßGF5/41 and AdßGF5 (AdßGF5/41sEG-RGD, 25.7-fold and 34.0-fold, respectively; AdßGF5/41sHI-RGD, 83.7-fold and 110.9-fold, respectively; and AdßGF5/41sIJ-RGD, 14.2-fold and 18.8-fold, respectively). CAR-positive SK-MEL-28 cells showed the highest reporter activity after transduction with AdßGF5, but readings for AdßGF5/41sHI-RGD were only minimally lower (1.4-fold). In these cells, transduction efficiencies of AdßGF5/41sEG-RGD, AdßGF5/41sHI-RGD, and AdßGF5/41sIJ-RGD were 20.5-fold, 36.2-fold, and 5.9-fold higher than that of AdßGF5/41s. In normal cells, transduction by AdßGF5/41sHI-RGD was superior (HUVEC and NHF) or similar (NHK) to that by AdßGF5. Adenoviruses with C-terminal fusion of the RGD peptide caused better transduction in melanoma cells than did AdßGF5/41s but had lower transduction efficiencies than viruses with internal RGD peptide insertions. In SK-MEL-28 cells, transduction by AdßGF5/41sCL-RGD, AdßGF5/41sCLL-RGD, and AdßGF41sCLL-RGD resulted in similar ß-Gal activities, whereas AdßGF5/41sCLL-RGD was superior to AdßGF5/41sCL-RGD and AdßGF41sCLL-RGD in PMel cells and HUVEC. In HUVEC and NHK, but not in NHF, transduction by AdßGF5/41sCLL-RGD was more efficient than that by AdßGF5/41s. However, whereas AdßGF5/41s mediated minimal gene transfer into melanoma cells, considerable transduction of normal cells was observed (1 to 2 orders of magnitude more than that by AdßGF). In fibroblasts, AdßGF5/41s was even more efficient than AdßGF5.
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FIG. 3. Transduction of established and primary melanoma cells and of normal cells with fiber-modified adenoviruses. A human melanoma cell line (SK-MEL-28), primary human melanoma cells (PMel), primary human endothelial cells (HUVEC), primary normal human fibroblasts (NHF), and primary normal human keratinocytes (NHK) were transduced with the indicated viruses at 104 (HUVEC), 2.5 x 104 (NHF and NHK), 5 x 104 (SK-MEL-28 cells), or 105 (PMel cells) VP/cell in triplicate. At 2 days postinfection, cells were lysed, and ß-galactosidase activities of the lysates were determined with a luminescence assay. Columns show mean RLU values; error bars show standard deviations. Uninfected cells were analyzed to show the background activity of ß-galactosidase.
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FIG. 4. Competition of transduction by fiber-modified adenoviruses with soluble RGD peptide. HUVEC were preincubated with the indicated peptides at 2 mg/ml in medium or with medium alone at 4°C for 30 min and were subsequently infected with the indicated viruses at 105 VP/cell for 90 min in triplicate. ß-Galactosidase activity was determined at 2 days postinfection. Columns show mean RLU values; error bars show standard deviations. Uninfected cells were analyzed to show the background activity of ß-galactosidase. *, not determined.
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Fiber trimerization and adenovirus transduction by F5/41sIJ-RGD derivatives with a long fiber shaft, tandem copies of the peptide insert, or a longer peptide insert. Next, we pursued strategies for further augmentation of F5/41sRGD fiber-mediated adenoviral cell entry. These strategies were (i) extension of the length of the fiber shaft, (ii) insertion of multiple copies of the peptide insert, or (iii) extension of the linker length on both sides of the RGD peptide. We hypothesized that these strategies would increase the accessibility and/or affinity of the peptide ligand in the fiber for its cellular receptor. With the third approach, we also sought to assess if the insertion of large inserts into Ad41s fiber knob loops is feasible. With these goals, we cloned three different pF expression plasmids encoding derivatives of the fiber construct F5/41sIJ-RGD (Fig. 5A and B). This modified fiber mediated a decent, but not yet optimal, gene transfer efficacy in the previous experiments. For strategy i, we replaced the Ad41s fiber shaft (12 repeat motifs) with the long shaft of the Ad5 fiber (22 repeat motifs) in which the KKTK motif was mutated, resulting in plasmid pF5ts*/41sIJ-RGD. We chose to mutate the putative HSPG-binding KKTK motif to exclude nonspecific, fiber shaft-mediated cell binding of the resulting virus (41). Strategy ii was investigated by inserting two copies of the CDCRGDCFC peptide in tandem, separated by a GS linker, into the IJ loop, generating pF5/41sIJ-2xRGD. Finally, for strategy iii, we inserted a sequence encoding 83 amino acids with a centered RGD peptide derived from the RGD-containing loop of the Ad5 penton base into the F5/41s IJ loop, generating pF5/41sIJ-loopRGD. By transient transfection of plasmids pF5ts*/41sIJ-RGD, pF5/41sIJ-2xRGD, and pF5/41sIJ-loopRGD, and as controls, the parental plasmids pF5/41sIJ-RGD and pDV67 and by immunoblot analysis, we could demonstrate trimerization of all three new recombinant fibers (Fig. 6A). For F5ts*/41sIJ-RGD, protein expression and trimerization were somewhat reduced compared to those for all other constructs. We then generated the three corresponding adenoviruses, AdßGF5ts*/41sIJ-RGD, AdßGF5/41sIJ-2xRGD, and AdßGF5/41sIJ-loopRGD, by the transfection/infection protocol. Incorporation of similar amounts of recombinant fibers into virus particles was shown by Western blotting (Fig. 6B). Note that the F5ts*/41sIJ-RGD fiber monomer (but not the trimer) (Fig. 6A) migrated faster than F5/41sIJ-loopRGD in the polyacrylamide gel, although the calculated molecular masses are 60 kDa and 50 kDa, respectively. Finally, we transduced SK-MEL-28 cells and PMel cells with viruses AdßGF5ts*/41sIJ-RGD, AdßGF5/41sIJ-2xRGD, and AdßGF5/41sIJ-loopRGD or with virus AdßGF5/41s or AdßGF5/41sIJ-RGD as a control and determined ß-Gal activities at 2 days postinfection (Fig. 6C). Surprisingly, in both cell types, ß-Gal activities for AdßGF5/41sIJ-2xRGD and AdßGF5/41sIJ-loopRGD were not increased relative to those for AdßGF5/41s and were thus much weaker than those for AdßGF5/41sIJ-RGD. Even lower RLUs were detected for AdßGF5ts*/41sIJ-RGD. Repeat experiments with a new set of virus preparations showed identical results. We concluded that the extension of shaft length, multiple copies of the peptide ligand, or extension of the linkers on both sites of the peptide ligand in the context of RGD peptide insertion into the IJ loop of F5/41s allowed for fiber trimerization and incorporation into virus but abolished peptide-dependent tropism modification. Therefore, these strategies are not generally suitable for enhancing (or even retaining) peptide-mediated adenovirus cell binding and entry.
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FIG. 5. Outline of pF5/41sIJ-RGD derivatives with two copies of the RGD peptide insert in tandem, an extended RGD-containing peptide insert, or a long fiber shaft. (A) Expression plasmid pF5ts*/41sIJ-RGD is based on a construct that encodes a recombinant fiber protein with the Ad5 fiber tail and shaft domains (amino acids 1 to 400; the asterisk indicates mutation of the potential HSPG-binding site of the shaft) fused to the Ad41 short fiber knob (starting with amino acid 233), resulting in the fusion site sequence DKLT/IWSI. (B) For plasmid pF5ts*/41sIJ-RGD, a CDCRGDCFC peptide with the indicated linkers (in italics) was inserted into the IJ loop of the Ad41s fiber knob (illustrated at the top). For pF5/41sIJ-2xRGD, two copies of the CDCRGDCFC peptide with the indicated spacer and linkers (in italics) were inserted into the IJ loop of the Ad41 short fiber knob. For pF5/41sIJ-loopRGD, an 83-amino-acid loop of the Ad5 penton base with a centered RGD motif and the indicated linkers (in italics) was inserted into the IJ loop of the Ad41s fiber knob.
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FIG. 6. Analysis of pF5/41sIJ-RGD derivatives with two copies of the RGD peptide insert in tandem, an extended RGD-containing peptide insert, or a long shaft. (A) Cell lysates of 293T cells transfected with the indicated plasmids were analyzed for recombinant fiber expression and trimerization by gel electrophoresis and Western blotting as described in the legend to Fig. 2A. (B) Purified adenoviruses (8 x 108 VP) generated with the transfection/infection technology were analyzed by gel electrophoresis and Western blotting for recombinant fiber incorporation as described in the legend to Fig. 2B. (C) SK-MEL-28 and PMel cells were transduced with the indicated adenoviruses at 105 VP/cell in triplicate. At 2 days postinfection, cells were lysed, and ß-galactosidase activities of the lysates were determined with a luminescence assay. Columns show mean RLU values; error bars show standard deviations. Uninfected cells were analyzed to show the background activity of ß-galactosidase.
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The realization of selective adenovirus cell entry into target cells represents a critical step towards the implementation of adenoviral therapeutics in gene transfer, vaccination, and oncolysis. This goal requires the development, in parallel, of two modifications to the tropism of the most commonly used adenovirus serotype, i.e., serotype 5. First, cell entry into normal, nontargeted cells that express the Ad5 receptor CAR, most prominently hepatocytes, needs to be abolished. Second, targeting ligands need to be incorporated into the virus capsid without a loss of ligand function or deleterious effects to the virus structure. Recently, the replacement of the Ad5 fiber with the short fiber of subgroup F adenovirus Ad40 or Ad41 has been shown to achieve substantially reduced transduction of the liver and other organs after intravenous injection into mice and rats (25, 31). Therefore, the short fibers of Ad40 and Ad41 represent promising "detargeted" platforms for retargeting of adenovirus cell entry by insertion of peptide ligands.
Our study shows that peptide insertion into the EG, HI, or IJ loop, but not into the AB or DE loop, of the Ad41s fiber knob retains the fiber's essential properties of trimerization and incorporation into adenovirus capsids. Notably, these results demonstrate that it is possible to insert peptides into the Ad41s fiber knob in such a way that they face the top (IJ loop) or the side (EG and HI loops) of the fiber molecule (Fig. 1C). In this regard, it is important that adenoviruses can bind to their cellular receptors either via residues in the side (Ad5) (19) or via residues in the top (Ad37/Ad19p) (11) of their fiber molecules. The inability of F5/41s with a DE loop insertion to form trimers can be explained by direct steric hindrance of the inserted amino acids, because this loop is located at the interface of fiber monomers. Also, according to the crystal structure of the short Ad41 fiber knob (36), which was published after we designed and produced our constructs, the DE region contains an alpha-helix, not a flexible loop. In contrast, the AB loop is located on the fiber surface. The AB loop of the Ad5 fiber is involved in CAR binding but is structurally different in the Ad41s fiber knob (33, 36). We hypothesize that the insertion of peptides into the AB loop of the Ad41s fiber knob interferes with folding of the fiber monomer and thus, indirectly, with fiber trimerization. We found that C-terminal fusion of peptide ligands to the Ad41s fiber knob via differently sized linkers (8 or 16 amino acids) does not interfere with fiber trimerization. This result is in line with previous studies that show the feasibility of C-terminal extensions of the Ad5, Ad3, and Ad40s fiber knobs (25, 42, 46).
All of our recombinant fibers, with the exception of F41sCLL-RGD, contained the Ad5 fiber tail and the Ad41 short fiber shaft. Thereby, we sought to guarantee the incorporation of recombinant fibers into Ad5 capsids but also to retain a short-shafted fiber. To detect fiber molecules in Western blots, we used the monoclonal anti-fiber antibody clone 4D2 (16), which binds to a highly conserved N-terminal motif (17) of adenovirus fiber molecules that is also found in the Ad41 short fiber. Although we were unable to detect trimeric F41sCLL-RGD in Western blots of cell lysates after transient transfection, we observed a weak band for this fiber in Western blots of purified AdßGF41sCLL-RGD. Together with the transduction data for this virus, our results indicate that the F41sCLL-RGD fiber can trimerize and is incorporated into virus particles, but with less efficiency than fibers with the Ad5 fiber tail. These results were not expected in light of the sequence homology between the Ad41 short fiber and Ad5 fiber tail domains and considering our data that show no interference of the CLL-RGD fusion with trimerization of the F5/41s fiber. Moreover, previous reports showed the incorporation of a fiber chimera with Ad40s tail and shaft domains fused to the Ad5 knob into the Ad5 capsid (25) and more efficient incorporation of the Ad41 short fiber than the Ad41 long fiber into Ad5 particles (34). Our results argue for the conservation of the Ad5 fiber tail in pseudotyped, Ad5-derived adenoviruses.
The virus transduction experiments of our study demonstrate that tropism modification of Ad5 by insertion of a peptide ligand into short-shafted adenovirus fibers, in this case the F5/41s fiber, is feasible. This is important especially in consideration of the negative charge of Ad5 hexon molecules in the virus capsid and the potentially resulting repulsion from cell surfaces. In melanoma cells, all modified RGD-containing fibers that were incorporated into virus particles mediated enhanced adenovirus cell entry relative to that of the RGD-less control virus. In SK-MEL-28 cells, all viruses with C-terminal RGD showed similar transduction efficacies, and AdßGF5/41sCLL-RGD was superior to AdßGF5/41sCL-RGD and AdßGF41sCLL-RGD in primary melanoma cells and HUVEC. Different expression levels of different integrins might be responsible for these intercellular variations. Still, a long linker might be advantageous for C-terminally fused peptide ligands. The lower transduction efficiency for the virus with the Ad41s fiber tail might be explained by reduced fiber incorporation into Ad5 virions (as discussed above). Importantly, we show that internal insertion of RGD peptides into different loops of the Ad41s fiber knob results in transduction efficiencies that are superior to those of C-terminal RGD fusions. Either better peptide positioning or a superior peptide conformation (loop-like versus linear) might be responsible for these results. In this regard, it is important that (i) the C terminus of the Ad41s fiber, like the C terminus of the Ad5 fiber, points towards the virus capsid rather than to the outside (36); and (ii) the CDCRGDCFC peptide, which was originally selected from a cyclic peptide phage library (20), is not able to circularize per se in the reducing milieu of the cytoplasm and nucleoplasm where viruses are produced. However, the peptide might be forced into a circular conformation when incorporated into a loop of the Ad41s fiber knob. The highest transduction efficiencies in all cell types were obtained for the virus that contained the RGD peptide in the HI loop, followed by the virus with the EG loop insertion. Note that both loops are located on the side of the Ad41s fiber knob, indicating that this might be a favorable locale for insertion of targeting ligands.
The CDCRGDCFC peptide mediated adenovirus cell entry at any of the positions at the tip of the EG, HI, or IJ loop or at the C terminus of the Ad41s fiber. However, our transduction results with AdßGF5/41s-2xRGD and AdßGF5/41s-loopRGD clearly show that the precise peptide position within a loop is critical for its ability for tropism modification. Even a slight change of the RGD peptide position in the IJ loop, as represented by AdßGF5/41sIJ-2xRGD, ablates its ability to redirect adenovirus transduction. Also, AdßGF5/41sIJ-loopRGD did not show an enhanced transduction efficacy compared to AdßGF5/41s. For this virus, in addition to the length of the whole insert, the amino acids that directly flank the RGD peptide are different from the CDCRGDCFC peptide insert in AdßGF5/41sIJ-RGD. However, this loop insert mediated efficient cell entry when inserted into the HI loop of the Ad5 fiber (8). Our transduction results for AdßGF5ts*/41sIJ-RGD indicate that the mutant long fiber shaft of Ad5 is not compatible with adenovirus tropism modification by ligand peptide insertion into the Ad41s fiber knob, at least for peptide insertions into the IJ loop. The rationale for developing this construct was to improve virus transduction by extending the distance between the peptide ligand and the virus surface. By this means, we sought to reduce potentially harmful repulsive effects resulting from the negative charge of the Ad5 fiber capsid. In light of our results for the long fiber shaft virus, it is even more important that peptide-mediated adenoviral transduction in the context of the short Ad41 fiber shaft is feasible. From our data, we conclude that the length and structure of the fiber shaft critically influence the ability of peptide ligands inserted into the fiber knob to interact with their cellular receptors. Interestingly, a recent publication indicates that mutation of the KKTK motif reduces transduction efficacy mediated by a ligand inserted into the HI loop of an Ad5 fiber (7). Further investigations are warranted to clarify the influence of the KKTK mutation on both virus detargeting and ligand-mediated retargeting of viruses with the Ad41s fiber knob.
To show peptide-mediated cell binding and entry of tropism-modified adenoviruses, competition experiments with soluble peptide are frequently performed. However, such experiments for RGD-modified viruses are complicated by the fact that RGD peptides can also interfere with binding of the Ad5 penton base to cellular integrins via its RGD motif. This interaction is required for internalization of cell-bound Ad5 particles. We previously reported that preincubation of HUVEC with circularized CDCRGDCFC peptide inhibits transduction by adenoviruses containing the Ad5 capsid (26). In the present study, the transduction of HUVEC by AdßGF5 was not inhibited by the GRGDS peptide. This result suggests that the interaction with integrins is weaker for this peptide than for the circular peptide and thus insufficient to block virus internalization in the context of the Ad5 fiber-CAR interaction. Interestingly, we observed reduced transduction of HUVEC by AdF5/41s after preincubation of the cells with the GRGDS peptide. We concluded that transduction by this virus was at least partially dependent on the penton-integrin interaction. Similar results were reported for viruses with the Ad40s fiber (25). In this case, transduction of primary hepatocytes was inhibited by preincubation of cells with a recombinant penton base. Note that penton bases of subgroup F adenoviruses Ad40 and Ad41 do not contain the RGD motif. After GRGDS peptide preincubation, HUVEC transduction by AdßGF5/41sIJ-RGD was reduced to a level similar to that by AdßGF5/41s, demonstrating that transduction was completely RGD dependent. Transduction of HUVEC by AdßGF5/41sHI-RGD was also significantly reduced by GRGDS preincubation. However, this inhibition was less dramatic than that for AdßGF5/41sIJ-RGD. This result could be explained by partially RGD-independent transduction. However, we suggest that the interaction between the HI-RGD and cellular integrins is stronger than that for the IJ insertion site and cannot be completely inhibited by the linear GRGDS peptide. Other groups have reported quantitatively similar or even less inhibition of RGD-modified Ad5 viruses by RGD peptides or penton base protein (9, 14). Moreover, our result that AdßGF5/41sHI-RGD showed a higher transduction efficacy than AdßGF5/41sIJ-RGD, while incorporating a similar quantity of fiber molecules, is also supportive of this hypothesis.
Our observation that primary normal cells were readily transduced by AdßGF5/41s without peptide ligand insertion is a novel and striking finding. Previous reports demonstrated strongly reduced transduction of healthy organs in vivo and of rat hepatocytes, rat endothelial cells, or primary human hepatocytes in vitro for Ad5-derived viruses with the Ad41s or Ad40s shaft and knob relative to that of viruses with the Ad5 fiber (25, 31). To date, a receptor for the Ad41s fiber has not been described. Because the transduction of HUVEC by AdßGF5/41s was RGD dependent, we hypothesize that cell entry of Ad5/41s is mediated, at least in part, by binding of the penton base via its RGD motif to cellular integrins. Thus, unwanted transduction by Ad5-derived viruses with the Ad41s fiber shaft and knob might be abolished by additional mutation of the penton base RGD motif.
In summary, we identified functional insertion sites for peptide ligands in the short-shafted Ad41 fiber knob. Internal insertion into both the top and side surfaces of the knob domain was feasible, mediated enhanced adenoviral transduction, and was superior to C-terminal peptide fusion, as shown with the CDCRGDCFC peptide. Hence, we (i) established that peptides inserted into a short-shafted fiber can mediate cell binding and (ii) defined sites for genetic insertion of targeting peptides into the Ad41s fiber knob. We suggest recombinant fibers with Ad41s fiber shaft and knob domains and peptide insertions in the EG, HI, or IJ loop as a novel platform for genetic targeting of adenovirus cell entry. This platform can now be exploited for the insertion of targeting peptides derived, for example, by various display technologies. Furthermore, we report that the precise positioning of a peptide ligand in the knob domain and also the position of the modified knob in the virus capsid, i.e., the length and structure of the fiber shaft, are critical determinants for the receptor binding capacity of the ligand peptide. Therefore, our results open new avenues for the future development of improved recombinant adenoviruses for therapeutic gene transfer, genetic vaccination, and viral oncolysis.
Adenovirus Ad5.ßgal.
F was kindly provided by AdVec Inc., Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, and G. Nemerow of the Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA, and Ad41 was provided by J. Chroboczek, Institut de Biologie Structurale Jean-Paul Ebel, Grenoble, France. We are grateful to G. Nemerow and D. Van Seggern, the Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA, for providing plasmids pDV55 and pDV67 and 633 cells. We thank G. Fey, C. Garlichs, and M. Marschall, University of Erlangen, Erlangen, Germany, and L. Chow, T. Broker, and S. Banerjee, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, for providing cells. We thank A. Steinkasserer and G. Schuler for their constant support and for providing an inspiring work environment. We are grateful to T. Johnson, Heidelberg University Hospital, for critically reading the manuscript.
Published ahead of print on 27 December 2006. ![]()
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v integrin-binding ablation. J. Virol. 77:13062-13072.
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