Publication | Open Access
MicroRNA-regulated, Systemically Delivered rAAV9: A Step Closer to CNS-restricted Transgene Expression
167
Citations
28
References
2010
Year
EngineeringGene DeliveryBiomedical EngineeringComplementary Mirna-binding SitesCns-restricted Transgene ExpressionCell TransplantationStep CloserNeurovirologyRna BiologyVascular BiologyRecombinant Adeno-associated VirusesGene ExpressionCell EngineeringFunctional GenomicsCell BiologyMicrorna DetectionGene VectorSmall RnaCentral Nervous SystemSystems BiologyMedicineViral OncologyGenome EditingNon-coding Rna
Recombinant adeno-associated viruses (rAAVs) that can cross the blood-brain-barrier and achieve efficient and stable transvascular gene transfer to the central nervous system (CNS) hold significant promise for treating CNS disorders. However, following intravascular delivery, these vectors also target liver, heart, skeletal muscle, and other tissues, which may cause untoward effects. To circumvent this, we used tissue-specific, endogenous microRNAs (miRNAs) to repress rAAV expression outside the CNS, by engineering perfectly complementary miRNA-binding sites into the rAAV9 genome. This approach allowed simultaneous multi-tissue regulation and CNS-directed stable transgene expression without detectably perturbing the endogenous miRNA pathway. Regulation of rAAV expression by miRNA was primarily via site-specific cleavage of the transgene mRNA, generating specific 5' and 3' mRNA fragments. Our findings promise to facilitate the development of miRNA-regulated rAAV for CNS-targeted gene delivery and other applications.
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