Litcius/Paper detail

Pseudotyping Lentiviral Vectors: When the Clothes Make the Virus

Alexis Duvergé, Matteo Negroni

2020Viruses53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Delivering transgenes to human cells through transduction with viral vectors constitutes one of the most encouraging approaches in gene therapy. Lentivirus-derived vectors are among the most promising vectors for these approaches. When the genetic modification of the cell must be performed in vivo, efficient specific transduction of the cell targets of the therapy in the absence of off-targeting constitutes the Holy Grail of gene therapy. For viral therapy, this is largely determined by the characteristics of the surface proteins carried by the vector. In this regard, an important property of lentiviral vectors is the possibility of being pseudotyped by envelopes of other viruses, widening the panel of proteins with which they can be armed. Here, we discuss how this is achieved at the molecular level and what the properties and the potentialities of the different envelope proteins that can be used for pseudotyping these vectors are.

Topics & Concepts

Transduction (biophysics)Genetic enhancementViral vectorVirologyVector (molecular biology)BiologyComputational biologyLentivirusHoly GrailVectors in gene therapyVirusViral envelopeGeneCell biologyGeneticsComputer scienceRecombinant DNAViral diseaseBiochemistryWorld Wide WebVirus-based gene therapy researchRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryCRISPR and Genetic Engineering