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DNA Released by Adeno-Associated Virus Strongly Alters Capsid Aggregation Kinetics in a Physiological Solution

Curtis W. Jarand, Karen Baker, Matthew Petroff, Mi Sun Jin, Wayne F. Reed

2024Biomacromolecules12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

While adeno-associated virus is a leading vector for gene therapy, significant gaps remain in understanding AAV degradation and stability. In this work, we study the degradation of an engineered AAV serotype at physiological pH and ionic strength. Viral particles of varying fractions of encapsulated DNA were incubated between 30 and 60 °C, with changes in molecular weight measured by changes in total light scattering intensity at 90° over time. Mostly full vectors demonstrated a rapid decrease in molecular weight corresponding to the release of capsid DNA, followed by slow aggregation. In contrast, empty vectors demonstrated immediate, rapid colloid-type aggregation. Mixtures of full and empty capsids showed a pronounced decrease in initial aggregation that cannot be explained by a linear superposition of empty and full degradation scattering signatures, indicating interactions between capsids and ejected DNA that influenced aggregation mechanisms. This demonstrates key interactions between AAV capsids and their cargo that influence capsid degradation, aggregation, and DNA release mechanisms in a physiological solution.

Topics & Concepts

CapsidBiophysicsDNAChemistryDynamic light scatteringIonic strengthAdeno-associated virusDegradation (telecommunications)KineticsVirusParticle aggregationColloidVirologyBiochemistryNanoparticleGeneNanotechnologyVector (molecular biology)Recombinant DNABiologyMaterials sciencePhysicsQuantum mechanicsAqueous solutionComputer scienceTelecommunicationsPhysical chemistryVirus-based gene therapy researchRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
DNA Released by Adeno-Associated Virus Strongly Alters Capsid Aggregation Kinetics in a Physiological Solution | Litcius