Expression of a foamy virus envelope protein

Chemistry: molecular biology and microbiology – Micro-organism – tissue cell culture or enzyme using process... – Recombinant dna technique included in method of making a...

Reexamination Certificate

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C435S325000, C536S023400

Reexamination Certificate

active

06703226

ABSTRACT:

The foamy viruses (FV) subgroup of retroid viruses has attracted scientific interest because of their unique replication strategy and because of their potential use as gene transfer vectors (35). It has been proposed that FVs may be ideal tools for the development of a gene delivery system due to specific properties of this virus group, such as the absence of FV antibodies in the human population, the benign course of natural FV infections, their very broad host cell range, and an extended packaging limit due to the size of the FV genome (4, 30, 32). However, limited knowledge of the molecular biology of this virus group has so far not allowed the development of safe packaging cell lines and vectors, such as those that have been derived for murine retroviruses, among others (27). For instance, the FV genome is a double-stranded DNA with a complex organization. In addition to LTRs (Long Terminal Repeat), a packaging region and gag, pol, env genes, it also comprises several genes such as bel1, bel2, bel3, bet, beo and bes located between env and 3′LTR. The env gene encodes a 130 kDa glycosylated precursor that is cleaved giving rise to the surface (SU) and transmembrane (TM) proteins (see FIG.
1
). Furthermore, FVs express their Pol protein from a spliced mRNA independently of the Gag protein, and the mechanism of FV genome packaging and particle assembly, as well as the significance of high amounts of reverse transcribed DNA in the extra-cellular particle are largely unknown (10, 18, 39). Other unique features include the nuclear localization of the Gag precursor protein (31, 40) and the predominant budding into intracytoplasmic vesicles which may be a consequence of the retention of the Env precursor protein in the ER (13).
Moloney retrovirus-based gene transfer vectors are currently the main vehicles for high efficiency stable gene transfer into a wide variety of cell types (20). Major limitations of this vector system are the restricted host-cell range and the inefficient infectivity for some human cells (reviewed in (1)). Recently, several methods using the pseudotyping with foreign envelope proteins, such as the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) G glycoprotein (6, 38) or the gibbon ape leukemia virus (GALV) envelope protein (2, 34) have been shown to overcome these disadvantages.
However, the expression of VSV-G for example is highly toxic for the producer cells and has prevented the generation of stable VSV-G packaging cells line (8, 22, 37).
The invention concerns constructs for the expression of a protein comprising at least a modified FV envelope protein.
The preferred FV according to the present invention is the human foamy virus (HFV), but others may be used (e.g. Simian FV).
The modification may consist in at least a mutation, deletion, substitution and/or addition of one or several amino acid (aa) of said modified FV envelope (env) protein or a combination thereof. Such modification(s) is preferably located into the cytoplasmic tail. Advantageously, a modified FV envelope protein is truncated at aa 975 or, more preferably, 981. The truncation may extend up to the stop codon or alternatively comprise before the stop codon one or several residues optionally from the original FV env protein. Furthermore, a construct of the invention may express a mature modified FV envelope protein or a precursor thereof or a chimeric protein resulting from the fusion of sequences of various origins.
In a particularly preferred embodiment, the modified FV env protein in use in the present invention is a fusion protein which furthermore comprises all or preferably a part of a non-FV retroviral envelope protein. Examples of suitable non-FV retroviruses include avian retroviruses, bovine retroviruses, feline retroviruses, murine retroviruses such as Murine Leukemia Virus (MuLV) and particularly Moloney MuLV (MoMuLV), Friend Murine Leukemia Virus (FrMuLV) especially strain FB 29, Murine Sarcome Virus (MSV), primate retroviruses such as GaLV, VSV or lentiviruses such as HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) or SIV (Simian Immunodeficiency Virus).
In a particularly preferred embodiment, a protein according to the invention consists in HFV protein envelope which all or part of the cytoplasmic domain is replaced by all or part of a cytoplasmic domain of a non-FV retroviral envelope protein, especially of a MuLV envelope protein. Advantageously, the fusion protein consists in the fusion of a MuLV cytoplasmic domain to a modified HFV envelope protein. The MuLV cytoplasmic domain in use in the present invention may be processed or unprocessed. “Processed” means that it contains the cleavage site normally recognized by the corresponding retroviral protease and “unprocessed” that it does not contain it or that it is not functional (mutation, deletion or truncation).
The preferred construct of the invention is the one allowing expression of the fusion protein designated hereinafter HFV &Dgr;2 MuLV.
It is also possible that the construct of the invention is mutated in the donor and/or acceptor splicing sites naturally present in the FV env protein encoding sequence.
The construct of the invention may include regulatory elements to allow transcription and translation of the sequence coding for the modified FV env protein. In particular, a suitable promoter may be linked upstream from the FV env encoding sequence in an operative way be conventional recombinant techniques. Such a promoter may be of prokaryote, eukaryote or viral origin and may be constitutive or regulated. Such regulatory elements are well known in the art.
It is also in the scope of the invention that the construct of the invention may additionally comprise a selection gene enabling detection and isolation of the cells expressing the modified FV env protein. In the context of the invention, the selection gene may be under the transcriptional control of the promoter driving expression of the modified FV env protein resulting in a bicistronic transcript or under the control of an additional promoter region. The possible selection genes are numerous, for example neo gene conferring resistance to antibiotic G418, dihydrofolate reductase (dhFr) gene, puromycin acetyl transferase (pac) gene or xanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (gpt).
The construct of the invention may be inserted in any appropriate vector, a viral vector (e.g. a retroviral vector) or a plasmid. The choice of the appropriate vector is large and within the capabilities of the man skilled in the art. Such a vector may be integrative or not. To decrease the possibility to generate replication-competent viral particles. It is advantageous that the construct lack any retroviral LTR and packaging region.
The invention also concerns fusion proteins as expressed by the above expression constructs as well as pseudotyped viral particles comprising a FV env protein. This latter may be derived from a native FV env protein, a part thereof or a modified one. In a preferred embodiment, the pseudotyped viral particle at its surface comprises a modified FV env protein as expressed by a construct according to the invention. The pseudotyped viral particle of the invention may be generated upon transfection of a recombinant retroviral vector into a complementation cell line. The technology is conventional and described in numerous prior art documents. A retroviral vector in use in the present invention comprises at least a 5′ LTR, a packaging region and a 3′ LTR derived from any retrovirus such those cited previously and a gene capable of expressing a ribozyme, an anti-sense RNA molecule or a mRNA to further produce a polypeptide of interest. Of particular interest, are therapeutic polypeptides, including but not limited to cytokines (IL-2, IFN &agr;, &bgr; or &agr;), Herpes Simplex Virus type 1 (HSV-1), thymidine kinase (TK), Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (DFTR), Dystrophin, coagulation Factors (FVIII, FIX, . . . ), tumor associated antigenes (MUC-1, HPV antigenes), antibodies, immunotoxines and anti-HIV drugs.
Another object of the invention is relating

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