Cell lines inducibly expressing the adeno-associated virus (AAV) rep gene: requirements for productive replication of rep-negative AAV mutants.

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RESUMO

The adeno-associated virus (AAV) rep gene codes for a family of nonstructural proteins which are required for AAV gene regulation and DNA replication. In addition, rep has been implicated in a variety of activities outside the AAV life cycle which have been difficult to study, since attempts to achieve separate and constitutive expression of rep in stable cell lines have failed so far. Here we report the generation of two cell lines which inducibly express Rep78 under the control of the glucocorticoid-responsive mouse mammary tumor virus promoter. In addition, one of the cell lines constitutively expresses relatively high levels of Rep52. Both cell lines showed similar plating efficiencies with and without induction of Rep78 expression, which rules out cytotoxic effects of Rep78. The cell lines efficiently support DNA replication of a rep-negative AAV genome and initiate the formation of AAV particles. However, despite the correct sizes and stoichiometry of the three capsid proteins, the AAV particles were noninfectious. This was found to be due to a defect in the accumulation of single-stranded AAV DNA. Transient transfection of single expression constructs for constitutive, high-level expression of individual Rep proteins (either Rep78, Rep68, Rep52, or Rep40) complemented this defect. Infectious rep-negative AAV progeny was produced at varying efficiencies depending on the rep expression construct used. These data show that functional expression of full-length Rep in recombinant cell lines is possible and that the state of Rep expression is critical for the infectivity of AAV progeny produced.

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