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An evolved AAV variant enables efficient genetic engineering of murine T cells
- Nyberg, William A;
- Ark, Jonathan;
- To, Angela;
- Clouden, Sylvanie;
- Reeder, Gabriella;
- Muldoon, Joseph J;
- Chung, Jing-Yi;
- Xie, William H;
- Allain, Vincent;
- Steinhart, Zachary;
- Chang, Christopher;
- Talbot, Alexis;
- Kim, Sandy;
- Rosales, Alan;
- Havlik, L Patrick;
- Pimentel, Harold;
- Asokan, Aravind;
- Eyquem, Justin
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2022.12.022Abstract
Precise targeting of large transgenes to T cells using homology-directed repair has been transformative for adoptive cell therapies and T cell biology. Delivery of DNA templates via adeno-associated virus (AAV) has greatly improved knockin efficiencies, but the tropism of current AAV serotypes restricts their use to human T cells employed in immunodeficient mouse models. To enable targeted knockins in murine T cells, we evolved Ark313, a synthetic AAV that exhibits high transduction efficiency in murine T cells. We performed a genome-wide knockout screen and identified QA2 as an essential factor for Ark313 infection. We demonstrate that Ark313 can be used for nucleofection-free DNA delivery, CRISPR-Cas9-mediated knockouts, and targeted integration of large transgenes. Ark313 enables preclinical modeling of Trac-targeted CAR-T and transgenic TCR-T cells in immunocompetent models. Efficient gene targeting in murine T cells holds great potential for improved cell therapies and opens avenues in experimental T cell immunology.
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