Disruption of Microtubules Post-Virus Entry Enhances Adeno-Associated Virus Vector Transduction. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Perinuclear retention of viral particles is a poorly understood phenomenon observed during many virus infections. In this study, we investigated whether perinuclear accumulation acts as a barrier to limit recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) transduction. After nocodazole treatment to disrupt microtubules at microtubule-organization center (MT-MTOC) after virus entry, we observed higher rAAV transduction. To elucidate the role of MT-MTOC in rAAV infection and study its underlying mechanisms, we demonstrated that rAAV's perinuclear localization was retained by MT-MTOC with fluorescent analysis, and enhanced rAAV transduction from MT-MTOC disruption was dependent on the rAAV capsid's nuclear import signals. Interestingly, after knocking down RhoA or inhibiting its downstream effectors (ROCK and Actin), MT-MTOC disruption failed to increase rAAV transduction or nuclear entry. These data suggest that enhancement of rAAV transduction is the result of increased trafficking to the nucleus via the RhoA-ROCK-Actin pathway. Ten-fold higher rAAV transduction was also observed by disrupting MT-MTOC in brain, liver, and tumor in vivo. In summary, this study indicates that virus perinuclear accumulation at MT-MTOC is a barrier-limiting parameter for effective rAAV transduction and defines a novel defense mechanism by which host cells restrain viral invasion.

published proceedings

  • Hum Gene Ther

altmetric score

  • 49.5

author list (cited authors)

  • Xiao, P., Mitchell, A. M., Huang, L. u., Li, C., & Samulski, R. J.

citation count

  • 6

complete list of authors

  • Xiao, Ping-Jie||Mitchell, Angela M||Huang, Lu||Li, Chengwen||Samulski, R Jude

publication date

  • January 2016