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Viral Vector-Based Dissection of Marmoset GFAP Promoter in Mouse and Marmoset Brains

Adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors are small in diameter, diffuse easily in the brain, and represent a highly efficient means by which to transfer a transgene to the brain of a large animal. A major demerit of AAV vectors is their limited accommodation capacity for transgenes. Thus, a compact prom...

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Autores principales: Shinohara, Yoichiro, Konno, Ayumu, Takahashi, Nobutaka, Matsuzaki, Yasunori, Kishi, Shoji, Hirai, Hirokazu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5003399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27571575
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0162023
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author Shinohara, Yoichiro
Konno, Ayumu
Takahashi, Nobutaka
Matsuzaki, Yasunori
Kishi, Shoji
Hirai, Hirokazu
author_facet Shinohara, Yoichiro
Konno, Ayumu
Takahashi, Nobutaka
Matsuzaki, Yasunori
Kishi, Shoji
Hirai, Hirokazu
author_sort Shinohara, Yoichiro
collection PubMed
description Adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors are small in diameter, diffuse easily in the brain, and represent a highly efficient means by which to transfer a transgene to the brain of a large animal. A major demerit of AAV vectors is their limited accommodation capacity for transgenes. Thus, a compact promoter is useful when delivering large transgenes via AAV vectors. In the present study, we aimed to identify the shortest astrocyte-specific GFAP promoter region that could be used for AAV-vector-mediated transgene expression in the marmoset brain. The 2.0-kb promoter region upstream of the GFAP gene was cloned from the marmoset genome, and short promoters (1.6 kb, 1.4 kb, 0.6 kb, 0.3 kb and 0.2 kb) were obtained by progressively deleting the original 2.0-kb promoter from the 5’ end. The short promoters were screened in the mouse cerebellum in terms of their strength and astrocyte specificity. We found that the 0.3-kb promoter maintained 40% of the strength of the original 2.0-kb promoter, and approximately 90% of its astrocyte specificity. These properties were superior to those of the 1.4-kb, 0.6-kb (20% promoter strength) and 0.2-kb (70% astrocyte specificity) promoters. Then, we verified whether the 0.3-kb GFAP promoter retained astrocyte specificity in the marmoset cerebral cortex. Injection of viral vectors carrying the 0.3-kb marmoset GFAP promoter specifically transduced astrocytes in both the cerebral cortex and cerebellar cortex of the marmoset. These results suggest that the compact 0.3-kb promoter region serves as an astrocyte-specific promoter in the marmoset brain, which permits us to express a large gene by AAV vectors that have a limited accommodation capacity.
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spelling pubmed-50033992016-09-12 Viral Vector-Based Dissection of Marmoset GFAP Promoter in Mouse and Marmoset Brains Shinohara, Yoichiro Konno, Ayumu Takahashi, Nobutaka Matsuzaki, Yasunori Kishi, Shoji Hirai, Hirokazu PLoS One Research Article Adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors are small in diameter, diffuse easily in the brain, and represent a highly efficient means by which to transfer a transgene to the brain of a large animal. A major demerit of AAV vectors is their limited accommodation capacity for transgenes. Thus, a compact promoter is useful when delivering large transgenes via AAV vectors. In the present study, we aimed to identify the shortest astrocyte-specific GFAP promoter region that could be used for AAV-vector-mediated transgene expression in the marmoset brain. The 2.0-kb promoter region upstream of the GFAP gene was cloned from the marmoset genome, and short promoters (1.6 kb, 1.4 kb, 0.6 kb, 0.3 kb and 0.2 kb) were obtained by progressively deleting the original 2.0-kb promoter from the 5’ end. The short promoters were screened in the mouse cerebellum in terms of their strength and astrocyte specificity. We found that the 0.3-kb promoter maintained 40% of the strength of the original 2.0-kb promoter, and approximately 90% of its astrocyte specificity. These properties were superior to those of the 1.4-kb, 0.6-kb (20% promoter strength) and 0.2-kb (70% astrocyte specificity) promoters. Then, we verified whether the 0.3-kb GFAP promoter retained astrocyte specificity in the marmoset cerebral cortex. Injection of viral vectors carrying the 0.3-kb marmoset GFAP promoter specifically transduced astrocytes in both the cerebral cortex and cerebellar cortex of the marmoset. These results suggest that the compact 0.3-kb promoter region serves as an astrocyte-specific promoter in the marmoset brain, which permits us to express a large gene by AAV vectors that have a limited accommodation capacity. Public Library of Science 2016-08-29 /pmc/articles/PMC5003399/ /pubmed/27571575 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0162023 Text en © 2016 Shinohara et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Shinohara, Yoichiro
Konno, Ayumu
Takahashi, Nobutaka
Matsuzaki, Yasunori
Kishi, Shoji
Hirai, Hirokazu
Viral Vector-Based Dissection of Marmoset GFAP Promoter in Mouse and Marmoset Brains
title Viral Vector-Based Dissection of Marmoset GFAP Promoter in Mouse and Marmoset Brains
title_full Viral Vector-Based Dissection of Marmoset GFAP Promoter in Mouse and Marmoset Brains
title_fullStr Viral Vector-Based Dissection of Marmoset GFAP Promoter in Mouse and Marmoset Brains
title_full_unstemmed Viral Vector-Based Dissection of Marmoset GFAP Promoter in Mouse and Marmoset Brains
title_short Viral Vector-Based Dissection of Marmoset GFAP Promoter in Mouse and Marmoset Brains
title_sort viral vector-based dissection of marmoset gfap promoter in mouse and marmoset brains
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5003399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27571575
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0162023
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