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Browsing by Subject "vector"

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  • Juntunen, Valtteri (2021)
    Adeno-Associated Viruses (AAVs) are quickly becoming one of the most applied vectors for gene therapy applications. In the recent years three new AAV-based gene therapies have been approved by U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and European Medicines Agency (EMA). The regulatory bodies require accurate and reliable characterisation of the clinical grade viral vectors during and after production. Analytic methods measuring the purity, potency and safety of the product support the up-stream and down-stream processes during the production and are used for final-drug substance characterisation. Median Tissue Culture Infectious Dose (TCID50) is a well-established method for measuring the infectious titer of a virus. Here, an assay for determining the infectious titer of AAVs, which has previously been used to characterise the existing AAV2 Reference Standard Material (AAV2RSM) was set up and optimised for research use at Kuopio Center for Gene and Cell Therapy (KCT). The assay utilizes the HeRC32-cell line, a HeLa clone, that stably expresses AAV Rep and Cap -proteins and in presence of adenovirus, enables the replication of recombinant AAV-vectors. The cells were grown in 96-well plates and infected with 10-fold dilution series of AAV vectors (AAV2 and AAV6) using human adenovirus type 5 as the co-infector. 72 hours post infection the vector genome replication of AAV was detected with quantitative PCR (qPCR). Thresholds for qPCR determined copy number and cycle threshold (Ct) were set and used for the determination of infection-positive wells. The 50-percent endpoint was observed and used to calculate the infectious titer according to the Spearman-Kärber method. The assay was set up and optimised with the AAV2 Reference standard material (AAV2RSM) using two different primer-probe sets (targeted sequences were; SV40 polyadenylation signal and AAV inverted terminal repeats (ITRs)). Plates infected with AAV2RSM were analysed separately with both primers resulting in mean infectious titers of 8.07 ± 3.13 x 108 TCID50 Infectious Units (IU) / mL (n = 9) and 1.27 ± 0.464 x 109 TCID50 IU/mL (n = 9) for SV40 and ITR, respectively. After the assay was set up with the AAV2RSM, an in-house AAV6 product was analysed with the ITR primers yielding 6.09 ± 3.94 x 109 TCID50 (IU) / mL (n = 5). The assay protocol was successfully set up for research use at the KCT laboratory. Improvements were added to the original protocol to increase assay robustness, accuracy and precision as well as to minimize the possibility of over-estimation of the infectious titer. The assay can be further optimised for a particular therapeutic AAV product in the research laboratory or technology transferred to a production facility for optimisation and validation for the analytics needs of a production pipeline.
  • Fang, Xin (2012)
    Bacterial soft rot is one of the most serious diseases affecting potatoes in fields and storages worldwide. Soft rot on potatoes and other crops are caused mainly by Pectobacterium atrosepticum, Pectobacterium carotovorum and several Dickeya species. The disease spreads via many ways and insects are suggested to be important agents in the epidemiology. Evolutionary and geological evidences suggest soil nematodes play essential roles in ecological processes including nutrients cycling, decomposition and disease suppression. Although some studies show that Pectobacteria can survive the digestive tract of the nematodes, it is unclear whether the soil nematodes can be vectors for transmission and dissemination of plant pathogenic bacteria. Moreover, the life span of C. elegans, a free-living and bacterial-feeding nematode, is limited when fed on Pectobacterium. How soft rot bacteria interact with C. elegans and how the nematodes respond to these bacteria are still unknown. Results of this study suggest that Pectobacterium could be disseminated via nematodes on potatoes, indicating that nematodes could serve as vectors in the dissemination of soft rot bacteria on crops. Through the bacterial transmission assay, Pectobacterium is proved to possess a better ability to persist with nematodes compared to E. coli. It seems that pectobacteria have some traits that provide this ability, so Pectobacterium mutants related to Pectobacterium-plant interaction were tested and the expressions C. elegans genes were measured using quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), aiming to find out genes playing a role in Pectobacterium-nematodes interaction. However, in this study most likely type VI secretion system, putative Flp/Tad-like pilus, flagella, full length lipopolysaccharides, quorum sensing or ExpAS two-component system are not necessary determinants for the interrelationship of Pectobacterium and nematodes.