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Lentiviral vector integration in the human genome induces alternative splicing and generates aberrant transcripts
Arianna Moiani, … , Giuliana Ferrari, Fulvio Mavilio
Arianna Moiani, … , Giuliana Ferrari, Fulvio Mavilio
Published April 23, 2012
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2012;122(5):1653-1666. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI61852.
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Research Article Article has an altmetric score of 7

Lentiviral vector integration in the human genome induces alternative splicing and generates aberrant transcripts

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Abstract

Retroviral vectors integrate in genes and regulatory elements and may cause transcriptional deregulation of gene expression in target cells. Integration into transcribed genes also has the potential to deregulate gene expression at the posttranscriptional level by interfering with splicing and polyadenylation of primary transcripts. To examine the impact of retroviral vector integration on transcript splicing, we transduced primary human cells or cultured cells with HIV-derived vectors carrying a reporter gene or a human β-globin gene under the control of a reduced-size locus-control region (LCR). Cells were randomly cloned and integration sites were determined in individual clones. We identified aberrantly spliced, chimeric transcripts in more than half of the targeted genes in all cell types. Chimeric transcripts were generated through the use of constitutive and cryptic splice sites in the HIV 5ι long terminal repeat and gag gene as well as in the β-globin gene and LCR. Compared with constitutively spliced transcripts, most aberrant transcripts accumulated at a low level, at least in part as a consequence of nonsense-mediated mRNA degradation. A limited set of cryptic splice sites caused the majority of aberrant splicing events, providing a strategy for recoding lentiviral vector backbones and transgenes to reduce their potential posttranscriptional genotoxicity.

Authors

Arianna Moiani, Ylenia Paleari, Daniela Sartori, Riccardo Mezzadra, Annarita Miccio, Claudia Cattoglio, Fabienne Cocchiarella, Maria Rosa Lidonnici, Giuliana Ferrari, Fulvio Mavilio

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Figure 5

Summary of the relative frequency (percentage) of the 4 classes of abundance of aberrantly spliced transcripts recovered in all analyzed cell clones.

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Summary of the relative frequency (percentage) of the 4 classes of abund...
(A) Aberrant transcripts generated from LV proviruses integrated in forward orientation in Jurkat/SupT1, primary T cell, HaCaT, and HEL clones, ranked in the high (red), intermediate (yellow), low (blue), rare (gray), and absent (black) abundance classes, as defined by the semiquantitative PCR assay shown in Figure 4. (B) Aberrant transcripts generated from the GLOBE proviruses integrated in reverse orientation in HEL clones. The total number of analyzed proviruses (n) is indicated above each bar.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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Referenced in 2 patents
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