Purification of retroviral vectors for clinical application: biological implications and technological challenges
Journal of biotechnology, 2007•Elsevier
For centuries mankind led a difficult battle against viruses, the smallest infectious agents at
the surface of the earth. Nowadays it is possible to use viruses for our benefit, both at a
prophylactic level in the production of vaccines and at a therapeutic level in the promising
field of gene therapy. Retroviruses were discovered at the end of the 19th century and
constitute one of the most effective entities for gene transfer and insertion into the genome of
mammalian cells. This attractive feature has intensified research in retroviral vectors …
the surface of the earth. Nowadays it is possible to use viruses for our benefit, both at a
prophylactic level in the production of vaccines and at a therapeutic level in the promising
field of gene therapy. Retroviruses were discovered at the end of the 19th century and
constitute one of the most effective entities for gene transfer and insertion into the genome of
mammalian cells. This attractive feature has intensified research in retroviral vectors …
For centuries mankind led a difficult battle against viruses, the smallest infectious agents at the surface of the earth. Nowadays it is possible to use viruses for our benefit, both at a prophylactic level in the production of vaccines and at a therapeutic level in the promising field of gene therapy. Retroviruses were discovered at the end of the 19th century and constitute one of the most effective entities for gene transfer and insertion into the genome of mammalian cells. This attractive feature has intensified research in retroviral vectors development and production over the past years, mainly due to the expectations raised by the concept of gene therapy. The demand for high quality retroviral vectors that meet standard requisites from the regulatory agencies (FDA and EMEA) is therefore increasing, as the technology has moved into clinical trials. The development of safer producer cell lines that can be used in large-scale production will result in the production of large quantities of retroviral stocks. Cost-efficient and scalable purification processes are essential for production of injectable-grade preparations to achieve final implementation of these vectors as therapeutics. Several preparative purification steps already established for proteins can certainly be applied to retroviral vectors, in particular membrane filtration and chromatographic methods. Nevertheless, the special properties of these complex products require technological improvement of the existing purification steps and/or development of particular purification steps to increase productivity and throughput, while maintaining biological activity of the final product. This review focuses on downstream process development in relation to the retroviral vectors characteristics and quality assessment of retroviral stocks for intended use in gene therapy.
Elsevier
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