[HTML][HTML] The impact of the CD9 tetraspanin on lentivirus infectivity and exosome secretion

KO Böker, N Lemus-Diaz, RR Ferreira, L Schiller… - Molecular Therapy, 2018 - cell.com
KO Böker, N Lemus-Diaz, RR Ferreira, L Schiller, S Schneider, J Gruber
Molecular Therapy, 2018cell.com
Efficient transduction tools are a hallmark for both research and therapy development. Here,
we introduce new insights into the generation of lentiviral vectors with improved
performance by utilizing producer cells with increased production rates of extracellular
vesicles through CD9 overexpression. Most human cells secrete small vesicles from their
surface (microvesicles) or intraluminal endosome-derived membranes (exosomes). In
particular, enhanced levels of the tetraspanin CD9 result in significantly increased numbers …
Efficient transduction tools are a hallmark for both research and therapy development. Here, we introduce new insights into the generation of lentiviral vectors with improved performance by utilizing producer cells with increased production rates of extracellular vesicles through CD9 overexpression. Most human cells secrete small vesicles from their surface (microvesicles) or intraluminal endosome-derived membranes (exosomes). In particular, enhanced levels of the tetraspanin CD9 result in significantly increased numbers of extracellular vesicles with exosome-like features that were secreted from four different human cell lines. Intriguingly, exosomes and their biogenesis route display similarities to lentivirus and we examined the impact of CD9 expression on release and infectivity of recombinant lentiviral vectors. Although the titers of released viral particles were not increased upon production in high CD9 cells, we observed improved performance in terms of both speed and efficiency of lentiviral gene delivery into numerous human cell lines, including HEK293, HeLa, SH-SY5Y, as well as B and T lymphocytes. Here, we demonstrate that enhanced CD9 enables lentiviral transduction in the absence of any pseudotyping viral glycoprotein or fusogenic molecule. Our findings indicate an important role of CD9 for lentiviral vector and exosome biogenesis and point out a remarkable function of this tetraspanin in membrane fusion, viral infectivity, and exosome-mediated horizontal information transfer.
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