Breadcrumb
- Home
- Publications
- Proceedings
- 2005 Annual Meeting
- Bioseparations
- Advances in Bioseparations II
- (341a) Purification of Aav Gene Therapy Vectors by Selectively Inactivating Helper Adenovirus Using High Hydrostatic Pressure
We have developed a method for using high hydrostatic pressure to selectively inactivate adenovirus helper virus (Ad5) without causing any detectable loss of activity in an AAV serotype 2 (AAV-2)-based gene therapy vector. High hydrostatic pressure has previously been shown to effectively inactivate microorganisms and viruses, including HIV-1, poliovirus, and adenovirus. Here, we report the inactivation kinetics of AAV-2 under a range of pressurization conditions, including precise control for incidental thermal effects. We thereby determined a range of high-pressure treatment conditions that leave AAV-2 fully active while rendering adenovirus essentially fully inactivated. AAV-2 inactivation kinetics would also be useful in determining whether high pressure might be used to inactivate other undesired viruses, such as those that might contaminate the producer cell lines, during the production of clinical-grade viral therapeutics. In addition, we are investigating the mechanisms by which AAV-2 is inactivated under high pressure in order to gain biological insights into the structure of AAV-2 particles, which would be useful for engineering gene therapy vectors for enhanced properties, such as delivery efficiency and stability. Finally, we are investigating whether high pressure treatment can be used with complementary separations processes to achieve enhanced product purity.