Genomic stability of Self-inactivating Rabies

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Abstract

Transsynaptic viral vectors provide means to gain genetic access to neurons based on synaptic connectivity and are essential tools for the dissection of neural circuit function. Among them, the retrograde monosynaptic ΔG-Rabies has been widely used in neuroscience research. A recently developed engineered version of the ΔG-Rabies, the non-toxic self-inactivating (SiR) virus, represents the first tool for open-ended genetic manipulation of neural circuits. However, the high mutational rate of the rabies virus poses a risk that mutations targeting the key genetic regulatory element in the SiR genome could emerge and revert it to a canonical ΔG-Rabies. Such revertant mutations have recently been identified in a SiR batch. To address the origin, incidence and relevance of these mutations, we investigated the genomic stability of SiRin vitroandin vivo. We found that “revertant” mutations are rare and accumulate only when SiR is extensively amplifiedin vitro, particularly in suboptimal production cell lines that have insufficient levels of TEV protease activity. Moreover, we confirmed that SiR-CRE, unlike canonical ΔG-Rab-CRE or revertant-SiR-CRE, is non-toxic and that revertant mutations do not emergein vivoduring long-term experiments.

Highlights

  • Revertant mutations are rare and do not accumulate when SiR is produced in high-TEVp expressing production cell lines

  • SiR is non-toxicin vivo

  • Revertant SiR mutations do not accumulate duringin vivoexperiments

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