Original Articles
Subject Category: Vector Toxicology, Immunogenicity and Safety
Molecular Therapy (2008); 16 3, 548–556. doi:10.1038/sj.mt.6300399
Silencing of Episomal Transgene Expression in Liver by Plasmid Bacterial Backbone DNA Is Independent of CpG Methylation
Zhi-Ying Chen1,2, Efren Riu1,2, Chen-Yi He1,2, Hui Xu1,2 and Mark A Kay1,2
- 1Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA
- 2Department of Genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA
Correspondence: Mark A Kay, Department of Genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA. E-mail: markay@stanford.edu
Received 5 December 2007; Accepted 5 December 2007; Published online 5 February 2008.
Abstract
Minicircle DNA vectors devoid of plasmid bacterial backbone, (BB) DNAs, are transcriptionally persistent, whereas their parent plasmid counterparts are silenced in the liver. In this study we establish that circular plasmid BB provided in trans did not silence a transgene expression cassette in vivo, further confirming our previous conclusions that the covalent attachment of the plasmid BB to the expression cassette is required for DNA silencing. Given the high concentration of CpG dinucleotides in the plasmid BB, we investigated the role of DNA methylation on transgene silencing in vivo. The presence or absence of methylation in CpG motifs in routine plasmid BBs had no significant effect on transcriptional silencing. Furthermore, the removal of the CpG motifs from the BB did not ameliorate transcriptional silencing. Transgene silencing was partially inhibited when two tandem copies of the chicken cHS4 insulator at each end of a routine plasmid vector were used. These results are consistent with the idea that the transcriptional repression observed with plasmid DNA vectors in the liver is caused by formation of repressive heterochromatin on the plasmid DNA backbone, which then spreads and inactivates the transgene in cis, and that CpG content or methylation has little or no influence in the process.
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