Revolution of AAV in Drug Discovery: From Delivery System to Clinical
Application
Abstract
Adeno-associated virus (AAV) is a non-enveloped DNA virus infecting a
wide variety of species, tissues and cell types, which is recognized as
safe and effective method for delivering therapeutic transgenes. AAV
vector is the most popular viral gene delivery system in clinical
delivery system with unique and multiple advantages, such as tissue
tropism, transduction specificity, long-lasting gene expression, low
immune responses, without host chromosome incorporation. Till now, four
AAV-based gene therapy drugs have already been approved by the US Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) or European Medicines Agency (EMA).
Despite the success of AAV vectors, there still have some remaining
challenges to limit the further usage, such as poor packaging capacity,
low organ specificity, pre-existing humoral immunity, and vector
dose-dependent toxicity. In the present review, we address the different
approaches to optimize AAV vector delivery system with focus on capsid
engineering, packaging capacity, immune response at the clinical level.
The review further investigates the potential of manipulating AAV
vectors in preclinical applications and clinical translation, which
emphasizes the challenges and prospects in viral vector selection, drug
delivery strategies, immune reactions in cancer, neurodegenerative
disease, retinal disease, SARS-CoV-2, and monkeypox. Finally, it
forecasts future directions and potential challenges of artificial
intelligence (AI), vaccine, and nanobody, which emphasizes the need for
ethical and secure approaches in AAV application.