We have previously described a new family of mutant adenoviruses carrying
different combinations of attB/attP sequences
from bacteriophage PhiC31 flanking the Ad5 packaging domain. These novel helper
viruses have a significantly delayed viral life cycle and a severe packaging
impairment, regardless of the presence of PhiC31 recombinase. Their infectious
viral titers are significantly lower (100–1000 fold) than those of control
adenovirus at 36 hours post-infection, but allow for efficient packaging of
helper-dependent adenovirus. In the present work, we have analyzed which steps
of the adenovirus life cycle are altered in attB-helper
adenoviruses and investigated whether these viruses can provide the necessary
viral proteins in trans. The entry of
attB-adenoviral genomes into the cell nucleus early at early
timepoints post-infection was not impaired and viral protein expression levels
were found to be similar to those of control adenovirus. However, electron
microscopy and capsid protein composition analyses revealed that
attB-adenoviruses remain at an intermediate state of
maturation 36 hours post-infection in comparison to control adenovirus which
were fully mature and infective at this time point. Therefore, an additional
20–24 hours were found to be required for the appearance of mature
attB-adenovirus. Interestingly,
attB-adenovirus assembly and infectivity was restored by
inserting a second packaging signal close to the right-end ITR, thus discarding
the possibility that the attB-adenovirus genome was retained in a nuclear
compartment deleterious for virus assembly. The present study may have
substantive implications for helper-dependent adenovirus technology since helper
attB-adenovirus allows for preferential packaging of
helper-dependent adenovirus genomes