Adeno-associated virus vector for high-frequency integration, expression, and rescue of genes in mammalian cells.

Abstract
We describe the construction of an adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector in which the coding sequence of the procaryotic gene neo is expressed under the control of the major AAV promoter p40. This AAV-neo vector allowed stable expression of neo as a dominant selective marker in mammalian cells by selection of cells which were resistant to the antibiotic geneticin (G418). When the vector was introduced into human (293 or HeLa) cell lines by a DNA transfection procedure, stable geneticin-resistant colonies were obtained. When the vector was first packaged into AAV particles and then introduced into cells via particle infection, geneticin-resistant cells were obtained at higher frequencies than those obtained by DNA transfection. In geneticin-resistant cells the AAV-neo vector was integrated at low copy number and could be rescued by subsequent infection with wild-type AAV and the helper adenovirus or, in some cases, by infection with adenovirus alone. The rescued AAV-neo vector could then be recovered as amplified unintegrated DNA from a Hirt lysate. These results demonstrate that AAV can be used as a transducing viral vector for stable integration and expression of a foreign gene in mammalian cells. The high frequency of integration and the ability to rescue the integrated vector suggest that this vector system may be useful for selecting genes from cDNA libraries. This vector may also be useful for introduction of genes into cells which are refractory to transfection in procedures such as those involving the use of CaPO4 or DEAE-dextran.