Adenovirus vectors

Abstract
The present invention provides improved adenovirus vectors and packaging cell lines. One type of improved adenoviral vector comprises deletions within the E2b region of the adenoviral genome. These E2b-deleted virus are used in conjunction with novel cell lines that constitutively express E2b gene products. The present invention further provides adenoviral vectors deleted for all viral coding regions. These "gutted" vectors permit the transfer of large genes to cells as demonstrated herein by the transfer of the dystrophin gene to the muscle of mice. The E2b-deleted vectors and the gutted vectors provide improved adenoviral vectors useful for a wide variety of gene therapy applications.
Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to improved adenovirus vectors, and more specifically, adenovirus vectors useful for gene therapy.
BACKGROUND
Adenoviruses (Ad) are double-stranded DNA viruses. The genome of adenoviruses (.about.36 kb) is complex and contains over 50 open reading frames (ORFs). These ORFs are overlapping and genes encoding one protein are often embedded within genes coding for other Ad proteins. Expression of Ad genes is divided into an early and a late phase. Early genes are those transcribed prior to replication of the genome while late genes are transcribed after replication. The early genes comprise E1a, E1b, E2a, E2b, E3 and E4. The E1a gene products are involved in transcriptional regulation; the E1b gene products are involved in the shut-off of host cell functions and mRNA transport. E2a encodes the a DNA-binding protein (DBP); E2b encodes the viral DNA polymerase and preterminal protein (pTP). The E3 gene products are not essential for viral growth in cell culture. The E4 region encodes regulatory protein involved in transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation of viral gene expression; a subset of the E4 proteins are essential for viral growth. The products of the late genes (e.g., L1-5) are predominantly components of the virion as well as proteins involved in the assembly of virions. The VA genes produce VA RNAs which block the host cell from shutting down viral protein synthesis.
Adenoviruses or Ad vectors have been exploited for the delivery of foreign genes to cells for a number of reasons including the fact that Ad vectors have been shown to be highly effective for the transfer of genes into a wide variety of tissues in vivo and the fact that Ad infects both dividing and non-dividing cells; a number of tissues which are targets for gene therapy comprise largely non-dividing cells.
The current generation of Ad vectors suffer from a number of limitations which preclude their widespread clinical use including: 1) immune detection and elimination of cells infected with Ad vectors, 2) a limited carrying capacity (about 8.5 kb) for the insertion of foreign genes and regulatory elements, and 3) low-level expression of Ad genes in cells infected with recombinant Ad vectors (generally, the expression of Ad proteins is toxic to cells).
The latter problem was thought to be solved by using vectors containing deletions in the E1 region of the Ad genome (E1 gene products are required for viral gene expression and replication). However, even with such vectors, low-level expression of Ad genes is observed. It is now thought that most mammalian cells contain E1-like factors which can substitute for the missing Ad E1 proteins and permit expression of Ad genes remaining on the E1 deleted vectors.
What is needed is an approach that overcomes the problem of low level expression of Ad genes. Such an approach needs to ensure that adenovirus vectors are safe and non-immunogenic.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention contemplates two approaches to improving adenovirus vectors. The first approach generally contemplates a recombinant plasmid, together with a helper adenovirus, in a packaging cell line. The helper adenovirus is rendered safe by utilization of loxP sequences. In the second approach, "damaged" adenoviruses are employed. While the "damaged" adenovirus is capable of self-propagation in a packaging cell line, it is not capable of expressing certain genes (e.g., the DNA polymerase gene and/or the adenovirus preterminal protein gene).
In one embodiment of the first approach, the present invention contemplates a recombinant plasmid, comprising in operable combination: a) a plasmid backbone, comprising an origin of replication, an antibiotic resistance gene and a eukaryotic promoter element; b) the left and right inverted terminal repeats (ITRs) of adenovirus, said ITRs each having a 5' and a 3' end and arranged in a tail to tail orientation on said plasmid backbone; c) the adenovirus packaging sequence, said packaging sequence having a 5' and a 3' end and linked to one of said ITRs; and d) a first gene of interest operably linked to said promoter element.
While it is not intended that the present invention be limited by the precise size of the plasmid, it is generally desirable that the recombinant plasmid have a total size of between 27 and 40 kilobase pairs. It is preferred that the total size of the DNA packaged into an EAM derived from these recombinant plasmids is about the length of the wild-type adenovirus genome (.about.36 kb). It is well known in the art that DNA representing about 105% of the wild-type length may be packaged into a viral particle; thus the EAM derived from recombinant plasmid may contain DNA whose length exceeds by 105% the size of the wild-type genome. The size of the recombinant plasmid may be adjusted using reporter genes and genes of interest having various sizes (including the use of different sizes of introns within these genes) as well as through the use of irrelevant or non-coding DNA fragment which act as "stuffer" fragments (e.g., portions of bacteriophage genomes).
In one embodiment of the recombinant plasmid, said 5' end of said packaging sequence is linked to said 3' end of said left ITR. In this embodiment, said first gene of interest is linked to said 3' end of said packaging sequence. It is not intended that the present invention be limited by the nature of the gene of interest; a variety of genes (including both cDNA and genomic forms) are contemplated; any gene having therapeutic value may be inserted into the recombinant plasmids of the present invention. For example, the transfer of the adenosine deaminase (ADA) gene is useful for the treatment of ADA- patients; the transfer of the CFTR gene is useful for the treatment of cystitic fibrosis. A wide variety of diseases are known to be due to a defect in a single gene. The plasmids, vectors and EAMs of the present invention are useful for the transfer of a non-mutated form of a gene which is mutated in a patient thereby resulting in disease. The present invention is illustrated using recombinant plasmids capable of generating encapsidated adenovirus minichromosomes (EAMs) containing the dystrophin cDNA gene (the cDNA form of this gene is preferred due to the large size of this gene); the dystrophin gene is non-functional in muscular dystrophy (MD) patients. However, the present invention is not limited toward the use of the dystrophin gene for treatment of MD; the use of the utrophin (also called the dystrophin related protein) gene is also contemplated for gene therapy for the treatment of MD [Tinsley et al. (1993) Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev. 3:484 and (1992) Nature 360:591]; the utrophin gene protein has been reported to be capable of functionally substituting for the dystrophin gene [Tinsley and Davies (1993) Neuromusc. Disord. 3:539]. As the utrophin gene product is expressed in the muscle of muscular dystrophy patients, no immune response would be directed against the utrophin gene product expressed in cells of a host (including a human) containing the recombinant plasmids, Ad vectors or EAMs of the present invention. While the present invention is illustrated using plasmids containing the dystrophin gene, the plasmids, Ad vectors and EAMs of the present invention have broad application for the transfer of any gene whose gene product is missing or altered in activity in cells.
Embodiments are contemplated wherein the recombinant plasmid further comprises a second gene of interest. In one embodiment, said second gene of interest is linked to said 3' end of said right ITR. In one embodiment, said second gene of interest is a reporter gene. A variety of reporter genes are contemplated, including but not limited to E. coli .beta.-galactosidase gene, the human placental alkaline phosphatase gene, the green fluorescent protein gene and the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene.
As mentioned above, the first approach also involves the use of a helper adenovirus in combination .with the recombinant plasmid. In one embodiment, the present invention contemplates a helper adenovirus comprising i) first and a second loxP sequences, and ii) the adenovirus packaging sequence, said packaging sequence having a 5' and a 3' end. It is preferred that said first loxP sequence is linked to the 5' end of said packaging sequence and said second loxP sequence is linked to said 3' end of said packaging sequence. In one embodiment, the helper virus comprises at least one adenovirus gene coding region.
The present invention contemplates a mammalian cell line containing the above-described recombinant plasmid and the above-described helper virus. It is preferred that said cell line is a 293-derived cell line. Specifically, in one embodiment, the present invention contemplates a mammalian cell line, comprising: a) a recombinant plasmid, comprising, in operable combination: i) a plasmid backbone, comprising an origin of replication, an antibiotic resistance gene and a eukaryotic promoter element, ii) the left and right inverted terminal repeats (ITRs) of adenovirus, said ITRs each having a 5' and a 3' end and arranged in a tail to tail orientation on said plasmid backbone, iii) the adenovirus packaging sequence, said packaging sequence having a 5' and a 3' end and linked to one of said ITRs, and iv) a first gene of interest operably linked to said promoter element; and b) a helper adenovirus comprising i) first and a second loxP sequences, and ii) the adenovirus packaging sequence, said packaging sequence having a 5' and a 3' end. As noted previously, said helper can further comprise at least one adenovirus gene coding region.
Overall, the first approach allows for a method of producing an adenovirus minichromosome. In one embodiment, this method comprises: A) providing a mammalian cell line containing: a) a recombinant plasmid, comprising, in operable combination, i) a plasmid backbone, comprising an origin of replication, an antibiotic resistance gene and a eukaryotic promoter element, ii) the left and right inverted terminal repeats (ITRs) of adenovirus, said ITRs each having a 5' and a 3' end and arranged in a tail to tail orientation on said plasmid backbone, iii) the adenovirus packaging sequence, said packaging sequence having a 5' and a 3' end and linked to one of the ITRs, and iv) a first gene of interest operably linked to said promoter element; and b) a helper adenovirus comprising i) first and a second loxP sequences, ii) at least one adenovirus gene coding region, and iii) the adenovirus packaging sequence, said packaging sequence having a 5' and a 3' end; and B) growing said cell line under conditions such that said adenovirus gene coding region is expressed and said recombinant plasmid directs the production of at least one adenoviral minichromosome. It is desired that said adenovirus minichromosome is encapsidated.
In one embodiment, the present invention contemplates recovering said encapsidated adenovirus minichromosome and, in turn, purifying said recovered encapsidated adenovirus minichromosome. Thereafter, said purified encapsidated adenovirus minichromosome can be administered to a host (e.g., a mammal). Human therapy is thereby contemplated.
It is not intended that the present invention be limited by the nature of the administration of said minichromosomes. All types of administration are contemplated, including direct injection (intramuscular, intravenous, subcutaneous, etc.), inhalation, etc.
As noted above, the present invention contemplates a second approaches to improving adenovirus vectors. In the second approach, "damaged" adenoviruses are employed. In one embodiment, the present invention contemplates a recombinant adenovirus comprising the adenovirus E2b region having a deletion, said adenovirus capable of self-propagation in a packaging cell line and said E2b region comprising the DNA polymerase gene and the adenovirus preterminal protein gene. In this embodiment, said deletion can be within the adenovirus DNA polymerase gene. Alternatively, said deletion is within the adenovirus preterminal protein gene. Finally, the present invention also contemplates embodiments wherein said deletion is within the adenovirus DNA polymerase and preterminal protein genes.
The present invention further provides cell lines capable of supporting the propagation of Ad virus containing deletions within the E2b region. In one embodiment the invention provides a mammalian cell line stably and constitutively expressing the adenovirus E1 gene products and the adenovirus DNA polymerase. In one embodiment, these cell lines comprise a recombinant adenovirus comprising a deletion within the E2b region, this E2b-deleted recombinant adenovirus being capable of self-propagation in the cell line. The present invention is not limited by the nature of the deletion within the E2b region. In one embodiment, the deletion is within the adenoviral DNA polymerase gene.
The present invention provides cells lines stably expressing E1 proteins and the adenoviral DNA polymerase, wherein the genome of the cell line contains a nucleotide sequence encoding adenovirus DNA polymerase operably linked to a heterologous promoter. In a particularly preferred embodiment, the cell line is selected from the group consisting of the B-6, B-9, C-1, C-4, C-7, C-13, and C-14 cell lines.
The present invention further provides cell lines which further constitutively express the adenovirus preterminal protein (pTP) gene product (in addition to E1 proteins and DNA polymerase). In one embodiment, these pTP-expressing cell lines comprise a recombinant adenovirus comprising a deletion within the E2b region, the recombinant adenovirus being capable of self-propagation in the pTP-expressing cell line. In a preferred embodiment, the deletion within the E2b region comprises a deletion within the adenoviral preterminal protein gene. In another preferred embodiment, the deletion within the E2b region comprises a deletion within the adenoviral (Ad) DNA polymerase and preterminal protein genes.
In a preferred embodiment, the cell lines coexpressing pTP and Ad DNA polymerase, contain within their genome, a nucleotide sequence encoding adenovirus preterminal protein operably linked to a heterologous promoter. In the invention is not limited by the nature of the heterologous promoter chosen. The art knows well how to select a suitable heterologous promoter to achieve expression in the desired host cell (e.g., 293 cells or derivative thereof). In a particularly preferred embodiment, the pTP- and Ad polymerase-expressing cell line is selected from the group consisting of the C-1, C-4, C-7, C-13, and C-14 cell lines.
The present invention provides a method of producing infectious recombinant adenovirus particles containing an adenoviral genome containing a deletion within the E2b region, comprising: a) providing: i) a mammalian cell line stably and constitutively expressing the adenovirus E1 gene products and the adenovirus DNA polymerase; ii) a recombinant adenovirus comprising a deletion within the E2b region, the recombinant adenovirus being capable of self-propagation in said cell line; b) introducing the recombinant adenovirus into the cell line under conditions such that the recombinant adenovirus is propagated to form infectious recombinant adenovirus particles; and c) recovering the infectious recombinant adenovirus particles. In a preferred embodiment, the method further comprises d) purifying the recovered infectious recombinant adenovirus particles. In yet another preferred embodiment, the method further comprises e) administering the purified recombinant adenovirus particles to a host which is preferably a mammal and most preferably a human.
In another preferred embodiment the mammalian cell line employed in the above method further constitutively expresses the adenovirus preterminal protein.
The present invention further provides a recombinant plasmid capable of replicating in a bacterial host comprising adenoviral E2b sequences, the E2b sequences containing a deletion within the polymerase gene, the deletion resulting in reduced polymerase activity. The present invention is not limited by the specific deletion employed to reduce polymerase activity. In a preferred embodiment, the deletion comprises a deletion of nucleotides 8772 to 9385 in SEQ ID NO:4. In one preferred embodiment, the recombinant plasmid has the designation p.DELTA.pol. In another preferred embodiment, the recombinant plasmid has the designation pBHG11.DELTA.pol.
The present invention also provides a recombinant plasmid capable of replicating in a bacterial host comprising adenoviral E2b sequences, the E2b sequences containing a deletion within the preterminal protein gene, the deletion resulting in the inability to express functional preterminal protein without disruption of the VA RNA genes. The present invention is not limited by the specific deletion employed to render the pTP inactive; any deletion within the pTP coding region which does not disrupt the ability to express the Ad VA RNA genes may be employed. In a preferred embodiment, the deletion comprises a deletion of nucleotides 10,705 to 11,134 in SEQ ID NO:4. In ore preferred embodiment, the recombinant plasmid has the designation p.DELTA.pTP. In another preferred embodiment, the recombinant plasmid has the designation pBHG11.DELTA.pTP.
In a preferred embodiment, the recombinant plasmid containing a deletion with the pTP region further comprises a deletion within the polymerase gene, this deletion resulting in reduced (preferably absent) polymerase activity. The present invention is not limited by the specific deletion employed to inactivate the polymerase and pTP genes. In a preferred embodiment, the deletion comprises a deletion of nucleotides 8,773 to 9586 and 11,067 to 12,513 in SEQ ID NO:4. In one preferred embodiment, the recombinant plasmid has the designation pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13. In another preferred embodiment, the recombinant plasmid has the designation pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
FIG. 1A is a schematic representation of the Ad polymerase expression plasmid pRSV-pol indicating that the Ad2 DNA polymerase sequences are under the transcriptional control of the RSV-LTR/promoter element and are flanked on the 3' end by the SV-40 small t intron and SV-40 polyadenylation addition site.
FIG. 1B is a schematic representation of the expression plasmid pRSV-pTP indicating that the Ad2 preterminal protein sequences are under the transcriptional control of the RSV-LTR/promoter element and are flanked on the 3' end by the SV-40 small-t intron and SV-40 polyadenylation signals.
FIG. 2 is an ethidium bromide-stained gel depicting the presence of Ad pol DNA sequences in genomic DNA from LP-293 cells and several hygromycin-resistant cell lines. The .about.750 bp PCR products are indicated by the arrow.
FIG. 3 is an autoradiograph depicting the results of a viral replication-complementation assay analyzing the functional activity of the Ad polymerase protein expressed by LP-293 cells and several hygromycin resistant cell lines. The 8,010 bp HindIII fragments analyzed by densitometry are indicated by an arrow.
FIG. 4 is an autoradiograph indicating that cell lines B-6 and C-7 contained a smaller and a larger species of Ad polymerase mRNA while LP-293 derived RNA had no detectable hybridization signal. The location of the two species of Ad polymerase mRNA are indicated relative to the 28S and 18S ribosomal RNAs, and the aberrant transcript expressed by the B-9 cell line is indicated by an arrow.
FIG. 5 is an autoradiograph showing which of the cell lines that received the preterminal protein expression plasmid indicated the presence of pRSV-pTP sequences (arrow labelled "pTP") and E1 sequences (arrow labelled "E1").
FIG. 6 is an autoradiograph indicating in which of the cell lines transcription of preterminal protein is occurring (arrow labelled ".about.3kb").
FIG. 7 is an autoradiograph indicating that the expression of the Ad-polymerase could overcome the replication defect of H5sub100 at non-permissive temperatures.
FIG. 8 graphically depicts plaque titre for LP-293, B-6 and C-7 cell lines infected with wtAd5, H5ts36, or H5sub100, and the results demonstrate that the C-7 cell line can be used as a packaging cell line to allow the high level growth of E1, preterminal, and polymerase deleted Ad vectors.
FIG. 9 is an autoradiograph showing that the recombinant pol.sup.- virus is viable on pol-expressing 293 cells but not on 293 cells which demonstrates that recombinant Ad viruses containing the 612 bp deletion found within p.DELTA.pol lack the ability to express Ad polymerase.
FIG. 10 is a schematic representation of the structure of pAd5.beta.dys wherein the two inverted adenovirus origins of replication are represented by a left and right inverted terminal repeat (LITR/RITR). P1 and P2 represent location of probes used for Southern blot analysis.
FIG. 11 graphically illustrates the total number of transducing adenovirus particles produced (output) per serial passage on 293 cells, total input virus of either the helper (hpAP) or Ad5.beta.dys, and the total number of cells used in each infection.
FIGS. 12A-B show Southern blot analyses of viral DNA from lysates 3, 6, 9 and 12, digested with the restriction enzymes BssHII, NruI and EcoRV. For the analyses, fragments from the C terminus of mus musculus dystrophin cDNA (A) or the N terminus of E coil .beta.-galactosidase (B) were labeled with dCTP.sup.32 and used as probes.
FIGS. 13A-B show the physical separation of Ad5.beta.dys from hpAP virions at the third (A) and final (B) stages of CsCl purification.
FIG. 14 graphically depicts the level of contamination of Ad5.beta.dys EAMs by hpAP virions obtained from the final stage of CsCl purification as measured by .beta.-galactosidase and alkaline phosphatase expression. The ratio of the two types of virions - Ad5.beta.dys EAMs (LacZ) or hpAP (AP) in each fraction is indicated in the lower graph.
FIGS. 15A-B are western blot (immunoblot) analyses of protein extracts from mdx myoblasts and myotubes demonstrating the expression of .beta.-galactosidase (A) and dystrophin (B) in cells infected with Ad5.beta.dys EAMs.
FIGS. 16A-C depict immunofluorescence of dystrophin expression in wild type MM14 myotubes (A), uninfected mdx (B) and infected mdx myotubes (C).
FIG. 17 is a schematic representation of the MCK/lacZ constructs tested to determine what portion of the .about.3.3 kb DNA fragment containing the enhancer/promoter of the MCK gene is capable of directing high levels of expression of linked genes in muscle cells.
FIG. 18 is a schematic representation of a GFP/.beta.-gal reporter construct suitable for assaying the expression of Cre recombinase in mammalian cells.
FIG. 19 is a schematic representation of the recombination event between the loxP shuttle vector and the Ad5dl7001 genome.





DEFINITIONS
To facilitate understanding of the invention, a number of terms are defined below.
The term "gene" refers to a DNA sequence that comprises control and coding sequences necessary for the production of a polypeptide or precursor thereof. The polypeptide can be encoded by a full length coding sequence or by any portion of the coding sequence so long as the desired enzymatic activity is retained. The term "gene" encompasses both cDNA and genomic forms of a given gene.
The term "wild-type" refers to a gene or gene product which has the characteristics of that gene or gene product when isolated from a naturally occurring source. A wild-type gene is that which is most frequently observed in a population and is thus arbitrarily designated the "normal" or "wild-type" form of the gene. In contrast, the term "modified" or "mutant" refers to a gene or gene product which displays modifications in sequence and or functional properties (i.e., altered characteristics) when compared to the wild-type gene or gene product. It is noted that naturally-occurring mutants can be isolated; these are identified by the fact that they have altered characteristics when compared to the wild-type gene or gene product.
The term "oligonucleotide" as used herein is defined as a molecule comprised of two or more deoxyribonucleotides or ribonucleotides, usually more than three (3), and typically more than ten (10) and up to one hundred (100) or more (although preferably between twenty and thirty). The exact size will depend on many factors, which in turn depends on the ultimate function or use of the oligonucleotide. The oligonucleotide may be generated in any manner, including chemical synthesis, DNA replication, reverse transcription, or a combination thereof.
As used herein, the term "regulatory element" refers to a genetic element which controls some aspect of the expression of nucleic acid sequences. For example, a promoter is a regulatory element which facilitates the initiation of transcription of an operably linked coding region. Other regulatory elements are splicing signals, polyadenylation signals, termination signals, etc. (defined infra).
Transcriptional control signals in eucaryotes comprise "promoter" and "enhancer" elements. Promoters and enhancers consist of short arrays of DNA sequences that interact specifically with cellular proteins involved in transcription [Maniatis, T. et al., Science 236:1237 (1987)]. Promoter and enhancer elements have been isolated from a variety of eukaryotic sources including genes in yeast, insect and mammalian cells and viruses (analogous control elements, i.e., promoters, are also found in procaryotes). The selection of a particular promoter and enhancer depends on what cell type is to be used to express the protein of interest. Some eukaryotic promoters and enhancers have a broad host range while others are functional in a limited subset of cell types [for review see Voss, S. D. et al., Trends Biochem. Sci., 11:287 (1986) and Maniatis, T. et al., supra (1987)].
The term "recombinant DNA vector" as used herein refers to DNA sequences containing a desired coding sequence and appropriate DNA sequences necessary for the expression of the operably linked coding sequence in a particular host organism (e.g. mammal). DNA sequences necessary for expression in procaryotes include a promoter, optionally an operator sequence, a ribosome binding site and possibly other sequences. Eukaryotic cells are known to utilize promoters, polyadenlyation signals and enhancers.
The terms "in operable combination", "in operable order" and "operably linked" as used herein refer to the linkage of nucleic acid sequences in such a manner that a nucleic acid molecule capable of directing the transcription of a given gene and/or the synthesis of a desired protein molecule is produced. The term also refers to the linkage of amino acid sequences in such a manner so that a functional protein is produced.
The term "genetic cassette" as used herein refers to a fragment or segment of DNA containing a particular grouping of genetic elements. The cassette can be removed and inserted into a vector or plasmid as a single unit. A plasmid backbone refers to a piece of DNA containing at least plasmid origin of replication and a selectable marker gene (e.g., an antibiotic resistance gene) which allows for selection of bacterial hosts containing the plasmid; the plasmid backbone may also include a polylinker region to facilitate the insertion of genetic elements within the plasmid. When a particular plasmid is modified to contain non-plasmid elements (e.g., insertion of Ad sequences and/or a eukaryotic gene of interest linked to a promoter element), the plasmid sequences are referred to as the plasmid backbone.
Because mononucleotides are reacted to make oligonucleotides in a manner such that the 5' phosphate of one mononucleotide pentose ring is attached to the 3' oxygen of its neighbor in one direction via a phosphodiester linkage, an end of an oligonucleotide is referred to as the "5' end" if its 5' phosphate is not linked to the 3' oxygen of a mononucleotide pentose ring and as the "3' end" if its 3' oxygen is not linked to a 5' phosphate of a subsequent mononucleotide pentose ring. As used herein, a nucleic acid sequence, even if internal to a larger oligonucleotide, also may be said to have 5' and 3' ends.
When two different, non-overlapping oligonucleotides anneal to different regions of the same linear complementary nucleic acid sequence, and the 3' end of one oligonucleotide points towards the 5' end of the other, the former may be called the "upstream" oligonucleotide and the latter the "downstream" oligonucleotide.
The term "primer" refers to an oligonucleotide which is capable of acting as a point of initiation of synthesis when placed under conditions in which primer extension is initiated. An oligonucleotide "primer" may occur naturally, as in a purified restriction digest or may be produced synthetically.
A primer is selected to be "substantially" complementary to a strand of specific sequence of the template. A primer must be sufficiently complementary to hybridize with a template strand for primer elongation to occur. A primer sequence need not reflect the exact sequence of the template. For example, a non-complementary nucleotide fragment may be attached to the 5' end of the primer, with the remainder of the primer sequence being substantially complementary to the strand. Non-complementary bases or longer sequences can be interspersed into the primer, provided that the primer sequence has sufficient complementarity with the sequence of the template to hybridize and thereby form a template primer complex for synthesis of the extension product of the primer.
"Hybridization" methods involve the annealing of a complementary sequence to the target nucleic acid (the sequence to be detected). The ability of two polymers of nucleic acid containing complementary sequences to find each other and anneal through base pairing interaction is a well-recognized phenomenon. The initial observations of the "hybridization" process by Marmur and Lane, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 46:453 (1960) and Doty et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 46:461 (1960) have been followed by the refinement of this process into an essential tool of modern biology.
The complement of a nucleic acid sequence as used herein refers to an oligonucleotide which, when aligned with the nucleic acid sequence such that the 5' end of one sequence is paired with the 3' end of the other, is in "antiparallel association." Certain bases not commonly found in natural nucleic acids may be included in the nucleic acids of the present invention and include, for example, inosine and 7-deazaguanine. Complementarity need not be perfect; stable duplexes may contain mismatched base pairs or unmatched bases. Those skilled in the art of nucleic acid technology can determine duplex stability empirically considering a number of variables including, for example, the length of the oligonucleotide, base composition and sequence of the oligonucleotide, ionic strength and incidence of mismatched base pairs.
Stability of a nucleic acid duplex is measured by the melting temperature, or "T.sub.m. " The T.sub.m of a particular nucleic acid duplex under specified conditions is the temperature at which on average half of the base pairs have disassociated. The equation for calculating the T.sub.m of nucleic acids is well known in the art.
The term "probe" as used herein refers to a labeled oligonucleotide which forms a duplex structure with a sequence in another nucleic acid, due to complementarity of at least one sequence in the probe with a sequence in the other nucleic acid.
The term "label" as used herein refers to any atom or molecule which can be used to provide a detectable (preferably quantifiable) signal, and which can be attached to a nucleic acid or protein. Labels may provide signals detectable by fluorescence, radioactivity, colorimetry, gravimetry, X-ray diffraction or absorption, magnetism, enzymatic activity, and the like.
The terms "nucleic acid substrate" and nucleic acid template" are used herein interchangeably and refer to a nucleic acid molecule which may comprise single- or double-stranded DNA or RNA.
"Oligonucleotide primers matching or complementary to a gene sequence" refers to oligonucleotide primers capable of facilitating the template-dependent synthesis of single or double-stranded nucleic acids. Oligonucleotide primers matching or complementary to a gene sequence may be used in PCRs, RT-PCRs and the like.
A "consensus gene sequence" refers to a gene sequence which is derived by comparison of two or more gene sequences and which describes the nucleotides most often present in a given segment of the genes; the consensus sequence is the canonical sequence.
The term "polymorphic locus" is a locus present in a population which shows variation between members of the population (i.e., the most common allele has a frequency of less than 0.95). In contrast, a "monomorphic locus" is a genetic locus at little or no variations seen between members of the population (generally taken to be a locus at which the most common allele exceeds a frequency of 0.95 in the gene pool of the population).
The term "microorganism" as used herein means an organism too small to be observed with the unaided eye and includes, but is not limited to bacteria, viruses, protozoans, fungi, and ciliates.
The term "microbial gene sequences" refers to gene sequences derived from a microorganism.
The term "bacteria" refers to any bacterial species including eubacterial and archaebacterial species.
The term "virus" refers to obligate, ultramicroscopic, intracellular parasites incapable of autonomous replication (i.e., replication requires the use of the host cell's machinery). Adenoviruses, as noted above, are double-stranded DNA viruses. The left and right inverted terminal repeats (ITRs) are short elements located at the 5' and 3' termini of the linear Ad genome, respectively and are required for replication of the viral DNA. The left ITR is located between 1-130 bp in the Ad genome (also referred to as 0-0.5 mu). The right ITR is located from .about.3,7500 bp to the end of the genome (also referred to as 99.5-100 mu). The two ITRs are inverted repeats of each other. For clarity, the left ITR or 5' end is used to define the 5' and 3' ends of the ITRs. The 5' end of the left ITR is located at the extreme 5' end of the linear adenoviral genome; picturing the left ITR (LITR) as an arrow extending from the 5' end of the genome, the tail of the 5' ITR is located at mu 0 and the head of the left ITR is located at .about.0.5 mu (further the tail of the left ITR is referred to as the 5' end of the left ITR and the head of the left ITR is referred to as the 3' end of the left ITR). The tail of the right or 3' ITR is located at mu 100 and the head of the right ITR is located at .about.mu 99.5; the head of the right ITR is referred to as the 5' end of the right ITR and the tail of the right ITR is referred to as the 3' end of the right ITR (RITR). In the linear Ad genome, the ITRs face each other with the head of each ITR pointing inward toward the bulk of the genome. When arranged in a "tail to tail orientation" the tails of each ITR (which comprise the 5' end of the LITR and the 3' end of the RITR) are located in proximity to one another while the heads of each ITR are separated and face outward (see for example, the arrangement of the ITRs in the EAM shown in FIG. 10 herein). The "adenovirus packaging sequence" refers to the .PSI. sequence which comprises five (AI-AV) packaging signals and is required for encapsidation of the mature linear genome; the packaging signals are located from .about.194 to 358 bp in the Ad genome (about 0.5-1.0 mu).
The phrase "at least one adenovirus gene coding region" refers to a nucleotide sequence containing more than one adenovirus gene coding gene. A "helper adenovirus" or "helper virus" refers to an adenovirus which is replication-competent in a particular host cell (the host may provide Ad gene products such as E1 proteins), this replication-competent virus is used to supply in trans functions (e.g., proteins) which are lacking in a second replication-incompetent virus; the first replication-competent virus is said to "help" the second replication-incompetent virus thereby permitting the propagation of the second viral genome in the cell containing the helper and second viruses.
The term "containing a deletion within the E2b region" refers to a deletion of at least one basepair (preferably more than one bp and preferably at least 100 and most preferably more than 300 bp) within the E2b region of the adenovirus genome. An E2b deletion is a deletion that prevents expression of at least one E2b gene product and encompasses deletions within exons encoding portions of E2b-specific proteins as well as deletions within promoter and leader sequences.
An "adenovirus minichromosome" refers to a linear molecule of DNA containing the Ad ITRs on each end which is generated from a plasmid containing the ITRs and one or more gene of interest. The term "encapsidated adenovirus minichromosome" or "EAM" refers to an adenovirus minichromosome which has been packaged or encapsidated into a viral particle; plasmids containing the Ad ITRs and the packaging signal are shown herein to produce EAMs. When used herein, "recovering" encapsidated adenovirus minichromosomes refers to the collection of EAMs from a cell containing an EAM plasmid and a helper virus; this cell will direct the encapsidation of the minichromosome to produce EAMs. The EAMs may be recovered from these cells by lysis of the cell (e.g., freeze-thawing) and pelleting of the cell debris to a cell extract as described in Example 1 (Ex. 1 describes the recovery of Ad virus from a cell, but the same technique is used to recover EAMs from a cell). "Purifying" such minichromosomes refers to the isolation of the recovered EAMs in a more concentrated form (relative to the cell lysate) on a density gradient as described in Example 7; purification of recovered EAMs permits the physical separation of the EAM from any helper virus (if present).
The term "transfection" as used herein refers to the introduction of foreign DNA into eukaryotic cells. Transfection may be accomplished by a variety of means known to the art including calcium phosphate-DNA co-precipitation, DEAE-dextran-mediated transfection, polybrene-mediated transfection, electroporation, microinjection, liposome fusion, lipofection, protoplast fusion, retroviral infection, and biolistics.
The term "stable transfection" or "stably transfected" refers to the introduction and integration of foreign DNA into the genome of the transfected cell. The term "stable transfectant" refers to a cell which has stably integrated foreign DNA into the genomic DNA.
As used herein, the term "gene of interest" refers to a gene inserted into a vector or plasmid whose expression is desired in a host cell. Genes of interest include genes having therapeutic value as well as reporter genes. A variety of such genes are contemplated, including genes of interest encoding a protein which provides a therapeutic function (such as the dystrophin gene, which is capable of correcting the defect seen in the muscle of MD patients), the utrophin gene, the CFTR gene (capable of correcting the defect seen in cystitic fibrosis patients), etc..
The term "reporter gene" indicates a gene sequence that encodes a reporter molecule (including an enzyme). A "reporter molecule" is detectable in any detection system, including, but not limited to enzyme (e.g., ELISA, as well as enzyme-based histochemical assays), fluorescent, radioactive, and luminescent systems. In one embodiment, the present invention contemplates the E. coli .beta.-galactosidase gene (available from Pharmacia Biotech, Pistacataway, N.J.), green fluorescent protein (GFP) (commercially available from Clontech, Palo Alto, Calif.), the human placental alkaline phosphatase gene, the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene; other reporter genes are known to the art and may be employed.
As used herein, the terms "nucleic acid molecule encoding," "DNA sequence encoding," and "DNA encoding" refer to the order or sequence of deoxyribonucleotides along a strand of deoxyribonucleic acid. The order of these deoxyribonucleotides determines the order of amino acids along the polypeptide (protein) chain. The DNA sequence thus codes for the amino acid sequence.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides improved adenovirus vectors for the delivery of recombinant genes to cells in vitro and in vivo. As noted above, the present invention contemplates two approaches to improving adenovirus vectors. The first approach generally contemplates a recombinant plasmid containing the minimal region of the Ad genome required for replication and packaging (i.e., the left and right ITR and the packaging or .PSI. sequence) along with one or more genes of interest; this recombinant plasmid is packaged into an encapsidated adenovirus minichromosome (EAM) when grown in parallel with an E1-deleted helper virus in a cell line expressing the E1 proteins (e.g., 293 cells). The recombinant adenoviral minichromosome is preferentially packaged. To prevent the packaging of the helper virus,. a helper virus containing loxP sequences flanking the .PSI. sequence is employed in conjunction with 293 cells expressing Cre recombinase; Cre-loxP mediated recombination removes the packaging sequence from the helper genome thereby preventing packaging of the helper during the production of EAMs. In the second approach, "damaged" or "deleted" adenoviruses containing deletions within the E2b region are employed. While the "damaged" adenovirus is capable of self-propagation in a packaging cell line expressing the appropriate E2b protein(s), the E2b-deleted recombinant adenovirus are incapable of replicating and expressing late viral gene products outside of the packaging cell line.
In one embodiment, the self-propagating recombinant adenoviruses contain deletions in the E2b region of the adenovirus genome. In another embodiment, "gutted" viruses are contemplated; these viruses lack all viral coding regions. In addition, packaging cell lines co-expressing E1 and E2b gene products are provided which allow the production of infectious recombinant virus containing deletions in the E1 and E2b regions without the use of helper virus.
The Description of the Invention is divided into the following sections: I. Self-Propagating Adenovirus Vectors; II. Packaging Cell Lines; and III. Encapsidated Adenoviral Minichromosomes.
I. Self-Propagating Adenovirus Vectors
Self-propagating adenovirus (Ad) vectors have been extensively utilized to deliver foreign genes to a great variety of cell types in vitro and in vivo. "Self-propagating viruses" are those which can be produced by transfection of a single piece of DNA (the recombinant viral genome) into a single packaging cell line to produce infectious virus; self-propagating viruses do not require the use of helper virus for propagation.
Existing Ad vectors have been shown to be problematic in vivo. This is due in part because current or first generation Ad vectors are deleted for only the early region 1 (E1) genes. These vectors are crippled in their ability to replicate normally without the trans-complementation of E1 functions provided by human 293 cells, a packaging cell line [ATCC CRL 1573; Graham et al. (1977) J. Gen. Virol. 36:59]. Unfortunately, with the use of high titres of E1 deleted vectors, and the fact that there are E1-like factors present in many cell types, E1 deleted vectors can overcome the block to replication and express other viral gene products [Imperiale et al. (1984) Mol. Cell Biol. 4:867; Nevins (1981) Cell 26:213; and Gaynor and Berk (1983) Cell 33:683]. The expression of viral proteins in the infected target cells elicits a swift host immune response, that is largely T-cell mediated [Yang and Wilson (1995) J. Immunol. 155:2564 and Yang et al. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91:4407]. The transduced cells are subsequently eliminated, along with the transferred foreign gene. In immuno-incompetent animals, Ad delivered genes can be expressed for periods of up to one year [Yang et al. (1994), supra; Vincent et al. (1993) Nature Genetics 5:130; and Yang et al. (1995) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92:7257].
Another shortcoming of first generation Ad vectors is that a single recombination event between the genome of an Ad vector and the integrated E1 sequences present in 293 cells can generate replication competent Ad (RCA), which can readily contaminate viral stocks.
In order to further cripple viral protein expression, and also to decrease the frequency of generating RCA, the present invention provides Ad vectors containing deletions in the E2b region. Propagation of these E2b-deleted Ad vectors requires cell lines which express the deleted E2b gene products. The present invention provides such packaging cell lines and for the first time demonstrates that the E2b gene products, DNA polymerase and preterminal protein, can be constitutively expressed in 293 cells along with the E1 gene products. With every gene that can be constitutively expressed in 293 cells comes the opportunity to generate new versions of Ad vectors deleted for the respective genes, This has immediate benefits; increased carrying capacity, since the combined coding sequences of the polymerase and preterminal proteins that can be theoretically deleted approaches 4.6 kb and a decreased incidence of RCA generation, since two or more independent recombination events would be required to generate RCA. Therefore, the novel E1, Ad polymerase and preterminal protein expressing cell lines of the present invention enable the propagation of Ad vectors with a carrying capacity approaching 13 kb, without the need for a contaminating helper virus [Mitani et al. (1995) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92:3854]. In addition, when genes critical to the viral life cycle are deleted (e.g., the E2b genes), a further crippling of Ad to replicate and express other viral gene proteins occurs. This decreases immune recognition of virally infected cells, and allows for extended durations of foreign gene expression. The most important attribute of E1, polymerase, and preterminal protein deleted vectors, however, is their inability to express the respective proteins, as well as a predicted lack of expression of most of the viral structural proteins. For example, the major late promoter (MLP) of Ad is responsible for transcription of the late structural proteins L1 through L5 [Doerfler, In Adenovirus DNA, The Viral Genome and Its Expression (Martinus Nijhoff Publishing Boston, 1986)]. Though the MLP is minimally active prior to Ad genome replication, the rest of the late genes get transcribed and translated from the MLP only after viral genome replication has occurred [Thomas and Mathews (1980) Cell 22:523]. This cis-dependent activation of late gene transcription is a feature of DNA viruses in general, such as in the growth of polyoma and SV-40. The polymerase and preterminal proteins are absolutely required for Ad replication (unlike the E4 or protein IX proteins) and thus their deletion is extremely detrimental to Ad vector late gene expression.
II. Packaging Cell Lines Constitutively Expressing E2b Gene Products
The present invention addresses the limitations of current or first generation Ad vectors by isolating novel 293 cell lines coexpressing critical viral gene functions. The present invention describes the isolation and characterization of 293 cell lines capable of constitutively expressing the Ad polymerase protein. In addition, the present invention describes the isolation of 293 cells which not only express the E1 and polymerase proteins, but also the Ad-preterminal protein. The isolation of cell lines coexpressing the E1, Ad polymerase and preterminal proteins demonstrates that three genes critical to the life cycle of Ad can be constitutively coexpressed, without toxicity.
In order to delete critical genes from self-propagating Ad vectors, the proteins encoded by the targeted genes have to first be coexpressed in 293 cells along with the E1 proteins. Therefore, only those proteins which are non-toxic when coexpressed constitutively (or toxic proteins inducibly-expressed) can be utilized. Coexpression in 293 cells of the E1 and E4 genes has been demonstrated (utilizing inducible, not constitutive, promoters) [Yeh et al. (1996) J. Virol. 70:559; Wang et al. (1995) Gene Therapy 2:775; and Gorziglia et al. (1996) J. Virol. 70:4173]. The E1 and protein IX genes (a virion structural protein) have been coexpressed [Caravokyri and Leppard (1995) J. Virol. 69:6627], and coexpression of the E1, E4, and protein IX genes has also been described [Krougliak and Graham (1995) Hum. Gene Ther. 6:1575].
The present invention provides for the first time, cell lines coexpressing E1 and E2b gene products. The E2b region encodes the viral replication proteins which are absolutely required for Ad genome replication [Doerfler, supra and Pronk et al. (1992) Chromosoma 102:S39-S45]. The present invention provides 293 cells which constitutively express the 140 kD Ad-polymerase. While other researchers have reported the isolation of 293 cells which express the Ad-preterminal protein utilizing an inducible promoter [Schaack et al. (1995) J. Virol. 69:4079], the present invention is the first to demonstrate the high-level, constitutive coexpression of the E1, polymerase, and preterminal proteins in 293 cells, without toxicity. These novel cell lines permit the propagation of novel Ad vectors deleted for the E1, polymerase, and preterminal proteins.
III. Encapsidated Adenoviral Minichromosomes
The present invention also provides encapsidated adenovirus minichromosome (EAM) consisting of an infectious encapsidated linear genome containing Ad origins of replication, packaging signal elements, a reporter gene (e.g., a .beta.-galactosidase reporter gene cassette) and a gene of interest (e.g., a full length (14 kb) dystrophin cDNA regulated by a muscle specific enhancer/promoter). EAMs are generated by cotransfecting 293 cells with supercoiled plasmid DNA (e.g., pAd5.beta.dys) containing an embedded inverted origin of replication (and the remaining above elements) together with linear DNA from E1-deleted virions expressing human placental alkaline phosphatase (hpAP) (a helper virus). All proteins necessary for the generation of EAMs are provided in trans from the hpAP virions and the two can be separated from each other on equilibrium CsCl gradients. These EAMs are useful for gene transfer to a variety of cell types both in vitro and in vivo.
Adenovirus-mediated gene transfer to muscle is a promising technology for gene therapy of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). However, currently available recombinant adenovirus vectors have several limitations, including a limited cloning capacity of .about.8.5 kb, and the induction of a host immune response that leads to transient gene expression of 3 to 4 weeks in immunocompetent animals. Gene therapy for DMD could benefit from the development of adenoviral vectors with an increased cloning capacity to accommodate a full length (.about.14 kb) dystrophin cDNA. This increased capacity should also accommodate gene regulatory elements to achieve expression of transduced genes in a tissue-specific manner. Additional vector modifications that eliminate adenoviral genes, expression of which is associated with development of a host immune response, might greatly increase long term expression of virally delivered genes in vivo. The constructed encapsidated adenovirus minichromosomes of the present invention are capable of delivering up to 35 kb of non-viral exogenous DNA. These minichromosomes are derived from bacterial plasmids containing two fused inverted adenovirus origins of replication embedded in a circular genome, the adenovirus packaging signals, a .beta.galactosidase reporter gene and a full length dystrophin cDNA regulated by a muscle specific enhancer/promoter. The encapsidated minichromosomes are propagated in vitro by trans-complementation with a replication defective (E1+E3,deleted) helper virus. These minichromosomes can be propagated to high titer (>10.sup.8 /ml) and purified on CsCl gradients due to their buoyancy difference relative to helper virus. These vectors are able to transduce myogenic cell cultures and express dystrophin in myotubes. These results demonstrate that encapsidated adenovirus minichromosomes are useful for gene transfer to muscle and other tissues.
The present invention further provides methods for modifying the above-described EAM system to enable the generation of high titer stocks of EAMs with minimal helper virus contamination. Preferably the EAM stocks contain helper virus representing less than 1%, preferably less than 0.1% and most preferably less than 0.01% (including 0.0%) of the final viral isolate.
The amount of helper virus present in the EAM preparations is reduced in two ways. The first is by selectively controlling the relative packaging efficiency of the helper virus versus the EAM virus. The Cre-loxP excision method is employed to remove the packaging signals from the helper virus thereby preventing the packaging of the helper virus used to provide in trans viral proteins for the encapsidation of the recombinant adenovirus minichromosomes. The second approach to reducing or eliminating helper virus in EAM stocks is the use of improved physical methods for separating EAM from helper virus.
EXPERIMENTAL
The following examples serve to illustrate certain preferred embodiments and aspects of the present invention and are not to be construed as limiting the scope thereof.
In the experimental disclosure which follows, the following abbreviations apply: M (molar); mM (millimolar); .mu.M (micromolar); mol (moles); mmol (millimoles); .mu.mol (micromoles); nmol (nanomoles); mu or m.u. (map unit); g (gravity); gm (grams); mg (milligrams); .mu.g (micrograms); pg (picograms); L (liters); ml (milliliters); .mu.l (microliters); cm (centimeters); mm (millimeters); .mu.m (micrometers); nm (nanometers); hr (hour); min (minute); msec (millisecond); .degree.C (degrees Centigrade); AMP (adenosine 5'-monophosphate); cDNA (copy or complimentary DNA); DTT (dithiotheritol); ddH.sub.2 O (double distilled water); dNTP (deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate); rNTP (ribonucleotide triphosphate); ddNTP (dideoxyribonucleotide triphosphate); bp (base pair); kb (kilo base pair); TLC (thin layer chromatography); tRNA (transfer RNA); nt (nucleotide); VRC (vanadyl ribonucleoside complex); RNase (ribonuclease); DNase (deoxyribonuclease); poly A (polyriboadenylic acid); PBS (phosphate buffered saline); OD (optical density); HEPES (N-[2-Hydroxyethyl]piperazine-N-[2-ethanesulfonic acid]); HBS (HEPES buffered saline); SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate); Tris-HCl (tris[Hydroxymethyl]aminomethane-hydrochloride); rpm (revolutions per minute); ligation buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM MgCl.sub.2, 10 mM dithiothreitol, 25 .mu.g/ml bovine serum albumin, and 26 .mu.M NAD+, and pH 7.8); EGTA (ethylene glycol-bis(.beta.-aminoethyl ether) N, N, N', N'-tetraacetic acid); EDTA (ethylenediaminetetracetic acid); ELISA (enzyme linked immunosorbant assay); LB (Luria-Bertani broth: 10 g tryptone, 5 g yeast extract, and 10 g NaCl per liter, pH adjusted to 7.5 with 1N NaOH); superbroth (12 g tryptone, 24 g yeast extract, 5 g glycerol, 3.8 g KH.sub.2 PO.sub.4 and 12.5 g, K.sub.2 HPO.sub.4 per liter); DMEM (Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium); ABI (Applied Biosystems Inc., Foster City, Calif.); Amersham (Amersham Corporation, Arlington Heights, Ill.); ATCC (American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, Md.); Beckman (Beckman Instruments Inc., Fullerton Calif.); BM (Boehringer Mannheim Biochemicals, Indianapolis, Ind.); Bio-101 (Bio-101, Vista, Calif.); BioRad (BioRad, Richmond, Calif.); Brinkmann (Brinkmann Instruments Inc. Wesbury, N.Y.); BRL, Gibco BRL and Life Technologies (Bethesda Research Laboratories, Life Technologies Inc., Gaithersburg, Md.); CRI (Collaborative Research Inc. Bedford, Mass.); Eastman Kodak (Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester, N.Y.); Eppendorf (Eppendorf, Eppendorf North America, Inc., Madison, Wis.); Falcon (Becton Dickenson Labware, Lincoln Park, N.J.); IBI (International Biotechnologies, Inc., New Haven, Conn.); ICN (ICN Biomedicals, Inc., Costa Mesa, Calif.); Invitrogen (Invitrogen, San Diego, Calif.); New Brunswick (New Brunswick Scientific Co. Inc., Edison, N.J.); NEB (New England BioLabs Inc., Beverly, Mass.); NFN (Du Pont NEN Products, Boston, Mass.); Pharmacia (Pharmacia LKB Gaithersburg, Md.); Promega (Promega Corporation, Madison, Wis.); Stratagene (Stratagene Cloning Systems, La Jolla, Calif.); UVP (UVP, Inc., San Gabreil, Calif.); USB (United States Biochemical Corp., Cleveland, Ohio); and Whatman (Whatman Lab. Products Inc, Clifton, N.J.).
Unless otherwise indicated, all restriction enzymes and DNA modifying enzymes were obtained from New England Biolabs (NEB) and used according to the manufacturers directions.
EXAMPLE 1
Generation Of Packaging Cell Lines That Coexpress The Adenovirus E1 And DNA Polymerase Proteins
In this example, packaging cell lines coexpressing Ad E1 and polymerase proteins were described. These cell lines were shown to support the replication and growth of H5ts36, an Ad with a temperature-sensitive mutation of the Ad polymerase protein. These polymerase-expressing packaging cell lines can be used to prepare Ad vectors deleted for the E1 and polymerase functions.
a) Tissue Culture and Virus Growth
LP-293 cells (Microbix Biosystems, Toronto) were grown and serially passaged as suggested by the supplier.
Plaque assays were performed in 60 mm dishes containing cell monolayers at .about.90% confluency. The appropriate virus dilution in a 2% DMEM solution was dripped onto the cells, and the plates incubated at the appropriate temperature for one hour. The virus containing media was aspirated, the monolayer was overlaid with 10 mls of a pre-warmed EMEM agar overlay solution (0.8% Noble agar, 4% fetal calf serum, and antibiotics) and allowed to solidify. After the appropriate incubation time (usually 7 days for incubations at 38.5.degree. C. and 10-12 days for incubations at 32.degree. C.), five mls of the agar-containing solution containing 1.3% neutral red was overlaid onto the infected dishes and plaques were counted the next day. An aliquot of the virus H5ts36 [Freimuth and Ginsberg (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83:7816] was utilized to produce high titre stocks after infection of 293 cells at 32.degree. C. H5ts36 is an Ad5-derived virus defective for viral replication at the nonpermissive temperature [Miller and Williams (1987) J. Virol. 61:3630].
The infected cells were harvested after the onset of extensive cytopathic effect, pelleted by centrifugation and resuspended in 10 mM Tris-Cl, pH 8.0. The lysate was freeze-thawed three times and centrifuged to remove the cell debris. The cleared lysate was applied to CsCl.sub.2 step gradients (heavy CsCl at density of 1.45 g/ml, the light CsCl at density of 1.20 g/ml), ultracentrifuged, and purified using standard techniques [Graham and Prevec (1991) In Methods in Molecular Biology, Vol 7: Gene Transfer and Expression Protocols, Murray (ed.), Humana Press, Clifton, N.J., pp. 109-128]. The concentration of plaque forming units (pfu) of this stock was determined at 32.degree. C. as described above. Virion DNA was extracted from the high titre stock by pronase digestion, phenol-chloroform extraction, and ethanol precipitation. The leakiness of this stock was found to be <1 in 2000 pfu at the non-permissive temperature, consistent with previous reports [Miller and Williams (1987), supra].
b) Plasmids
The expression plasmid pRSV-pol [Zhao and Padmanabhan (1988) Cell 55:1005] contains sequences encoding the Ad2 polymerase mRNA (including the start codon from the exon at map unit 39) under the transcriptional control of the Rous Sarcoma Virus LTR/promoter element; the Ad2 DNA polymerase sequences are flanked on the 3' end by the SV-40 small t intron and SV-40 polyadenylation addition site (see FIG. 1A). FIG. 1A provides a schematic representation of the Ad polymerase expression plasmid pRSV-pol. pRSV-pol includes the initiator methionine and amino-terminal peptides encoded by the exon at m.u. 39 of the Ad genome. The location of the PCR primers p602a and p2158c, the two ScaI 1 kb probes utilized for Northern analyses, the polymerase terminator codon, and the polyadenylation site of the IVa2 gene (at 11.2 m.u. of the Ad genome) are indicated.
The expression plasmid pRSV-pTP [Zhao and Padmanabhan (1988), supra] contains sequences encoding the Ad2 preterminal protein (including the amino terminal peptides encoded by the exon at map unit 39 of the Ad genome) under the transcriptional control of the Rous Sarcoma Virus LTR/promoter element; the pTP sequences are flanked on the 3' end by the SV-40 small-t intron and SV-40 polyadenylation signals (see FIG. 1B for a schematic of pRSV-PTP). FIG. 1B also shows the location of the EcoRV subfragment utilized as a probe in the genomic DNA and cellular RNA evaluations, as well as the initiator methionine codon present from map unit 39 in the Ad5 genome. The locations of the H5in19O and H5sub100 insertions are shown relative to the preterminal protein open-reading frame. The following abbreviations are used in FIG. 1: ORF, open reading frame; small-t, small tumor antigen. and m.u., map unit.
pCEP4 is a plasmid containing a hygromycin expression cassette (Invitrogen).
pFG140 (Microbix Biosystems Inc. Toronto, Ontario) is a plasmid containing sequences derived from Ad5dl309 which contain a deletion/substitution in the E3 region [Jones and Shek (1979) Cell 17:683]. pFG140 is infectious in single transfections of 293 cells and is used as a control for transfection efficiency.
c) Transfection of 293 Cells
LP-293 cells were cotransfected with BamHI linearized pRSV-pol and BamHI linearized pCEP4 at a molar ratio of 10:1 using a standard CaPO.sub.4 precipitation method [Sambrook et al. (1989) Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor Press, Plainview, N.Y., pp.16.33-16.36]. In addition, 293 cells were cotransfected with or with BamHI linearized pRSV-pol, BamHI linearized pRSV-pTP and pCEP using a molar ratio of 10:1 (non-selectable:selectable plasmids).
Forty-eight hours after transfection, the cells were passaged into media containing hygromycin at 100 .mu.g/mL. Ind.lridual hygromycin resistant colonies were isolated and expanded.
d) Isolation of Ad Polymerase Expressing 293 Cell Lines
Twenty hygromycin resistant cell lines were expanded and screened for the ability to express the Ad polymerase protein. Initially, the individual cell lines were assayed for the ability to support growth of the viral polymerase mutant H5ts36 using the plaque assay described in section a) above. It was speculated that constitutive expression of the wild type Ad polymerase protein in a clonal population of 293 cells should allow the growth of H5ts36 at 38.5.degree. C. However, it was unclear if constitutive expression of the Ad polymerase would be toxic when coexpressed with the E1 proteins present in 293 cells. Similar toxicity problems have been observed with the Ad ssDBP, and the pTP [Klessig et al. (1984) Mol. Cell. Biol. 4:1354 and Schaack et al. (1995) J. Virol. 69:4079].
Of the twenty hygromycin resistant cell lines isolated, seven were able to support plaque formation with H5ts36 at the non-permissive temperature, unlike the parental LP-293 cells; these cell lines were named B-6, B-9, C-1, C-4, C-7, C-13 and C-14 (see Table 1) (the B-6 and B-9 cell lines received only the pRSV-pol and CEP4 plasmids; C-1, C-4, C-7, C-13 and C-14 cell lines received the pRSV-pol, pRSV-pTP and CEP4 plasmids). For the results shown in Table 1, dishes (60 mm) of near confluent cells of each cell line were infected with the same dilution of H5ts36 at the temperature indicated, overlaid with agar media, and stained for plaques as outlined in section a. Passage number refers to the number of serial passages after initial transfection with the plasmid pRSV-pol.
The cell line B-6 produced plaques one day earlier than the other Ad polymerase-expressing cell lines, which may reflect increased polymerase expression (see below). Cell line B-9 demonstrated an increased doubling time whereas each of the other cell lines displayed no growth disadvantages relative to the parental LP-293 cells. As shown in Table 1, even after multiple passages (in some instances up to four months of serial passaging) the cells wore still capable of H5ts36 plaque formation at the non-permissive temperature, indicating that the RSV-LTR/promoter remained active for extended periods of time. However, the cell lines B-9 and C-13 displayed a decreased ability to plaque the virus at 32.degree. C. as well as at 38.5.degree. C., suggesting that a global viral complementation defect had occurred in these cell lines after extended passaging. The remaining cell lines screened at later passages demonstrated no such defect, even after 20 passages (e.g., cell line B-6, Table 1).
TABLE 1______________________________________Plaquing Ability Of H5ts36 At The Non-Permissive Temperature Utilizing 293-Ad Polymerase Expressing Cell Lines Number of Plaques At:Cell Line Passage Number 32.0.degree. C. 38.5.degree. C.______________________________________293 -- >500 0B-6 9 >500 >500 20 >500 >500 B-9 5 >500 >500 14 90 18 C-1 5 >500 >500 13 >500 >500 C-4 5 >500 >500 14 >500 >500 C-7 5 >500 >500 14 >500 >500 C-13 5 >500 >500 27 120 4 C-14 5 >500 >500 27 >500 370______________________________________
e) Genomic Analysis of Ad Polymerase-Expressing Cell Lines
Genomic DNA from LP-293 cells and each of the seven cell lines able to complement H5ts36 at 38.5.degree. C. were analyzed by PCR for the presence of pRSV-pol derived sequences. Genomic DNA from LP-293 cells and the hygromycin resistant cell lines were harvested using standard protocols (Sambrook et al., supra) and 200 ng of DNA from each cell line was analyzed by PCR in a solution containing 2 ng/mL of primers p602a and p2158c, 10 mM TrisHCl, pH 8.3, 50 mM KCl, 1.5 mM MgCl.sub.2, and 0.001% gelatin. The forward primer, p602a [5'-TTCATTTTATGTTTCAGGTTC AGGG-3' (SEQ ID NO:2)] is located in the SV-40 polyadenylation sequence. The reverse primer p2158c [5'-TTACCGCCACACTCGCAGGG-3' (SEQ ID NO:3)] is Ad-sequence specific with the 5' nucleotide located at position 3394 of the Ad 5 genome [numbering according to Doerfler (1986) Adenovirus DNA, The Viral Genome and Its Expression, Nijhoff, Boston, Mass., pp. 1-95].
PCR was performed with a Perkin Elmer 9600 Thermocycler utilizing the following cycling parameters: initial denaturation at 94.degree. C. for 3 min, 3 cycles of denaturation at 94.degree. C. for 30 sec, annealing at 50.degree. C. for 30 sec, and extension at 72.degree. C. for 60 sec, followed by another 27 cycles with an increased annealing temperature at 56.degree. C., with a final extension at 72.degree. C. for 10 minutes. PCR products were separated on a 1.0% agarose gel and visualized with ethidium bromide staining (FIG. 2). A 1 kb ladder (Gibco-BRL) was used as a size marker, and the plasmid pRSV-pol was used as a positive control. The .about.750 bp PCR products are indicated by an arrow in FIG. 2.
As shown in FIG. 2, all cell lines capable of H5ts36 plaque formation at 38.5.degree. C. contained the Ad pol DNA sequences, whereas the LP-293 cells did not yield any amplification product with these primers. This result demonstrates that each of the selected cell lines stably co-integrated not only the hygromycin resistance plasmid pCEP4, but also pRSV-pol.
f) Complementation of the Replication Defect of H5ts36 by Ad Polymerase Expressing Cell Lines
The C to T transition at position 7623 of the H5ts36 genome alters the DNA binding affinity of the Ad polymerase protein, rendering it defective for viral replication at non-permissive temperatures [Chen et al. (1994) Virology 205:364; Miller and Williams (1987) J. Virol. 61:3630; and Wilkie et al. (1973) Virology 51:499]. To analyze the functional activity of the Ad polymerase protein expressed by each of the packaging cell lines, a viral replication-complementation assay was performed. LP-293 cells or the hygromycin resistant cell lines were seeded onto 60 mM dishes at densities of 2.5-3.0.times.10.sup.6 per dish, infected with H5ts36 at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 10, and incubated for 24 hours at 38.5.degree. C., or 48 hours at 32.degree. C. Total DNA was harvested from each plate, then 2 .mu.g of each sample were digested with HindIII, separated on a 1.0% agarose gel, transferred to a nylon membrane, and hybridized with .sup.32 P-labeled H5ts36 virion DNA. Densitometric analysis of the 8,010 bp HindIII fragment in each lane was performed on a phophoroimager (Molecular Dynamics) utilizing a gel image processing system (IP Lab Version 1.5, Sunnyvale, Calif.).
The resulting autoradiograph is shown in FIG. 3. In FIG. 3, the lane marked "Std." (standard) contains 1 .mu.g of HindIII-digested H5ts36 virion DNA. The 8,010 bp HindIII fragments analyzed by densitometry are indicated by an arrow.
As shown in FIG. 3, H5ts36 had a diminished ability to replicate in LP-293 cells at the non-permissive temperature. In contrast, all seven of the previously selected cell lines were able to support replication of H5ts36 virion DNA at 38.5.degree. C. to levels approaching those occurring in LP-293 cells at 32.degree. C.
A densitometric analysis of the amount of H5ts36 viral DNA replicated in each of the cell lines at permissive and nonpermissive temperatures is presented in Table 2 below. For this assay, the relative amounts of the 8,010 bp HindIII fragment were compared. The relative levels of H5ts36 virion DNA replication determined by densitometric analysis of the 8,010 bp HindIII fragment isolated from each of the cell line DNA samples. The surface area of the 8,010 bp fragment in 293 cells incubated at 38.5.degree. C. was designated as 1, and includes some replicated H5ts36 virion DNA. The numbers in each column represent the ratio between the densities of the 8,010 bp fragment isolated in the indicated cell line and the density of the same band present in LP-293 cells at 38.5.degree. C.
As shown in Table 2, the levels of replication at the permissive temperature were all within four-fold of each other, regardless of which cell line was analyzed, but at the non-permissive temperature LP-293 cells reveal the H5ts36 replication defect. The viral bands that were present in the LP-293 DNA sample at 38.C represented input virion DNA as well as low level replication of H5ts36 DNA, which is generated due to the leakiness of the ts mutation at the high MOI utilized in this experiment. The Ad polymerase-expressing cell lines were all found to be capable of augmenting
TABLE 2______________________________________Densitometric Analysis Of H5ts36 Replication Ratios of 8,010 bp HindIII Fragment Generated At:Cell Line 32.0.degree. C. 38.5.degree. C.______________________________________LP-293 42.6 1.0 B-6 27.3 57.2 B-9 69.0 15.8 C-1 113.6 34.1 C-4 100.2 65.5 C-7 114.9 75.0 C-13 43.1 42.2 C-14 46.7 27.8______________________________________
H5ts36 genome replication. Although one cell line (B-9) allowed H5ts36 replication to levels only 16 fold greater than LP-293 cells, this was the same cell line that was observed to display poor growth properties. Each of the remaining Ad polymerase-expressing cell lines allowed substantially greater replication of H5ts36 at non-permissive temperatures, compared to LP-293 cells (Table 2). An enhancement of replication up to 75 fold above that of LP-293 cells was observed with the cell line C-7 at 38.5.degree. C. A substantially more rapid onset of viral cytopathic effect in Ad polymerase-expressing cell lines was observed at either temperature. These estimates of H5ts36 replication-complementation are conservative, since they have not been adjusted for the low level replication of H5ts36 at 38.5.degree. C. [Miller and Williams (1987), supra]. The leakiness of the H5ts36 mutation could potentially be overcome with the use of a virus deleted for the Ad polymerase gene.
g) RNA Analysis of Ad Polymerase-Expressing Cell Lines
Total RNA was extracted from each of the cell lines using the RNAzol method (Teltest, Inc., Friendswood, Tex. 77546; Chomczynski and Sacchi (1987) Anal. Biochem. 162:156]. Fifteen micrograms of RNA from each cell line was electrophoresed on a 0.8% agarose-formaldehyde gel, and transferred to a Nytran membrane (Schleicher & Schuell) by blotting. The filter was UV crosslinked, and analyzed by probing with the two .sup.32 P-labeled 1 kb ScaI subfragments of Ad which span positions 6095-8105 of the Ad5 genome (see FIG. 1A). These two ScaI subfragments of the Ad genome are complimentary to the 5' end of the Ad polymerase mRNA. The resulting autoradiograph is shown in FIG. 4. In FIG. 4, the location of the smaller and larger species of Ad polymerase mRNA are indicated relative to the 28S and 18S ribosomal RNAs. The aberrant transcript expressed by the B-9 cell line is indicated by an arrow.
The results shown in FIG. 4 revealed that the RNA derived from cell lines B-6 and C-7 contained two species of RNA, estimated to be .about.4800 and .about.7000 nt in length, while LP-293 derived RNA had no detectable hybridization signal. The presence of two polymerase RNA species suggests that the polyadenylation signal of the Ad IVa2 gene Ct(resent in The Ad-pol construct, see FIG. 1A) is being utilized by the cell RNA processing machinery, in addition to the SV-40 polyadenylation signal. Similar analysis of RNA derived from the cell lines C-1, C-4, C-13, and C-14 also detected the same two transcripts as those detected in the RNA of cell lines B-6 and C-7, but at decreased levels, suggesting that even low levels of Ad polymerase mRNA expression can allow for the efficient replication of polymerase mutants such as H5ts36. The cell line B-6 expressed high levels of polymerase transcript and can plaque H5ts36 one day earlier than the other cell lines at 38.5.degree. C., suggesting a causal relationship. It is interesting to note that the two polymerase transcripts are also detected in RNA isolated from cell line B-9, but substantial amounts of a larger RNA transcript (size>10 kb) is also present (see FIG. 4). The high level production of the aberrant message may be related to the increased doubling time previously noted in this cell line.
h) Transfectability of Ad Polymerase-Expressing Cell Lines
The ability of Ad polymerase-expressing 293 cell lines to support production of H5ts36 virions after transfection with H5ts36 genome DNA was examined as follows. 293 cells as well as hygromycin resistant cell lines were grown to near confluency on 60 mm dishes and transfected with either 3 .mu.g of purified H5ts36 virion DNA, or with 3.5 .mu.g of the plasmid pFG140 (Microbix Biosystems), using the cationic lipid Lipofectamine (Gibco-BRL). Cells that received the H5ts36 virion DNA were incubated at 32.degree. C. for 14 days, or 38.5.degree. C. for 10 days. The pFG140 transfected cells were incubated at 37.5.degree. C. for 10 days. All plates were then stained with the neutral red agar overlay and plaques were counted the next day. The results are shown in Table 3.
TABLE 3______________________________________Transfection Efficiency Of Ad pol-Expressing Cell Lines Number of Plaques At:Cell line 32.0.degree. C. 38.5.degree. C.______________________________________LP-293 >500 0 B-6 >500 >500B-9 n.d..sup.a n.d.C-1 n.d. >500 C-4 n.d. >500 C-7 n.d. >500 C-13 n.d. 100 C-14 n.d. >500______________________________________ .sup.a n.d. = not determined.
The results shown in Table 3 demonstrated that transfection of H5ts36 DNA at the non-permissive temperature allows for ample plaque production in all of the Ad polymerase-expressing cell lines tested, unlike the parental LP-293 cells. Cell line C-13 was at passage number 29, and demonstrated a somewhat decreased ability to generate plaques at this extended passage number. These same cell lines are also capable of producing plaques when transfected with the plasmid pFG140, a plasmid capable of producing infectious, E1 dependent Ad upon transfection of the parental 293 cells [Ghosh-Choudhury (1986) Gene 50:161]. These observations suggest that the Ad polymerase expressing cell lines should be useful for the production of second generation Ad vectors deleted not only for the E1 genes, but also for the polymerase gene. As shown below in Examples 2 and 3, this is indeed the case.
EXAMPLE 2
Isolation and Characterization of Packaging Cell Lines That Coexpress the Adenovirus E1, DNA Polymerase and Preterminal Proteins
In Example 1, packaging cell lines coexpressing Ad E1 and polymerase proteins were described. These cell lines were shown to support the replication and growth of H5ts36, an Ad with a temperature-sensitive mutation of the Ad polymerase protein. These polymerase-expressing packaging cell lines can be used to prepare Ad vectors deleted for the E1 and polymerase functions. In this example, 293 cells cotransfected with both Ad polymerase and preterminal protein expression plasmids are characterized. Cell lines co-expressing the Ad E1, polymerase and preterminal proteins can be used to prepare Ad vectors deleted for the E1, polymerase and preterminal protein (pTP) functions.
a) Tissue Culture and Virus Propagation
The use of LP-293 cells (Microbix Biosystems Inc., Toronto), Ad-polymerase expressing cell lines, and plaquing efficiency assays of Ad viruses was conducted as described in Example 1. All cells were maintained in 10% fetal bovine serum supplemented DMEM media (GIBCO) in the presence of antibiotics. The virus H5sub100 [Freimuth and Ginsberg (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83:7816] has a temperature sensitive (ts) mutation caused by a three base pair insertion within the amino terminus of the preterminal protein, in addition to a deletion of the E1 sequences (see FIG. 1B). H5sub100 was propagated and titred at 32.0.degree. C. in LP-293 cells; the leakiness of this stock was less than 1 per 1000 plaque-forming units (pfu) at the nonpermissive temperature of 38.5.degree. C. A lower titer cell lysate containing the virus H5in190 (which contains a 12 base-pair insertion within the carboxy-terminus of the preterminal protein as well as a deletion of the E1 region, see FIG. 1B) was provided by Dr. P. Freimuth [Freimuth and Ginsberg (1986), supra]. The polymerase and preterminal protein expressing cell lines were always maintained in media supplemented with hygromycin (Sigma) at 100 .mu.g/mL.
b) Isolation of Ad Polymerase and Preterminal Protein Expressing 293 Cells
The C-1, C-4, C-7, C-13, and C-14 cell lines (Ex. 1), which had been cotransfected with pRSV-pol, pRSV-pTP and CEP4, were screened for presence of pTP sequences and for the ability to support the growth of H5ts36 (ts for the Ad-polymerase), H5in190, and H5sub100 using plaque assays as described in Example 1.
i) Analysis of Genomic DNA and Cellular RNA
Cell lines that had received the preterminal protein expression plasmid were screen for the presence of pRSV-pTP sequences and E1 sequences. Total DNA was isolated from the LP-293, B-6 (transfected with pRSV-pol only) or C-7 (cotransfected with pRSV-pol and pRSV-pTP) cell lines, two micrograms (.mu.g) of each DNA was codigested with the restriction enzymes XbaI and BamHI, electrophoretically separated in a 0.6% agarose gel, and transferred onto a nylon membrane. The membrane was UV crosslinked, probed with both a 1.8 kb BlnI-XbaI fragment (spans the E1 coding region) isolated from the plasmid pFG140, and a 1.8 kb EcoRV subfragment of Ad serotype 5 (spans the preterminal protein coding sequences; see FIG. 1B), both of which were random-primer radiolabeled with .sup.32 P to a specific activity greater than 3.0.times.10.sup.8 cpm/.mu.g. The membrane was subsequently exposed to X-ray film with enhancement by a fluorescent screen. The resulting autoradiograph is shown in FIG. 5.
In FIG. 5, the preterminal specific sequences migrated as an .about.11.0 kb DNA fragment while the E1 containing band migrated as a 2.3 kb DNA fragment. No hybridization of either probe to DNA isolated from either the LP-293 or B-6 cell lines was observed As shown in FIG. 5, only the C-7 cell line genomic DNA had preterminal coding sequences, unlike the parental LP-293 cells, or the Ad-polymerase expressing B-6 cells. In addition, all cell lines had E1 specific sequences present at nearly equivalent amounts, demonstrating that the selection design has not caused the loss of the E1 sequences originally present in the LP-293 cells. The results presented in Example 1 demonstrated that both the B-6 and C-7 cell lines contain polymerase specific sequences within their genomes, unlike the parental LP-293 cells.
To confirm that transcription of preterminal protein was occurring, total RNA was isolated from each of the cell lines, transferred to nylon membranes, and probed to detect preterminal protein-specific mRNA transcripts as follows. Total cellular RNA was isolated from the respective cell lines and 15 .mu.g of total RNA from each cell line was transferred to nylon membranes. The membranes were probed with the 1.8 kb EcoRV radiolabeled subfragment of Ad5 (see FIG. 1B) complementary to the preterminal protein coding region. The resulting autoradiograph is shown in FIG. 6.
As shown in FIG. 6, a single mRNA of the expected size (.about.3 kb in length) is detected only in RNA derived from the C-7 cell line. No hybridization was detected in lanes containing RNA derived from the LP-293 or B-6 cell lines. In Example 1, it was demonstrated that the C-7 cell line also expresses high levels of the Ad polymerase mRNA. Thus, the C-7 cell line constitutively expresses both the Ad polymerase and preterminal protein mRNAs along with E1 transcripts.
ii) Plaquing Efficiency of pTP Mutants on pTP-Expressing Cell Lines
The C-7 cell line was screened for the ability to transcomplement the growth of preterminal mutant viruses. The virus H5in190 (contains a 12 base pair insertion located within the carboxy-terminus of the preterminal protein) has been shown to have a severe growth and replication defect, producing less than 10 plaque-forming units per cell [Freimuth and Ginsberg (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83:7816]. The results are summarized in Table 4 below. For the results shown in Table 4, LP-6 293, B-6, or C-7 cells were seeded at a density of 2.0-2.5.times.10.sup.6 cells per plate. The cells were infected with limiting dilutions of lysates derived from the preterminal protein-mutant viruses H5in190 or H5sub100, incubated at 38.5.degree. C., and plaques counted after six days. As shown in Table 4, only the C-7 cell line could allow efficient plaque formation of H5in190 at 38.5.degree. C. (the H5in190 lysate used to infect the cells was of a low titer, relative to the high titer H5sub100 stock), while both the B-6 and C-7 cell lines had nearly equivalent plaquing efficiencies when H5sub100 was utilized as the infecting virus.
TABLE 4______________________________________Plaquing Efficiency Of Preterminal Protein-Mutant Viruses Mutation Plaque Titres (pfu/ml)Virus Location LP-293 B-6 C-7______________________________________H5in190 carboxy-terminus <1 .times. 10.sup.2 <1 .times. 10.sup.2 1.4 .times. 10.sup.5 HSsub100 amino-terminus <1 .times. 10.sup.4 9.0 .times. 10.sup.8 4.5 .times. 10.sup.8______________________________________
As shown in Table 4, when equivalent dilutions of H5in190 were utilized, the plaquing efficiency of the C-7 cell line was at least 100-fold greater than that of the B-6 or LP-293 cells. This result demonstrated that the C-7 cell line produces a functional preterminal protein, capable of trans-complementing the defect of the H5in190 derived preterminal protein.
The cell lines were next screened for the ability to trans-complement with the temperature-sensitive virus, H5sub100, at nonpermissive temperatures. H5sub100 has a codon insertion mutation within the amino-terminus of the preterminal protein, as well as an E1 deletion. The mutation is responsible both for a temperature sensitive growth defect, as well as a replication defect [Freimuth and Ginsberg (1986), supra and Schaack et al. (1995) J. Virol. 69:4079]. The plaquing efficiency of the cell line C-7 was found to be at least 1000 fold greater than that of the LP-293 cells (at non-permissive temperatures) (see Table 4). Interestingly, the cell line B-6 was also capable of producing large numbers of H5sub100 derived plaques at 38.5.degree. C., even though it does not express any preterminal protein. This result suggested that the high level expression of the polymerase protein was allowing plaque formation of H5sub100 in the B-6 cell line. To examine this possibility, the nature of H5sub100 growth in the various cell lines was examined.
c) Complementation of the Replication and Growth Defects of H5sub100
The cell lines B-6 and C-7 were shown to overcome the replication defect of H5ts36 (Ex. 1). Since the preterminal and polymerase proteins are known to physically interact with each other [Zhao and Padmanabhan (1988) Cell 55:1005], we investigated whether the expression of the Ad-polymerase could overcome the replication defect of H5sub100 at non-permissive temperatures using the following replication-complementation assay.
LP-293, B-6, or C-7 cells were seeded onto 60 mM dishes at a density of 2.times.10.sup.6 cells per dish and infected the next day with H5sub100 at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 0.25, and incubated at 38.5.degree. C. for 16 hours or 32.0.degree. C. for 40 hours. The cells from each infected plate were then harvested and total DNA extracted as described in Example 1. Four micrograms of each DNA sample was digested with HindIII, electrophoresed through a 0.7% agarose gel, transferred to a nylon membrane, and probed with .sup.32 P-labeled H5ts36 virion DNA. The resulting autoradiograph is shown in FIG. 7. As seen in FIG. 7, the H5sub100 replication defect when grown in LP-293 cells at 38.5.degree. C. is seen; this defect is not present when the virus is grown at the same temperature in either B-6 or C-7 cells.
The results depicted in FIG. 7 demonstrates that both cell lines B-6 and C-7 could trans-complement the replication defect of H5sub100. This result demonstrated that the expression of the Ad polymerase in B-6 cells was able to overcome the preterminal protein-mediated replication defect of H5sub100. While not limiting the present invention to any particular mechanism, the ability of Ad polymerase to overcome the preterminal protein-mediated replication defect of H5sub100 may be due to a direct physical interaction of the polymerase with the amino-terminus of the H5sub100-derived preterminal protein.
In support of this hypothesis, it has also been demonstrated that the H5sub100 replication defect can be overcome when LP-293 cells were infected with a 100-fold greater amount of H5sub100. However, complementation of the H5sub100 replication defect is not sufficient to overcome the growth defect of H5sub100, since temperature shift-up experiments have demonstrated that the H5sub100 growth defect is not dependent upon viral replication [Schaack et al. (1995), supra]. Therefore, the overexpression of the Ad-polymerase must have allowed a very low level but detectable production of infectious H5sub100 particles in the B-6 cell line. The reduced growth of H5sub100 is therefore not due to a replication defect, but rather some other critical activity that the preterminal protein has a role in, such as augmention of viral transcription by association with the nuclear matrix [Schaack and Shenk (1989) Curr. Top. Microbiol. Immunol. 144:185 and Hauser and Chamberlain (1996) J. Endo. 149:373]. This was confirmed by assessing the ability of the C-7 cell line to overcome the growth defect of H5sub100 utilizing one-step growth assays performed as follows.
Each of the cell lines (LP-293, B-6 and C-7) were seeded onto 60 mm dishes at 2.0.times.10.sup.6 cells/dish. The cell lines were infected at an MOI of 4 with each of the appropriate viruses (wtAd5, H5ts36, or H5sub100), and incubated at 38.5.degree. C. for 40 hours. The total amount of infectious virions produced in each 60 mm dish was released from the cell lysates by three cycles of freeze-thawing, and the titer was then determined by limiting dilution and plaque assay on B-6 cells at 38.5.degree. C. The results are summarized in FIG. 8.
The results shown in FIG. 8, demonstrated that even though the B-6 cell line allowed normal replication and plaque formation of H5sub100 at 38.5.degree. C. (in fact, B-6 cells were utilized to determine the plaque titres depicted in FIG. 8) they could not allow high level growth of H5sub100 and only produced titres of H5sub100 equivalent to that produced by the LP-293 cells. The C-7 cell line produced 100 fold more virus than the LP-293 or B-6 cells, see FIG. 8. Encouragingly, the titre of H5sub100 produced by the C-7 cells approached titres produced by LP-293 cells infected with wild-type virus, Ad5. When the H5sub100 virions produced from infection of the C-7 cells were used to infect LP-293 cells at 38.5.degree. C., all virus produced retained the ts mutation (i.e., at least a 1000 fold drop in pfu was detected when LP-293 cells were respectively infected at 38.5.degree. C. vs. 32.0.degree. C.). This finding effectively rules out the theoretical possibility that the H5sub100 input virus genomes recombined with the preterminal protein sequences present in the C-7 cells.
In addition, the C-7 cell line allowed the high level growth of H5ts36, demonstrating that adequate amounts of the Ad-polymerase protein were also being expressed. The C-7 cell line was capable of trans-complementing the growth of both H5ts36 and H5sub100 after 4 months of serial passaging, demonstrating that the coexpression of the E1, preterminal, and polymerase proteins was not toxic.
These results demonstrate that the constitutive expression of both the polymerase and preterminal proteins is not detrimental to normal virus production, which might have occurred if one or both of the proteins had to be expressed only during a narrow time period during the Ad life cycle. In summary, these results demonstrated that the C-7 cell line can be used as a packaging cell line to allow the high level growth of E1, preterminal, and polymerase deleted Ad vectors.
EXAMPLE 3
Production of Adenovirus Vectors Deleted for E1 and Polymerase Functions
In order to produce an Ad vectors deleted for E1 and polymerase functions, a small, frame-shifting deletion was introduced into the Ad-pol gene contained within an E1-deleted Ad genome. The plasmid pBHG11 (Microbix) was used as the source of an E1-deleted Ad genome. pBHG11 contains a deletion of Ad5 sequences from bp 188 to bp 1339 (0.5-3.7 m.u.); this deletion removes the packaging signals as well as E1 sequences. pBHG11 also contains a large deletion within the E3 region (bp 27865 to bp 30995; 77.5-86.2 m.u.). The nucleotide sequence of pBHG11 is listed in SEQ ID NO:4 [for cross-corrleation between the pBHG11 sequence and the Ad5 genome (SEQ ID NO:1), it is noted that nucleotide 8,773 in pBHG11 is equivalent to nucleotide 7,269 in Ad5].
pBHG11 was chosen to provide the Ad backbone because this plasmid contains a large deletion within the E3 region (77.5 to 86.2 m.u.) and therefore vectors derived from this plasmid permit the insertion of large pieces of foreign DNA. A large cloning capacity is important when the pol vectors is to be used to transfer a large gene such as the dystrophin gene (cDNA=13.6 kb). However, the majority of genes are not this large and therefore other Ad backbones containing smaller deletions within the E3 region (e.g., pBHG10 which contains a deletion between 78.3 to 85.8 m.u.; Microbix) may be employed for the construction of pol- vectors using the strategy outlined below.
a) Construction of a Plasmid Containing a Portion of the Adenovirus Genome Containing the Polymerase Gene
A fragment of the Ad genome containing the pol gene located on pBHG11 was subcloned to create pBSA-XB. Due to the large size of the Ad genome, this intermediate plasmid was constructed to facilitate the introduction of a deletion within the pol gene the pol deletion. pBSA-XB was constructed as follows. The polylinker region of pBluescript (Stratagene) was modified to include additional restriction enzyme recognition sites (the sequence of the modified polylinker is provided in SEQ ID NO:5; the remainder of pBluescript was not altered); the resulting plasmid was termed pBSX. pBHG11 was digested with XbaI and BamHI and the 20.223 kb fragment containing the pol and pTP coding regions (E2b region) was inserted into pBSX digested with XbaI and BamHI to generate pBSA-XB.
b) Construction of pBHG11.DELTA.pol
A deletion was introduced into the pol coding region contained within pBSA-XB in such a manner that other key viral elements were not disturbed (e.g., the major late promoter, the tripartite leader sequences, the pTP gene and other leader sequences critical for normal virus viability). The deletion of the pol sequences was carried out as follows. pBSA-XB was digested with BspEI and the ends were filled in using T4 DNA polymerase. The BspEI-digested, T4 polymerase filled DNA was then digested with BamHI and the 8809 bp BamHI/BspEI(filled) fragment was isolated as follows. The treated DNA was run on a 0.6% agarose gel (TAE buffer) and the 8809 bp fragment was excised from the gel and purified using a QIAEX Gel Extraction Kit according to the manufacturer's instructions (OIAGEN, Chatsworth, Calif.).
A second aliquot of pBSA-XB DNA was digested with BspHI and the ends were filled in with T4 DNA polymerase. The BspHI-digested, T4 polymerase filled DNA was then digested with BamHI and the 13,679 bp BamHI/BspHI(filled) fragment was isolated as described above.
The purified 8809 bp BamHI/BspEI(filled) fragment and the purified 13,679 bp BamHI/BspHI(filled) fragment were ligated to generate p.DELTA.pol. p.DELTA.pol contains a 612 bp deletion within the pol gene (bp 8772 to 9385; numbering relative to that of pBHG11) and lacks the 11.4 kb BamHI fragment containing the right arm of the Ad genome found within pBHG11.
To provide the right arm of the Ad genome, p.DELTA.pol was digested with BamHI followed by treatment with calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase. pBHG11 was digested with BamHI and the 11.4 kb fragment was isolated and purified using a QIAEX Gel Extraction Kit as described above. The purified 11.4 kb BamHI fragment was ligated to the BamHI/phosphatased p.DELTA.pol to generate pBHG11.DELTA.pol. Proper construction of pBHG11.DELTA.pol was confirmed restriction digestion (HindIII).
c) Rescue and Propagation of Ad5.DELTA.pol Virus
The Ad genome contained within pBHG11.DELTA.pol lacks the packaging signals. Therefore, in order to recover virus containing the 612 bp deletion within the pol gene from pBHG11.DELTA.pol, this plasmid must be cotransfected into packaging cells along with DNA that provides a source of the Ad packaging signals. The Ad packaging signals may be provided by wild-type or mutant Ad viral DNA or alternatively may be provided using a shuttle vector which contains the left-end Ad5 sequences including the packaging signals such as p.DELTA.E1sp1A, p.DELTA.E1sp1B (Microbix) or pAdBglII (pAdBglII is a standard shuttle vector which contains 0-1 m.u. and 9-16 m.u. of the adenovirus genome).
To rescue virus, pBHG11.DELTA.pol was co-transfected with Ad5dl7001 viral DNA. Ad5dl7001 contains a deletion in the E3 region; the E3 deletion contained within Ad5dl7001 is smaller than the deletion contained within the Ad genome contained within pBHG11. It is not necessary that Ad5dl7001 be used to recover virus; other adenoviruses, including wild-type adenoviruses, may be used to rescue of virus from pBHG11.DELTA.pol.
It has been reported that the generation of recombinant Ads is more efficient if Ad DNA-terminal protein complex (TPC) is employed in conjunction with a plasmid containing the desired deletion [Miyake et al. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93:1320]. Accordingly, Ad5dl7001-TPC were prepared as described [Miyake et al. (1996), supra]. Briefly, purified Ad5dl7001 virions (purified through an isopycnic CsCl gradient centered at 1.34 g/ml) were lysed by the addition of an equal volume of 8 M guanidine hydrochloride. The released Ad5dl7001 DNA-TPC was then purified through a buoyant density gradient of 2.8 M CsCl/4 M guanidine hydrochloride by centrifugation for 16 hr at 55,000 rpm in a VTi65 rotor (Beckman). Gradient fractions containing Ad5dl7001 DNA-TPC were identified using an ethidium bromide spot test and then pooled, dialyzed extensively against TE buffer. BSA was then added to a final concentration of 0.5 mg/ml and aliquots were stored at -80.degree. C. The Ad5dl7001 DNA-TPC was then digested with ScaI and then gel-filtered through a Sephadex G-50 spin column.
One hundred nanograms of the digested Ad5dl7001 DNA-TPC was mixed with 5 .mu.g of pBHG11.DELTA.pol and used to transfect pol-expressing 293 cells (i.e., C-7). Approximately 10 days post-transfection, plaques were picked. The recombinant viruses were plaque purified and propagated using standard techniques (Graham and Prevac, supra). Viral DNA was isolated, digested with restriction enzymes and subjected to Southern blotting analysis to determine the organization of the recovered viruses. Two forms of virus containing the 612 bp pol deletion were recovered and termed Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I and Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3II. One form of recombinant pol.sup.- virus recovered, Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I, underwent a double recombination event with the Ad5dl7001 sequences and contains the E3 deletion contained within Ad5dl7001 at the right end of the genome. The second form of recombinant pol.sup.- virus, Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3II, retained pBHG11 sequences at the right end of the genome (i.e., contained the E3 deletion found within pBHG11). These results demonstrate the production of a recombinant Ad vector containing a deletion within the pol gene.
d) Characterization of the E1+, pol- Viruses
To demonstrate that the deletion contained within these two pol viruses renders the virus incapable of producing functional polymerase, Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I was used to infect 293 cells and pol-expressing 293 cells (B-6 and C-7 cell lines) and a viral replication-complementation assay was performed as described in Example 1e. Briefly, 293, B-6 and C-7 cells were seeded onto 60 mm dishes at a density of 2.times.106 cells/dish and infected with H5sub100 or Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I at an MOI of 0.25. The infected cells were then incubated at 37.degree. C. or 38.5.degree. C. for 16 hours, or at 32.0.degree. C. for 40 hours. Cells from each infected plate were then harvested and total DNA was extracted. Four micrograms of each DNA sample was digested with HindIII, electrophoresised through an agarose gel, transferred to a nylon membrane and probed with .sup.32 P-labeled adenoviral DNA. The resulting autograph is shown in FIG. 9. In FIG. 9, each panel shows, from left to right, DNA extracted from 293, B-6 and C-7 cells, respectively infected with either H5sub100 or Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I (labeled Ad5.DELTA.POL in FIG. 9).
As shown in FIG. 9, the recombinant pol.sup.- virus was found to be viable on pol-expressing 293 cells but not on 293 cells. These results demonstrates that recombinant Ad viruses containing the 612 bp deletion found within p.DELTA.pol lack the ability to express Ad polymerase. These results also demonstrate that B-6 and C-7 cells efficiently complement the .DELTA.pol found within Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I and Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3II. In addition, these results show that replication of the ts pTP mutant H5sub100 can be complemented by high level expression of the Ad polymerase with or without co-expression of pTP.
Because the expression of early genes is required for the expression of the late gene products, the ability of recombinant viruses containing the .DELTA.pol deletion to direct the expression of late gene products was examined. 293 and C-7 cells were infected with Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I and 24 hours after infection cell extracts were prepared. The cell extracts were serially diluted and examined for the expression of the fiber protein (a late gene product) by immunoblot analysis. The immunoblot was performed as described in Example 3C with the exception that the primary antibody used was an anti-fiber antibody (FIBER-KNOB obtained from Robert Gerard, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School). The results of this immunoblotting analysis revealed that no fiber protein was detected from 293 cells infected with Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I (at any dilutuion of the cell extract). In contrast, even a 1:1000 dilution of cell extract prepared from C-7 cells infected with Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I produced a visible band on the immunoblot. Therefore, the pol deletion contained within Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I resulted in a greater than 1000-fold decrease in fiber production.
The above results demonstrate that polymerase gene sequences can be deleted from the virus and that the resulting deleted virus will only grow on cells producing Ad-polymerase in trans. Using the pol-expressing cell lines described herein (e.g., B-6 and C-7), large quantities of the pol.sup.- viruses can be prepared. A dramatic shut-down in growth and late gene expression is seen when cells which do not express Ad polymerase are infected with the pol.sup.- viruses.
e) Generation of E1.sup.-, Pol.sup.- Ad Vectors
Ad5dl7001 used above to recuse virus containing the polymerase deletion is an E1-containing virus. The presence of E1 sequences on the recombinant pol- viruses is undesirable when the recombinant virus is to be used to transfer genes into the tissues of animals; the E1 region encodes the transforming genes and such viruses replicate extremely well in vivo leading to an immune response directed against cells infected with the E1-containing virus.
E1.sup.- viruses containing the above-described polymerase deletion are generated as follows. pBHG11.DELTA.pol is cotransfected into pol-expressing 293 cells (e.g., B-6 or C-7) along with a shuttle vector containing the left-end Ad5 sequences including the packaging signals. Suitable shuttle vectors include p.DELTA.E1sp1A (Microbix), p.DELTA.E1sp1B (Microbix) or pAdBglII. The gene of interest is inserted into the polylinker region of the shuttle vector and this plasmid is then cotransfected into B-6 or C-7 cells along with pBHG11.DELTA.pol to generate a recombinant E1.sup.- , pol.sup.- Ad vector containing the gene of interest.
EXAMPLE 4
Production of Adenovirus Vectors Deleted For E1 and Preterminal Protein Functions
In order to produce an Ad vectors deleted for E1 and preterminal protein functions, a small deletion was introduced into the Ad preterminal protein (pTP) gene contained within an E1-deleted Ad genome. The plasmid pBHG11 (Microbix) was used as the source of an E1-deleted Ad genome to Maximize the cloning capacity of the resulting pTP.sup.- vector. However, other Ad backbones containing smaller deletions within the E3 region (e.g., pBHG10 which contains a deletion between 78.3 to 85.8 m.u.; Microbix) may be employed for the construction of pTP.sup.- vectors using the strategy outlined below.
a) Construction of p.DELTA.pTP
A deletion was introduced into the pTP coding region contained within pBSA-XB (Ex. 3) in such a manner that other key viral elements were not disturbed (e.g., the tripartite leader sequences, the i-leader sequences, the VA-RNA I and II genes, the 55 kD gene and the pol gene). The deletion of the pTP sequences was carried out as follows. pBSA-XB was digested with XbaI and EcoRV and the 7.875 kb fragment was isolated as described (Ex. 3). Another aliquot of pBSA-XB was digested with MunI and the ends were filled in using T4 DNA polymerase. The MunI-digested, T4 polymerase filled DNA was then digested with XbaI and the 14.894 kb XbaI/MunI(filled) fragment was isolated as described (Ex. 3). The 7.875 kb MunI fragment and the 14.894 kb XbaI/MunI(filled) fragment were ligated together to generate p.DELTA.pTP.
b) Construction of pBHG11.DELTA.pTP
p.DELTA.pol contains a 429 bp deletion within the pTP gene (bp 10,705 to 11,134; numbering relative to that of pBHG11) and lacks the 11.4 kb BamHI fragment containing the right arm of the Ad genome found within pBHG11.
To provide the right arm of the Ad genome, p.DELTA.pTP was digested with BamHI followed by treatment with shrimp alkaline phosphatase (SAP; U.S. Biochemicals, Cleveland, Ohio). pBHG11 was digested with BamHI and the 11.4 kb fragment was isolated and purified using a QIAEX Gel Extraction Kit as described (Ex. 3). The purified 11.4 kb BamHI fragment was ligated to the BamHI/phosphatased p.DELTA.pTP to generate pBHG11.DELTA.pTP. Proper construction of pBHG11.DELTA.pTP was confirmed restriction digestion.
c) Rescue and Propagation of Ad Vectors Containing the pTP Deletion
The Ad genome contained within pBHG11.DELTA.pTP lacks the Ad packaging signals. Therefore, in order to recover virus containing the 612 bp deletion within the pol gene from pBHG11.DELTA.pol, this plasmid must be cotransfected into packaging cells along with DNA that provides a source of the Ad packaging signals. The Ad packaging signals may be provided by wild-type or mutant Ad viral DNA or alternatively may be provided using a shuttle vector which contains the left-end Ad5 sequences including the packaging signals such as p.DELTA.E1sp1A, p.DELTA.E1sp1B (Microbix) or pAdBglII.
Recombinant Ad vectors containing the pTP deletion which contain a deletion within the E3 region are generated by cotransfection of pBHG11.DELTA.pTP (the gene of interest is inserted into the unique PacI site of pBHG11.DELTA.pTP) with a E3-deleted Ad virus such as Ad5dl1700 into pTP-expressing 293 cells (e.g., C-7); viral DNA-TPC are utilized as described above in Example 3.
Recombinant vectors containing the pTP deletion which also contain deletions within the E1 and E3 regions are generated by cotransfection of pBHG11.DELTA.pTP into pTP-expressing 293 cells (e.g., C-7) along with a shuttle vector containing the left-end Ad5 sequences including the packaging signals. Suitable shuttle vectors include p.DELTA.E1sp1A (Microbix), p.DELTA.E1sp1B (Microbix) or pAdBglII. The gene of interest is inserted into the polylinker region of the shuttle vector and this plasmid is then cotransfected into B-6 or C-7 cells along with pBHG11.DELTA.pTP to generate a recombinant E1.sup.-, pTP.sup.- Ad vector containing the gene of interest.
EXAMPLE 5
Production of Adenovirus Vectors Deleted for E1, Polymerase and Preterminal Protein Functions
In order to produce an Ad vectors deleted for E1, polymerase and preterminal protein functions, a deletion encompassing pol and pTP gene sequences was introduced into the Ad sequences contained within an E1-deleted Ad genome. The plasmid pBHG11.DELTA.E4 was used as the source of an E1-deleted Ad genome to maximize the cloning capacity of the resulting pol.sup.-, pTP.sup.- vector. pBHG11.DELTA.E4 is a modified form of BHG11 which contains a deletion of all E4 genes except for the E4 ORF 6; the E4 region was deleted to create more room for the insertion of a gene of interest and to further disable the virus. However, other E1.sup.- Ad backbones, such as pBHG11 and pBHG1 (Microbix; pBHG10 contains a smaller deletion within the E3 region as compared to pBHG11), may be employed for the construction of pol.sup.-, pTP.sup.- vectors using the strategy outlined below.
Due to the complexity of the cloning steps required to introduce a 2.3 kb deletion that removes portions of both the pTP and pol genes, this deletion was generated using several steps as detailed below.
a) Construction of pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13
In order to create a plasmid containing Ad sequences that have a deletion within the pol and pTP genes, pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 was constructed as follows.
pBSA-XB was digested with BspEI and the 18 kb fragment was isolated and recircularized to create pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTP; this plasmid contains a deletion of the sequences contained between the BspEI sites located at 8,773 and 12,513 (numbering relative to pBHG11).
A fragment encoding the VA-RNA3 sequence and the third leader of the tri-partite leader sequence was prepared using the PCR as follows. The PCR was carried out in a solution containing H5ts36 virion DNA (any Ad DNA, including wild-type Ad, may be used), 2 ng/mL of primers 4005E and 4006E, 10 mM TrisHCl, pH 8.3, 50 mM KCl, 1.5 mM MgCl.sub.2, 0.001% gelatin and Pfu polymerase. The forward primer, 4005E, [5.dbd.-TGCCGCAGCACCGGATGCATC-3' (SEQ ID NO:6)] contains sequences complementary to residues 12,551 to 12,571 of pBHG11 (SEQ ID NO:4). The reverse primer, 4006E, [5'-GCGTCCGGAGGCTGCCATG CGGCAGGG-3' (SEQ ID NO:7)] is complementary to residues 11,091 to 11,108 of pBHG11 (SEQ ID NO:4) as well as a BspEI site (underlined). The predicted sequence of the .about.1.6 kb PCR product is listed in SEQ ID NO:8.
PCR was performed with a Perkin Elmer 9600 Thermocycler utilizing the following cycling parameters: initial denaturation at 94.degree. C. for 3 min, 3 cycles of denaturation at 94.degree. C. for 30 sec, annealing at 50.degree. C. for 30 sec, and extension at 72.degree. C. for 60 sec, followed by another 27 cycles with an increased annealing temperature at 56.degree. C., with a final extension at 72.degree. C. for 10 minutes. The .about.1.6 kb PCR product was purified using a QIAEX Gel Extraction Kit as described (Ex. 3).
The purified PCR fragment was then digested with BspEI. pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTP was digested with BspEI followed by treatment with SAP. The BspEI-digested PCR fragment and the BspEI-SAP-treated pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTP were ligated together to create pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13.
b) Construction of pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13
pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 contains a 2.3 kb deletion within the pol and pTP genes (bp 8,773 to 11,091; numbering relative to that of pBHG11) and lacks the 11.4 kb BamHI fragment containing the right arm of the Ad genome.
To provide the right arm of the Ad genome, pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 was digested with BamHI followed by treatment with SAP. pBHG11.DELTA.E4 (PBHG11 or pBHG10 may be used in place of pBHG11.DELTA.E4) was digested with BamHI and the 11.4 kb fragment was isolated and purified using a QIAEX Gel Extraction Kit as described (Ex. 3). The purified 11.4 kb BamHI fragment was ligated to the BamHI/phosphatased pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 to generate pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13. Proper construction of pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 was confirmed restriction digestion.
c) Rescue and Propagation of Ad Vectors Containing the pol, pTP Double Deletion
The Ad genome contained within pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 lacks the Ad packaging signals. Therefore, in order to recover virus containing the 2.3 kb deletion within the pol and pTP genes from pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13, this plasmid must be cotransfected into packaging cells along with DNA that provides a source of the Ad packaging signals. The Ad packaging signals may be provided by wild-type or mutant Ad viral DNA or alternatively may be provided using a shuttle vector which contains the left-end Ad5 sequences including the packaging signals such as p.DELTA.E1sp1A, p.DELTA.E1sp1B (Microbix) or pAdBglII.
Recombinant vAd vectors containing the pol, pTP double deletion which also contain a deletion within the E3 region are generated by cotransfection of pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 (the gene of interest is inserted into the unique PacI site of pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13) with a E3-deleted Ad virus such as Ad5dl7001 into pol- and pTP-expressing 293 cells (e.g., C-7); viral DNA-TPC are utilized as described (Ex. 3).
Recombinant vectors containing the pol, pTP double deletion which also contain deletions within the E1 and E3 regions are generated by cotransfection of pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 into pol- and pTP-expressing 293 cells (e.g., C-7) along with a shuttle vector containing the left-end Ad5 sequences including the packaging signals. Suitable shuttle vectors include p.DELTA.E1sp1A (Microbix), p.DELTA.E1sp1B (Microbix) or pAdBglII. The gene of interest is inserted into the polylinker region of the shuttle vector and this plasmid is then cotransfected into B-6 or C-7 cells along with pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 to generate a recombinant E1.sup.-, pol.sup.-, pTP.sup.- Ad vector containing the gene of interest.
EXAMPLE 6
Encapsidated Adenovirus Minichromosomes Containing a Full Length Dystrophin cDNA
In this Example, the construction of an encapsidated adenovirus minichromosome (EAM) consisting of an infectious encapsidated linear genome containing Ad origins of replication, packaging signal elements, a .beta.-galactosidase reporter gene cassette and a full length (14 kb) dystrophin cDNA regulated by a muscle specific enhancer/promoter is described. EAMs are generated by cotransfecting 293 cells with supercoiled plasmid DNA (pAd5.beta.dys) containing an embedded inverted origin of replication (and the remaining above elements) together with linear DNA from E1-deleted virions expressing human placental alkaline phosphatase (hpAP). All proteins necessary for the generation of EAMs are provided in trans from the hpAP virions and the two can be separated from each other on equilibrium CsCl gradients. These EAMs are useful for gene transfer to a variety of cell types both in vitro and in vivo.
a) Generation and Propagation of Encapsidated Adenovirus Minichromosomes
To establish a vector system capable of delivering full length dystrophin cDNA clones, the minimal region of Ad5 needed for replication and packaging was combined with a conventional plasmid carrying both dystrophin and a .beta.-galactosidase reporter gene. In the first vector constructed, these elements were arranged such that the viral ITRs flanked (ITRs facing outward) the reporter gene and the dystrophin gene [i.e., the vector contained from 5' to 3' the right or 3' ITR (mu 100 to 99), the dystrophin gene and the reporter gene and the left or 5' ITR and packaging sequnce (mu 1 to 0)]. Upon introduction of this vector along with helper virus into 293 cells, no encapsidated adenovirus minichromosomes were recovered.
The second and successful vector, pAd5.beta.dys (FIG. 10) contains 2.1 kb of adenovirus DNA, together with a 14 kb murine dystrophin cDNA under the control of the mouse muscle creatine kinase enhancer/promoter, as well as a .beta.-galactosidase gene regulated by the human cytomegalovirus enhancer/promoter.
FIG. 10 shows the structure of pAd5.beta.dys (27.8 kb). The two inverted adenovirus origins of replication are represented by a left and right inverted terminal repeat (LITR/RITR). Replication from these ITRs generates a linear genome whose termini correspond to the 0 and 100 map unit (mu) locations. Orientation of the origin with respect to wild type adenovirus serotype 5 sequences in mu is indicated above the figure (1 mu=360 bp). Encapsidation of the mature linear genome is enabled by five (AI-AV) packaging signals (.PSI.). The E. coli .beta.-galactosidase and mus musculus dystrophin cDNAs are regulated by cytomegalovirus (CMV) and muscle creatine kinase (MCK) enhancer/promoter elements, respectively. Both expression cassettes contain the SV40 polyadenylation (pA) signal. Since the E1A enhancer/promoter overlaps with the packaging signals, pAd5.beta.dys was engineered such that RNA polymerase transcribing from the E1A enhancer/promoter will encounter the SV40 late polyadenylation signal. Pertinent restriction sites used in constructing pAd5.beta.dys are indicated below the figure. An adenovirus fragment corresponding to mu 6.97 to 7.77 was introduced into pAd5.beta.dys during the cloning procedure (described below). P1 and P2 represent location of probes used for Southern blot analysis. Restriction sites destroyed during the cloning of the Ad5 origin of replication and packaging signal are indicated in parentheses. pAd5.beta.dys was constructed as follows. pBSX (Ex. 3a) was used as the backbone for construction of pAd5.beta.dys. The inverted fused Ad5 origin of replication and five encapsidation signals were excised as a PstI/XbaI fragment from pAd5ori, a plasmid containing the 6 kb HindIII fragment from pFG140 (Microbix Biosystems). This strategy also introduced a 290 bp fragment from Ad5 corresponding to map units 6.97 to 7.77 adjacent to the right inverted repeat (see FIG. 10). The E. coli .beta.-galactosidase gene regulated by the human CMV immediate early (IE) promoter/enhancer expression cassette was derived as an EcoRI/HindIII fragment from pCMV.beta. [MacGregor and Caskey (1989) Nucleic Acids Res. 17:2365]; the CMV IE enhancer/promoter is available from a number of suppliers as is the E. coli .beta.-galactosidase gene]. The murine dystrophin expression cassette was derived as a BssHII fragment from pCVAA, and contains a 3.3 kb MCK promoter/enhancer element [Phelps et al. (1995) Hum. Mol. Genet. 4:1251 and Jaynes et al. (1986) Mol. Cell. Biol. 6:2855]. The sequence of the .about.3.3 kb MCK promoter/enhancer element is provided in SEQ ID NO:9 (in SEQ ID NO:9, the last nucleotide of SEQ ID NO:9 corresponds to nucleotide +7 of the MCK gene). The enhancer element is contained within a 206 bp fragment located -1256 and -1050 upstream of the transcription start site in the MCK gene.
It was hoped that the pAd5.beta.dys plasmid would be packageable into an encapsidated minichromosome when grown in parallel with an E1-deleted virus due to the inclusion of both inverted terminal repeats (ITR) and the major Ad packaging signals in the plasmid. The ITRs and packaging signals were derived from pFG140 (Microbix), a plasmid that generates E1-defective Ad particles upon transfection of human 293 cells.
hpAP is an E1 deleted Ad5 containing the human placental alkaline phosphatase gene [Muller et al. (1994) Circ. Res. 75:1039]. This virus was chosen to provide the helper functions so that it would be possible to monitor the titer of the helper virus throughout serial passages by quantitative alkaline phosphatase assays.
293 cells were cotransfected with pAd5.beta.dys and hpAP DNA as follows. Low passage 293 cells (Microbix Biosystems) were grown and passaged as suggested by the supplier. Five pAd5.beta.dys and hpAP DNA (5 and 0.5 .mu.g, respectively) were dissolved in 70 .mu.l of 20 mM HEPES buffer (pH 7.4) and incubated with 30 .mu.l of DOTAP (BMB) for 15 min. at room temperature. This mixture was resuspended in 2 mls of DMEM supplemented with 2% fetal calf serum (FCS) and added dropwise to a 60 mm plate of 293 cells at 80% confluency. Four hours post-transfection the media was replaced by DMEM with 10% FCS. Cytopathic effect was observed 6-12 days post-transfection.
Cotransfection of 293 cells with supercoiled pAd5.beta.dys and linear hpAP DNA produced Ad5.beta.dys EAMs (the encapsidated version of pAd5.beta.dys) approximately 6 to 12 days post transfection, as evidenced by the appearance of a cytopathic effect (CPE). Initially, the amount of Ad5.beta.dys EAMs produced was significantly lower than that of hpAP virions so the viral suspension was used to re-infect fresh cultures, from which virus was isolated and used for serial infection of additional cultures (FIG. 11). Infection and serial passaging of 293 cells was carried out as follows.
Lysate from one 60 mm plate of transfected 293 cells was prepared by vigorously washing the cells from the plate and centrifuging at 1 K rpm in a clinical centrifuge. Cells were resuspended in DMEM and 2% FCS, freeze-thawed in a dry ice-ethanol bath, cell debris removed by centrifugation, and approximately 75% of the crude lysate was used to infect 293 cells in DMEM supplemented with 2% FCS for 1 hour and then supplemented with 10% FCS thereafter. Infection was allowed to proceed for 18-20 hrs before harvesting the virus. The total number of cells infected in each serial passage is indicated in FIG. 11.
In FIG. 11, the total number of transducing adenovirus particles produced (output) per serial passage on 293 cells, total input virus of either the helper (hpAP) or Ad5.beta.dys, and the total number of cells used in each infection is presented. The total number of input/output transducing particles were determined by infection of 293 cells plated in 6-well microtiter plates. Twenty four hours post-infection the cells were assayed for alkaline phosphatase or .beta.-galactosidase activity (described below) to determine the number of cells transduced with either Ad5.beta.dys or hpAP. The number of transducing particles were estimated by extrapolation of the mean calculated from 31 randomly chosen 2.5 mm.sup.2 sectors of a 961 mm.sup.2 plate. The intra-sector differences in total output of each type of virus are presented as the standard deviations, .sigma., in FIG. 11. For each serial passage, 75% of the total output virus from the previous passage was used for infection.
Alkaline phosphatase or .beta.-galactosidase activity was determined as follows. For detection of alkaline phosphatase, infected 293 cells on Petri dishes were rinsed twice with phosphate buffered saline (PBS) and fixed for 10 minutes in 0.5% glutaraldehyde in PBS. Cells were again rinsed twice with PBS for ten minutes followed by inactivation of endogenous alkaline phosphatase activity at 65.degree. C. for 1 hr. in PBS prior to the addition of the chromogenic substrate BCIP (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate) at 0.15 mg/ml and nitro blue tetrazolium at 0.3 mg/ml). Cells were incubated at 37.degree. C. in darkness for 3-24 hrs. For .beta.-galactosidase assays, the cells were fixed and washed as above, then assayed using standard methods [MacGregor et al. (1991) In Murray (ed.), Methods in Molecular Biology, Vol. 7: Gene Transfer and Expression Protocols, Human Press Inc., Clifton, N.J., pp. 217-225].
As shown in FIG. 11, the rate of increase in titer of Ad5.beta.dys EAMs between transfection and serial passage 6 was approximately 100 times greater than that for hpAP virions. This result indicated that Ad5.beta.dys has a replication advantage over the helper virus, probably due to the shorter genome length (a difference of approximately 8 kb) and hence an increased rate of packaging.
Interestingly, after serial passage 6 there was a rapid decrease in the total titer of hpAP virions whereas the titer of Ad5,.beta.dys EAMs continued to rise. While not limiting the present invention to any particular mechanism, at least two possible mechanisms could be responsible for this observation. Firstly, a buildup of defective hpAP virions due to infections at high multiplicities may slowly out-compete their full length counterparts, a phenomenon that has been previously observed upon serial propagation of adenovirus [Daniell (1976) J. Virol. 19:685; Rosenwirth et al. (1974) Virology 60:431; and Burlingham et al. (1974) Virology 60:419]. Secondly, the emergence of replication competent virions due to recombination events between E1 sequences in cellular DNA and the hpAP genome could lead to a buildup of virus particles defective in expressing alkaline phosphatase [Lochmuller et al. (1994) Hum. Gene Ther. 5:1485].
Southern analysis of DNA prepared from serial lysates 3, 6, 9 and 12 indicated that full length dystrophin sequences were present in each of these lysates (FIG. 12A). In addition, the correct size restriction fragments were detected using both dystrophin and .beta.-galactosidase probes against lysate DNA digested with several enzymes (FIGS. 12A-B).
FIG. 12 shows a Southern blot analysis of viral DNA from lysates 3, 6, 9 and 12, digested with the restriction enzymes BssHII, NruI and EcoRV, indicating the presence of a full length dystrophin cDNA in all lysates. Fragments from the C terminus of mus musculus dystrophin cDNA (A) or the N terminus of E coli .beta.-galactosidase (B) were labeled with dCTP.sup.32 and used as probes [Sambrook et al., supra]. The position of these probes and the predicted fragments for each digest is indicated in FIG. 10. Note that one end of each fragment (except the 17.8 kb BssHII dystrophin fragment) detected is derived from the end of the linearized Ad5,.beta.dys genome (see FIG. 10). Low levels of shorter products, presumably derived from defective virions, become detectable only at high serial passage number.
At the later passages (9 and 12) there appeared to be an emergence of truncated Ad5.beta.dys sequences, suggesting that deletions and/or rearrangements may be occurring at later passages. Hence, most experiments were performed with Ad5.beta.dys EAMs derived from the earlier passages. The possibility of the emergence of replication competent (E1-containing) viruses was also examined by infection of HeLa cells by purified and crude serial lysates, none of which produced any detectable CPE.
b) Purification of Encapsidated Adenovirus Minichromosomes on CsCl Gradients
The ability to separate Ad5.beta.dys EAMs from hpAP virions based on their buoyancy difference (due presumably to their different genome lengths) on CsCl gradients was examined. Repeated fractionation of the viral lysate allows small differences in buoyancy to be resolved. CsCl purification of encapsidated adenovirus minichromosomes was performed as follows. Approximately 25% of the lysate prepared from various passages during serial infections was used to purify virions. Freeze-thawed lysate was centrifuged to remove the cell debris. The cleared lysate was extracted twice with 1,1,2 tricholorotrifluoroethane (Sigma) and applied to CsCl step and self forming gradients.
Purification of virus was initially achieved by passing it twice through CsCl step gradients with densities of .rho.=1.45 and .rho.=1.20 in a SW28 rotor (Beckman). After isolation of the major band in the lower gradient, the virus was passed through a self forming gradient (initial .rho.=1.334) at 37,000 rpm for 24 hrs followed by a relaxation of the gradient by reducing the speed to 10,000 rpm for 10 hrs. in a SW41 rotor (Beckman) at 12.degree. C. [Anet and Strayer (1969) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 34:328]. The upper band from the gradient (composed mainly of Ad5.beta.dys virions) was isolated using an 18 gauge needle, reloaded on a fourth CsCl gradient (.rho.=1.334) and purified at 37,000 rpm for 24 hrs followed by 10,000 rpm for 10 hrs at 12.degree. C.
The Ad5.beta.dys-containing CsCl band was removed in 100 .mu.l fractions from the top of the centrifugation tube and CsCl was removed by chromatography on Sephadex G-50 (Pharmacia). Aliquots from each fraction were used to infect 293 cells followed by .beta.-galactosidase and alkaline phosphatase assays to quantitate the level of contamination by hpAP virions in the final viral isolate.
Results of the physical separation between Ad5.beta.dys EAMs and hpAP virions are shown in FIG. 13. FIG. 13 shows the physical separation of Ad5dys from hpAP virions at the third (A) and final (B) stages of CsCl purification (initial .rho.=1.334) in a SW41 tube. Aliquots of Ad5.beta.dys EAMs from the final stage were drawn through the top of the centrifugation tube and assayed for .beta.-galactosidase and alkaline phosphatase expression. Results of these assays are presented in FIG. 14.
In FIG. 14, shows the level of contamination of Ad5.beta.dys EAMs by hpAP virions obtained from passage 6. Following four cycles of CsCl purification, aliquots were removed from the top of the centrifugation tube and used for infection of 293 cells, which were fixed 24 hrs later and assayed for .beta.-galactosidase or alkaline phosphatase activity (described below). The number of transducing particles are an underestimation of the actual totals as in some cases a positive cell may have been infected by more than one transducing particle. The ratio of the two types of virions - Ad5.beta.dys EAMs (LacZ) or hpAP (AP) in each fraction is indicated in the lower graph.
The maximum ratio of transducing Ad5.beta.dys EAMs to hpAP virions reproducibly achieved in this study was 24.8--a contamination with helper virus corresponding to approximately 4% of the final viral isolate.
c) Dystrophin and .beta.-galactosidase Expression by Encapsidated Adenovirus Minichromosomes in Muscle Cells
To determine if the Ad5.beta.dys EAMs were able to express .beta.-galactosidase and dystrophin in muscle cells, mouse mdx myogenic cultures were infected with CsCl purified EAMs.
i) Propagation and Infection of Muscle Cells
MM14 and mdx myogenic cell lines were kindly provided by S. Hauschka (University of Washington) and were cultured as previously described [Linkhart et al. (1981) Dev. Biol. 86:19 and Clegg et al. (1987) J. Cell Biol. 105:949]. Briefly, myoblasts were grown on plastic tissue culture plates coated with a 0.1% gelatin in Ham's F-10 medium containing 15% (v/v) horse serum, 0.8 mM CaCl.sub.2, 200 ng/ml recombinant human basic fibroblast growth factor (b-FGF) and 60 .mu.g/ml genitimicin (proliferation medium). Cultures were induced to differentiate by switching to growth in the presence of growth medium lacking b-FGF and containing 10% horse serum (differentiation medium). Myoblasts or differentiated myotubes (three days post switching) were infected at a multiplicity of infection of 2.2 Ad5.beta.dys EAMs per cell. Fractions containing minimal contamination with hpAP virions (3, 4 and 5 of passage 6) were used for western and immunofluorescence analysis. Infection was allowed to proceed for 3 days for both the myoblasts and myotubes before harvesting cells.
ii) Total Protein Extraction and Immunoblot Analysis
For protein extraction, muscle cells were briefly trypsinized, transferred to a microcentrifuge tube, centrifuged at 14 K for 3 min at room temp and resuspended two times in PBS. After an additional centrifugation, the cell pellet was resuspended in 80 .mu.l of RIPA buffer (50 mM Tris-Cl, pH 7.5; 150 mM NaCl; 1% Nonidet P-40; 0.5% sodium deoxycholate; 0.1% SDS) (Sambrook et al., supra). The sample was briefly sheared using a 22 gauge needle to reduce viscosity and total protein concentration assayed using the bicinconinic acid protein assay reagent (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.). Expression of full length dystrophin or .beta.-galactosidase in infected mdx and MM14 myoblasts or myotubes was analyzed by electrophoresis of 40 .mu.g of total protein extract on a 6% SDS-PAGE gel (in 25 mM Tris, 192 mM glycine, 10 mM .beta.-mercaptoethanol, 0.1% SDS). After transferring to Gelman Biotrace NT membrane (in 25 mM Tris, 192 mM glycine, 10 mM .beta.-mercaptoethanol, 0.05% SDS, 20% methanol), the membrane was blocked with 5% non-fat milk and 1% goat-serum in Tris-buffered saline-Tween (TBS-T) for 12 hrs at 4.degree. C. Immunostaining was done according to the protocol for the ECL western blotting detection reagents (Amersham Life Sciences, Buckingham, UK). The primary antibodies used were Dys-2 (Vector Laboratories) and anti-.beta.-galactosidase (BMB, Indianapolis, Ind.) with a horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-mouse secondary antibody.
Western blot analysis of EAM-infected mdx myoblasts and myotubes (three days post-fusion) indicated that EAMs were able to infect both of these cell types (FIG. 15). In FIG. 15, immunoblots of protein extracts from mdx myoblasts and myotubes demonstrating the expression of .beta.-galactosidase (A) and dystrophin (B) in cells infected with Ad5.beta.dys EAMs. Total protein was extracted 3 days post infection in all cases. Myotubes were infected at three days following a switch to differentiation media. In FIG. 15A, lane 1 contains total protein extract from 293 cells infected with a virus expressing .beta.-galactosidase as a control (RSV-LacZ); lanes 2-5 contain total protein extracts from uninfected mdx myoblasts, mdx myoblasts infected with Ad5.beta.dys EAMs, mdx myotubes and mdx myotubes derived from mdx myoblasts infected with Ad5.beta.dys EAMs, respectively. In FIG. 15B, lanes 1 and 7 contain total protein from mouse muscle ("C57") while lane 2 contains protein from wild type MM14 myotubes, as controls. Lanes 3-5 contain total protein extracts from uninfected mdx myoblasts, mdx myoblasts infected with Ad5.beta.dys EAMs, mdx myotubes and mdx myotubes derived from mdx myoblasts infected with Ad5.beta.dys EAMs, respectively.
As shown in FIG. 15, expression of .beta.-galactosidase was detected in both the infected mdx myoblasts and myotubes indicating that the CMV promoter was active at both these early stages of differentiation in muscle cells. However, only infected mdx myotubes produced protein detected by dys-2, an antibody recognizing the 17 C-terminal amino acids of dystrophin (FIG. 15). No dystrophin expression was detected in infected myoblasts by western analysis, indicating that the muscle creatine kinase promoter functions minimally, if at all, within the Ad5.beta.dys EAM prior to terminal differentiation of these cells.
Dystrophin expression in mdx cells infected with EAMs was confirmed by immunofluorescence studies using N-terminal dystrophin antibodies. In agreement with the western analysis, dystrophin expression from the MCK promoter was detected only in differentiated mdx myotubes infected by Ad5.beta.dys EAMs (FIG. 16). FIGS. 16A-C show immunofluorescence of dystrophin in wild type MM14 myotubes (A), uninfected mdx (B) and infected mdx myotubes (C), respectively. The results shown in FIG. 16 demonstrate the transfer and expression of recombinant dystrophin to differentiated mdx cells by Ad5.beta.dys EAMs.
Immunofluorescence of myogenic cells was performed as follows. Approximately 1.5.times.10.sup.6 MM14 or mdx myoblasts were plated on Poly-L-lysine (Sigma) coated glass slides (7.times.3 cm) which had been previously etched with a 0.05% chromium potassium sulfate and 0.1% gelatin solution. For myotube analysis, the cultures were switched to differentiation media [Clegg et al. (1987), supra] 48 hours after plating, immediately infected and then allowed to fuse for 3 days, whereas myoblasts were continuously propagated in proliferation media [Clegg et al. (1987), supra]. Cells were washed three times with PBS at room temperature and fixed in 3.7% formaldehyde. For immunostaining, cells were incubated in 0.5% Triton X-100, blocked with 1% normal goat serum and incubated with an affinity purified antibody against the N-terminus of murine dystrophin for 2 hrs. followed by extensive washing in PBS and 0.1% Tween-20 with gentle shaking. Cells were incubated with a 1:200 dilution of biotin conjugated anti-rabbit antibody (Pierce) for one hour and washed as above. Cells were further incubated with a 1:300 dilution of streptavidin-fluorescein isothiocyanate conjugate (Vectorlabs, Burlingam, Calif.) for one hour and washed as above, followed by extensive washing in PBS.
The above results show that embedded inverted Ad origins of replication coupled to an encapsidation signal can convert circular DNA molecules to linear forms in the presence of helper virus and that these genomes can be efficiently encapsidated and propagated to high titers. Such viruses can be purified on a CsCl gradient and maintain their ability to transduce cells in vitro, and their increased cloning capacity allows the inclusion of large genes and tissue specific gene regulatory elements. The above results also show that the dystrophin gene was expressed in cells transduced by such viruses and that the protein product was correctly localized to the cell membrane. The above method for preparing EAMs theoretically enables virtually any gene of interest to be inserted into an infectious minichromosome by conventional cloning in plasmid vectors, followed by cotransfection with helper viral DNA in 293 cells. This approach is useful for a variety of gene transfer studies in vitro. The observation that vectors completely lacking viral genes can be used to transfer a full-length dystrophin cDNA into myogenic cells indicates that this method may be used for the treatment of DMD using gene therapy.
d) A Modified MCK Enhancer Increases Expression of Linked Genes in Muscle
The DNA fragment containing enhancer/promoter of the MCK gene utilized in the Ad5.beta.dys EAM plasmid is quite large (.about.3.3. kb). In order to provide a smaller DNA fragment capable of directing high levels of expression of linked genes in muscle cells, portions of the 3.3 kb MCK enhancer/promoter were deleted and/or modified and inserted in front of a reporter gene (lacZ). The enhancer element of the MCK gene was modified to produce the 2RS5 enhancer; the sequence of the 2RS5 enhancer is provided in SEQ ID NO:10. The first 6 residues of SEQ ID NO:10 represent a KpnI site added for ease of manipulation of the modified MCK enhancer element. Residue number 7 of SEQ ID NO:10 corresponds to residue number 2164 of the wild-type MCK enhancer sequence listed in SEQ ID NO:9 (position 2164 of SEQ ID NO:9 corresponds to position -1256 of the MCK gene). Residue number 174 of SEQ ID NO:10 corresponds to residue number 2266 of the wild-type MCK enhancer sequence listed in SEQ ID NO:9.
These MCK/lacZ constructs were used to transfect cells in culture (i.e., myogenic cultures) or were injected as naked DNA into the muscle of mice and .beta.-galactosidase activity was measured. FIG. 17 provides a schematic of the MCK/lacZ constructs tested. The first construct shown in FIG. 17 contains the 3.3. kb wild-type MCK enhancer/promoter fragment linked to the E. coli lacZ gene. The wild-type enhancer element (-1256 to -1056) is depicted by the box containing "E"; the core promoter element (-358 to -80) is indicated by the light cross-hatching and the minimal promoter element (-80 to +7) is indicated by the dark cross-hatching. The core promoter element is required in addition to the minimal promoter element (which is required for basal expression) in order to achieve increased muscle-specific expression in tissue culture [Shield et al. (1996) Mol. Cell. Biol. 16:5058]. The modified enhancer element, the 2RS5 enhancer, is indicated by the box labeled "E*." The box labeled "mi nx" contains a synthetic intron derived from adenovirus and is used to increase expression of the constructs (any intron may be utilized for this purpose). The box labeled "CMV" depicts the CMV IE enhancer/promoter which was used a positive control.
In FIG. 17, .beta.-galactosidase activity is expressed relative to the activity of the wild-type MCK enhancer/promoter construct shown at the top of the figure. As shown in FIG. 17, a construct containing the 2RS5 enhancer (SEQ ID NO:10) linked to either the minimal MCK promoter (a .about.261 bp element) or the core and minimal MCK promoter elements (a .about.539 bp element) directs higher levels of expression of the reporter gene in muscle cells as compared to the .about.3.3 kb fragment containing the wild-type enhancer element. These modified enhancer/promoter elements are considerably smaller than the .about.3.3 kb fragment used in the Ad5.beta.dys EAM plasmid and are useful for directing the expression of foreign genes in muscle cells. These smaller elements are particularly useful for driving the expression of genes in the context of self-propagating adenoviral vectors which have more severe constraints on the amount of foreign DNA which can be inserted in comparison to the use of "gutted" adenoviruses such as the EAMs described above.
EXAMPLE 7
Generation of High Titer Stocks of Encapsidated Adenovirus Minichromosomes Containing Minimal Helper Virus Contamination
The results presented in Example 6 demonstrated that encapsidated adenovirus minichromosomes (EAMs) can be prepared that lack all viral genes and which can express full-length dystrophin cDNAs in a muscle specific manner. The propagation of these EAMs requires the presence of helper adenoviruses that contaminate the final EAM preparation with conventional adenoviruses (about 4% of the total preparation). In this example the EAM system is modified to enable the generation of high titer stocks of EAMs with minimal helper virus contamination. Preferably the EAM stocks contain helper virus representing less than 1%, preferably less than 0.1% and most preferably less than 0.01% of the final viral isolate. Purified EAMs are then injected in vivo in muscles of dystrophin minus mdx mice to determine whether these vectors lead to immune rejection and whether they can alleviate dystrophic symptoms in mdx muscles.
The amount of helper virus present in the EAM preparations is reduced in two ways. The first is by selectively controlling the relative packaging efficiency of the helper virus versus the EA4 virus. The second is to improve physical methods for separating EAM from helper virus. These approaches enable the generation of dystrophin-expressing EAMs that are contaminated with minimal levels of helper virus.
a) Development and Characterization of Adenovirus Packaging Cell Lines Expressing the Cre Recombinase from Bacteriophage P1
Cell lines expressing a range of Cre levels are used to optimize the amount of helper virus packaging that occurs during growth of the EAM vectors. The Cre-loxP system [Sauer and Henderson (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85:5166] is employed to selectively disable helper virus packaging during growth of EAMs. The bacterial Cre recombinase catalyzes efficient recombination between a 34 bp target sequence called loxP. To delete a desired sequence, loxP sites are placed at each end of the sequence to be deleted in the same orientation; in the presence of Cre recombinase the intervening DNA segment is efficiently excised.
Cell lines expressing a range of Cre recombinase levels are generated. The expression of too little Cre protein may result in high levels of helper virus being generated, which leads to unacceptably high levels of helper virus contaminating the final EAM preparation. If very high levels of Cre expression are present in a cell line, excision of the packaging signal from the helper virus would be 100% efficient (i.e., it would completely prevent helper virus packaging). As shown in Example 6, serial passage of EAM preparations containing low levels of helper virus increased the titer of the EAM. Therefore, it is desirable, at least in the initial passages of a serial passage that some helper virus capable of being packaged is present. A low level of packagable helper virus may be provided by using a cell line expressing levels of Cre recombinase which are not high enough to achieve excision of the packaging signals from 100% of the helper virus; these cell lines would be used early in the serial passaging of the EAM stock and a cell line expressing high enough levels of Cre recombinanse to completely prevent helper virus packaging would be used for the final passage.
Alternatively, EAMs may be prepared using a packaging cell line that supports high efficiency Cre recombinase-mediated excision of the packaging signals from the helper virus by transfection of the Cre-expressing cell line with the EAM plasmid followed by infection of these cells with loxP-containing helper virus using an MOI of .gtoreq.1.0.
Human 293 cell lines that express a variety of levels of Cre recombinase are generated as follows. An expression vector containing the Cre coding region, pOG231, was cotransfected into 293 cells along with pcDNA3 (Invitrogen); pcDNA3 contains the neo gene under the control of the SV40 promoter. pOG23 1 uses the human CMV enhancer/promoter [derived from CDM8 (Invitrogen)] to express a modified Cre gene [pOG231 was obtained from S. O'Gorman]. The modified Cre gene contained within pOG231 has had a nuclear localization signal inserted into the coding region to increase the efficiency of recombination.
pOG231 was constructed as follows. A Bg/II site was introduced into the 5' XbaI site of the synthethic intron of pMLSISCAT [Haung and Gorman (1990) Nucleic Acids Res. 18:937] by linker tailing. A BglII site in the synthethic intron of pMLSISCAT was destroyed and a BamHI linker was inserted into the PstI site at the 3' end of the synthethic intron in pMLSISCAT. BglII and SmaI sites and a nuclear localization signal were introduced into the 5' end of pMC-Cre [Gu et al. (1993) Cell 73:1155] using a PCR fragment that extended from the novel BglII and SmaI sites to the BamHI site in the Cre coding region. This PCR fragment was ligated to a BamHI/SalI fragment containing a portion of the Cre coding region derived from pIC-Cre (Gu et al., supra) and the intron plus Cre coding sequence was inserted into a modified form of pOG44 [O'Gorman et al. (1991) Science 251:1351] to generate pOG231. The predicted sequence of pOG231 from the BglII site to the BamHI site located in the middle of the Cre coding sequence is listed in SEQ ID NO: 11.
One 60 mm dish of 293 cells (Microbix) were transfected with 10 .mu.g of PvuII-linearized pOG231 and 1 .mu.g of NotI-linearized pcDNA3 using a standard calcium phosphate precipitation protocol. Two days after the addition of DNA, the transfected cells were split into three 100 mm dishes and 1000 .mu.g/ml of active G418 was added to the medium. The cells were fed periodically with G418-containing medium and three weeks later, 24 G418-resistant clones were isolated.
The isolated clones were expanded for testing. Aliquots were frozen in liquid nitrogen at the earliest possible passage. The neomycin resistant cell lines were examined for the expression of Cre recombinase using the following transfection assay. The neomycin resistant cells were transfected with PGK-1-GFP-lacZ (obtained from Sally Camper, Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.), which contains a green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression cassette that can be excised by Cre recombinase to allow expression of .beta.-galactosidase; transfection was accomplised using standard calcium phosphate precipitation. FIG. 18 provides a schematic of a GFP/.beta.-gal reporter construct suitable for assaying the expression of Cre recombinase in mammalian cells; GFP sequences and .beta.-gal (i.e., lacZ) sequences are avaialbale from commmerical sources (e.g., Clonetech, Palo Alto, Calif. and Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, N.J., respectively).
Control experiments verified that 293 cells transfected with PGK-1-GFP-lacZ expressed significant amounts of .beta.-galactosidase only if these cells also expressed Cre recombinanse. .beta.-galactosidase assays were performed as described in Example 6. Neomycin resistant cells expressing Cre recombinase were grouped as high, medium or low expressors based upon the amount of .beta.-galactosidase activity produced (estimated by direct counting of .beta.-galactosidase-positive cells per high-power field and by observing the level of staining and the rapidity with which the blue stain was apparent) when these cell lines were transfected with the GFP/.beta.-gal reporter construct. Thirteen positive (i.e., Cre-expressing) lines, D608#12, #7, #22, #18, #17, #4, #8, #2, #2/2, #13, #5, #15 and #21 were retained for further use.
The results of this transfection analysis revealed that cultures of 293 cells expressing medium to high levels of Cre recombinase could be generated without apparent toxicity.
b) Generation of Helper Adenovirus Strains that Contain loxP Sites Flanking the Adenovirus Packaging Signals
Studies of EAM production demonstrated that the EAM vector has a packaging advantage over the helper adenovirus (Ex. 6). While not limiting the present invention to a particular mechanism, it is hypothesized that this packaging and replication advantage can be greatly increased by using helper viruses that approach the packaging size limits of Ad5 [Bett et al. (1993) J. Virol. 67:5911], by using viruses with mutations in E4 and/or E2 genes [Yeh et al. (1996) J. Virol. 70:559; Gorziglia et al. (1996) J. Virol. 70:4173; and Amalfitano et al. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93:3352], by inclusion of mutations or alterations in the packaging signals of the helper virus [Imler et al. (1995) Hum. Gene Ther. 6:711] and by combining these strategies.
The Cre-loxP excision method is used to disable the packaging signals from the helper virus genomes. The Ad5 packaging domain extends from nucleotide 194 to 358 and is composed of five distinct elements that are functionally redundant [Hearing et al. (1987) J. Virol. 61:2555]. Theoretically, any molecule containing the Ad5 origin of replication and packaging elements should replicate and be packaged into mature virions in the presence of non-defective helper virus. Disabling the packaging signals should allow replication and gene expression to proceed, but will prevent packaging of viral DNA into infectious particles. This in turn should allow the ratio of EAM to helper virus to be increased greatly.
To disable the packaging signals within the helper virus used to encapsidate the EAMs, the loxP sequences are incorporated into a helper virus that has a genome approaching the maximal packaging size for Ad[.about.105 map units; Bett et al. (1993), supra] which further decreases the efficiency of helper virus packaging. Final virus size can be adjusted by the choice of introns inserted into the reporter gene, by the choice of reporter genes, or by including a variety of DNA fragments of various sizes to act as "stuffer" fragments. A convenient reporter gene is the alkaline phosphatase gene (see Ex. 6). The optimized Cre-loxP system is also incorporated into a helper viral backbone containing disruptions of any or all of the E1-E4 genes. Use of such deleted genomes requires viral growth on appropriate complementing cell lines, such as 293 cells expressing E2, and/or E4 gene products. The loxP sequences are incorporated into the helper virus by placing the loxP sequences on either side of the packaging signals on a shuttle vector. This modified shuttle vector is then used to recombine with the Ad DNA derived from a virus containing disruptions of any or all of the E1-E4 genes to produce the desired helper virus containing the packaging signals flanked by loxP sequences.
pAdBglII, an adenovirus shuttle plasmid containing Ad sequences from 0-1 and 9-16 map units (mu) was used as the starting material. Synthetic oligonucleotides were used to create a polylinker which was inserted at 1 mu within pAdBglII as follows. The BglII LoxP oligo [5'-GAAGATCTATAACTTCGTATAATGTATGCTA TACGAAGTTATTACCGAAGAAATGGCTCGAGATCTTC-3' (SEQ ID NO:12) and its reverese complement [5'-GAAGATCTCGAGCCATTTCTTCGGTAATAACTTCGT ATAGCATACATTATACGAAGTTATAGATCTTC-3' (SEQ ID NO:13)] were synthesized. The AflIII LoxP oligo [5'-CCACATGTATAACTTCGTATAGCATACA TTATACGAAGTTATACATGTGG-3' (SEQ ID NO:14)] and its reverse complement [5'-CCACATGTATAACTTCGTATAATGTATGCTATACGAAGTTATACATG TGG-3' (SEQ ID NO:15)] were synthesized. The double stranded form of each loxP oligonuceotide was digested with the appropriate restriction enzyme (e.g., BglII or AflIII) and inserted into pAdBglII which had been digested with BglII and AflIII. This resulted in the insertion of LoxP sequences into the shuttle vector flanking the packaging signals that are located between 0.5 and 1 mu of Ad5 (one mu equals 360 bp in the Ad5 genome; the sequence of the Ad5 genome is lsited in SEQ ID NO:1). The 3' loxP sequence was inserted into the BglII site within pAdBglII. The 5' loxP sequence was inserted into the AflIII site located at base 143 (.about.0.8 mu) (numbering relative to Ad5).
DNA sequencing was used to verify, the final structure of the modified shuttle plasmid between 0-1 mu. If Cre recombinase-mediated excision of the packaging signals is found to be too efficient (as judged by the production of too little helper virus), alternate sites for the insertion of the loxP sequences are used that would result in deletion of 2, 3 or 4 packaging sequences rather than all 5 [Grable and Hearing (1990) J. Virol. 64:2047]. The insertion of loxP sequences at sites along the Ad genome contained within the shuttle vector which would result in the deletion of 2, 3 or 4 packaging sequences are easily made using the technique of recombinant PCR [Higuchi (1990) In: PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications, Innis et al. (eds.) Academic Press, San Diego, Calif., pp. 177-183]. The optimal amount of Cre recombinase-mediated excision of the packaging signals is that amount which permits the production of enough packaged helper virus to permit the slow spread of virus on the first plate of cells co-transfected with helper virus DNA (containing the loxP sequences) and the EAM vector. This permits serial passage of the EAM preparation onto a subsequent lawn of cells to increase the titer of the EAM preparation. Alternatively, if Cre recombinase-mediated excision of the packaging signals is essentially 100% efficient in all Cre-expressing cells lines (i.e., regardless of the level of Cre-expression, that is even a cell line expressing a low level of Cre as judged by the GFP/.beta.-gal assay described above), the packaged EAMs may be used along with helper virus (used at a MOI of .about.1.0) to infect the second or subsequent lawn of cells to permit serial passaging to increase the titer of the EAM preparation.
Following introduction of the loxP sequences into the shuttle vector, the human placental alkaline phosphatase (HpAp) cDNA under control of the RSV promoter was inserted into the polylinker to provide a reporter gene for the helper virus. This is the same reporter used previously during EAM generation (Ex. 6). The HpAp sequences were inserted as follows. The loxP-containing shuttle vector was linearized with XhoI and the hpAp cassette was ligated into the XhoI site (a XhoI site was inserted into pAdBglII during the insertion of the loxP sequences as a XhoI site was located on the 3' end of the loxP sequences inserted into the BglII site of pAdBglII). The HpAp cassette was constructed as follows. pRSVhAPT40 (obtained from Gary Nabel, Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.) was digested with EcoRI to generate an EcoRI fragment containing the HpAP cDNA and the SV40 intron and polyadenylation sequences. pRc/RSV (Invitrogen) was digested with HindIII, then partially digested with EcoRI. A 5,208 bp fragment was then size selected on an agarose gel, treated with calf alkaline phosphatase, and ligated to the EcoRI fragment derived from pRSVhAPT40 to generate pRc/RSVAP. pRc/RSVAP was then digested with SalI and XhoI to liberate the RSV promoter linked to the HpAP cDNA cassette (including the SV40 intron and polyadenylation sequences). This SalI-XhoI fragment was inserted into the loxP-containing shuttle vector which had been digested with SalI and XhoI to generate pADLoxP-RSVAP.
Helper virus containing loxP sites flanking the Ad packaging signals is generated by co-transfection of the LoxP shuttle plasmid (pADLoxP-RSVAP) and ClaI-digested Ad5dl7001 DNA into 293 cells [Graham and Prevec (1991) Manipulation of Adenovirus Vectors, In Methods in Molecular Biology, Vol. 7: Gene Transfer and Expression Protocols, Murray (ed.), Humana Press Inc., Clifton, N.J., pp. 109-128]. FIG. 19 provides a schematic showing the recombination event between the loxP shuttle vector and the Ad5dl7001 genome. Co-transfection is carried out as described in Example 3c.
Alternatively, the reporter gene may be inserted into the E3 region of pBHG10 or pBHG11 (using the unique PacI site) rather than into the polylinker located in the E1 region of the shuttle vector. The reporter gene-containing pBHG10 or 11 is then used in place of Ad5dl7001 for cotransfection of 293 cells along with the loxP-containing pAdBglII.
Following cotransfection, recombinant plaques are picked, plaque purified, and tested for incorporation of both hpAp and loxP sequences by PCR and Southern analysis (Ex. 3). Viruses which contain loxP sites flanking the packaging signals and the marker gene (hpAp) are retained, propagated and purified.
The isolated helper virus containing loxP sites flanking the packaging signals and the marker gene is then used to infect both 293 cells and the 293 cell lines that express Cre (section a, above). Cre recombinase-expressing cell lines that produce optimal levels of Cre recombinase when infected with the loxP-containing helper virus are then used for the generation of EAMs as described below.
c) Generation of Encapsidated Adenovirus Minichromosomes that Express Dystrophin
The growth of EAMs is optimized using the following methods. In the first method, plasmid DNA from the EAM vector (Ex. 6) are co-transfected into 293 cells with purified viral DNA from the helper virus, and viruses are harvested 10-14 days later after appearance of a viral cytopathic effect (CPE) as described in Example 6. This approach is simple, yet potentially increases helper virus levels by allowing viral spread throughout the culture dishes.
In the second method, the co-transfected 293 cells are overlaid with agar and single plaques are picked and tested for EAM activity by the ability to express .beta.-galactosidase activity following infection of Hela cells (Ex. 6). This second approach is more time consuming, but will result in less contamination by helper.
The ability of these two methods to generate EAMs are directly compared. The preferred method is that which produces the highest titer of EAM with the lowest contamination of helper virus. The efficiency of EAM generation may also be increased by using helper virus DNA that retains the terminal protein (TP) (i.e., the helper virus is used as a viral DNA-TPC as described in Ex. 3) The use of viral DNA-TPC has been shown to increase the efficiency of viral production following transfection of 293 cells by an order of magnitude [Miyake et al. (1996), supra].
The initial transfection will utilize 293 cells that do not express Cre recombinase, so that efficient spread of the helper can lead to large scale production of EAM. The method producing the highest ratio of EAM to helper virus is then employed to optimize conditions for the serial propagation of the EAM on 293 cells expressing Cre recombinase. This optimization is conducted using cell lines expressing different levels of Cre recombinase. The following variables are tested: 1) the ratio of input viral titer to cell number, 2) the number of serial passages to use for EAM generation, 3) the use of cell lines producing different levels of Cre to achieve the optimal ratio between high EAM titer and low helper titer, 4) continuous growth on Cre-producing 293 cells versus alternating between Cre-producing cells and the parental 293 cells, or to alternate between high and low Cre-producing cells and 5) CsCl purification of EAMs prior to re-infection of 293 cells increases the ratio of the final EAM/helper titers. The protocols that result in the highest yield of EAM with minimal helper virus are used to generate large volumes of crude viral lysates for purification by density gradient centrifugation (Ex. 6).
EAMs were purified from helper virus using standard CsCl density gradient centrifugation protocols in Example 6 and resulted in preparations containing .about.4% helper virus. In order to improve the physical separation of EAMs and helper virus, a variety of different centrifugation conditions are possible, including changing the gradient shape, type of rotor and tube used, combinations of step and continuous gradients, and the number of gradients used. Materials with better resolving powers than CsCl can also be employed. These include rubidium chloride and potassium bromide [Reich and Zarybnicky (1979) Annal. Biochem. 94:193].
d) Use of EAMs Encoding Dystrophin for Long Term Expression of Dystrophin in Muscle
To demonstrate the ability of the purified dystrophin expressing EAMs (prepared as described above) to deliver and express dystrophin in the muscle of an animal, the following experiment is conducted. First, purified dystrophin-EAMs are delivered to the muscle by direct intramuscular injection into newborn, 1 month, and adult (3 month) mouse quadriceps muscle. The dystrophin expressing EAM Ad5.beta.Dys are injected into mdx mice and into transgenic mdx mice that express .beta.-galactosidase in the pituitary gland [Tripathy et al. (1996) Nature Med. 2:545]. These latter mice are used to avoid potential immune-rejection of cells expressing .beta.-galactosidase from the Ad5.beta.Dys vector. An alternate EAM lacking the .beta.-galactosidase reporter gene may also be employed; however, the presence of the .beta.-Gal reporter simplifies EAM growth and purification (vectors lacking .beta.-Gal have their purity estimated by PCR assays rather than by .beta.-Gal assays).
Following intramuscular injection of EAM, animals are sacrificed at intervals between 1 week and 6 months to measure dystrophin expression [by western blot analysis and by immunofluorescence (Phelps et al. (1995) Hum. Mol. Genet. 4:1251 and Rafael et al. (1996) J. Cell Biol. 134:93] and muscle extracts will also be assayed for .beta.-Gal activity [MacGregor et al. (1991), supra]. These results are compared with previous results obtained using current generation viral vectors (i.e., containing deletions in E1 and E3 only) to demonstrate that EAMs improve the prospects for long term gene expression in muscle.
e) Use of Dystrophin-EAMs to Prevent, Halt, or Reverse the Dystrophic Symptoms that Develop in the Muscles of mdx Mice
To demonstrate that beneficial effects on dystrophic muscle are achieved by delivery of dystrophin expressing EAMs to mar mice, the following experiments are conducted. Central nuclei counts are performed on soleus muscle at intervals following injection of EAM into newborn, 1 month, and 3 month (adult) mice (Phelps et al., 1995). Central nuclei arise in mouse muscle only after a myofiber has undergone dystrophic necrosis followed by regeneration, and is a quantitative measure of the degree of dystrophy that has occurred in a muscle group (Phelps et al., 1995).
More informative assays are also contemplated. These assays require administration of EAMs to mouse diaphragm muscles.
The diaphragm is severely affected in mdx mice (Stedman et al., 1991; Cox et al., 1993), and displays dramatic decreases in both force and power generation. Administration of virus to the diaphragm will allow the strength of the muscles to be measured at intervals following dystrophin delivery. The force and power generating assays developed by the Faulkner lab are used to measure the effect of dystrophin transgenes (Shrager et al., 1992; Rafael et al., 1994; Lynch et al., 1996).
To detemine whether dystrophin delivery to dystrophic muscle reverses dystrophy or stabilizes muscle, varying amounts of the dystrophin EAM are delivered to the to diaphragm at different stages of the dystrophic process and then strength is measured at intervals following EAM administration. First, various titers of EAM are tested to determine the minimal amount of virus needed to transduce the majority of muscle fibers in the diaphragm. It has been shown that conventional adenovirus vectors can transduce the majority of diaphragm fibers when 10.sup.8 pfu are administrated by direct injection into the intraperitoneal cavity [Huard et al. (1995) Gene Therapy 2:107]. In addition, it has been shown that transduction of a simple majority of fibers in a muscle group is sufficient to prevent virtually all the dystrophic symptoms in mice [Rafael et al. (1994) Hum. Mol. Genet. 3:1725 and Phelps et al. (1995) Hum. Mol. Genet. 4:1251]. Virus is administered to mdx animals at three different ages (neonatal, 1 month, and 3 months). Animals are sacrificed for physiological analysis of diaphragm muscle at two different times post infection (1 month and 3 months). Error control is achieved by performing these experiments in sextuplicate. Control animals consist of mock injected wild-type (C57B1/10) and dystrophic (mdx) mice. Three month old mdx mice display a 40% reduction in force and power generation compared with wild-type mice, while 6 month animals display a greater than 50% reduction (Cox et al. (1993) Nature 364:725; Rafael et al. (1994), supra; Phelps et al. (1995), supra; and Corrado et al. (1996) J. Cell. Biol. 134:873].
EXAMPLE 8
Improved Shuttle Vectors for the Production of Helper Virus Containing LoxP Sites
In the previous example, a shuttle vector containing adenoviral sequences extending from 9 mu to 16 mu of the Ad5 genome was modified to contain loxP sequences surrounding the packaging signals (the LoxP shuttle vector). This modified shuttle vector was then recombined with an Ad virus to produce a helper virus containing the loxP sequences. This helper virus was then used to infect cells expressing Cre recombinase along with DNA comprising a minichromosome containing the dystrophin gene, a reporter gene and the packaging signals and ITRs of Ad in order to preferentially package the minichromosomes. Using this approach the helper virus, which has had the packaging signals removed by Cre-loxP recombination, contains the majority of the Ad genome (only a portion of the E3 region is deleted). Thus, if low levels of helper virus are packaged and appear in the EAM preparation, the EAM preparation has the potential of passing on helper virus capable of directing the expression of Ad proteins in cells which are exposed to the EAM preparation. The expression of Ad proteins may lead to an immune response directed against the infected cells.
Another approach to reducing the possibility that the EAM preparation contains helper virus capable of provoking an immune response is to use helper viruses containing deletions and/or mutations within the pol and pTP genes. Helper virus containing a deletion in the pol and/or pTP genes is cotransfected with the EAM construct into 293-derived cell lines expressing pol or pol and pTP to produce EAMs. Any helper virus present in the purified EAM preparation will be replication defective due to the deletion in the pol and/or pTP genes. As shown in Example 3, viruses containing a deletion in the pol gene are incapable of directing the expression of viral late genes; therefore, helper viruses containing a deletion in the pol gene or the pol and pTP genes should not be capable of provoking an immune response (i.e., a CTL response) against late viral proteins synthesized de novo. Shuttle vectors containing deletions within the Ad pol and/or pTP genes are constructed as described below.
a) Construction of A Shuttle Vector Containing the .DELTA.pol Deletion
pAdBglII was modified to contain sequences corresponding to 9 to 40 mu of the Ad5 genome as follows. pAdBglII was digested with BglII and a linker/adapter containing an AscI site was added to create pAdBglIIAsc. pAdBglIIAsc was then digested with Bst1107I. Ad5dl7001 viral DNA was digested with AscI and the ends were filled in using T4 DNA polymerase. The AscI-digested, T4 DNA polymerase filled Ad5dl7001 viral DNA was then digested with Bst1107I and the .about.9.9 kb AscI-Bst1107I(filled) fragment containing the pol and pTP genes was isolated (as described in Ex. 3) and ligated to the Bst1107I-digested pAdBglIIAsc to generate pAdAsc. pAdAsc is a shuttle vector which contains the genes encoding the DNA polymerase and preterminal protein (the inserted AscI-Bst1107I fragment corresponds to nucleotides 5767 to 15, 671 of the Ad5 genome).
A shuttle vector, pAdAsc.DELTA.pol, which contains the 612 bp deletion in the pol gene (described in Ex. 3) was constructed as follows. Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I viral DNA (Ex. 3) was digested with AscI and the ends were filled in using T4 DNA polymerase. The AscI-digested, T4 DNA polymerase filled Ad5.DELTA.pol.DELTA.E3I viral DNA was then digested with Bst1107I and the .about.9.3 kb AscI-Bst1107I(filled) fragment containing the deleted pol gene and the pTP gene was isolated (as described in Ex. 3) and ligated to Bst1107I-digested pAdBglIIAsc to generate pAdAsc.DELTA.pol.
b) Construction of a Shuttle Vector Containing the .DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTP Deletion
A shuttle vector, pAdAsc.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTP, which contains a 2.3 kb deletion within the pol and pTP genes (described in Ex. 5) was constructed as follows. pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 (Ex. 5b) was digested with AscI and the ends were filled in using T4 DNA polymerase. The AscI-digested, T4 DNA polymerase filled pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13 DNA was then digested with Bst1107I and the .about.7.6 kb AscI-Bst1107I(filled) fragment containing the deleted pol gene and the pTP gene was isolated (as described in Ex. 3) and ligated to Bst1107I-digested pAdBglIIAsc to generate pAdAsc.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTP.
In order to reduce the packaging of the above helper viruses, the pol.sup.- or pol.sup.-, pTP.sup.- helper viruses can be modified to incorporate loxP sequences on either side of the packaging signals as outlined in Example 7. The loxP-containing pol.sup.- or pol.sup.-, pTP.sup.- shuttle vectors (pTP.sup.- shuttle vectors may also be employed) are cotransfected into 293 cells expressing Cre recombinase and pol or Cre recombinase, pol and pTP, respectively along with an appropriate E1.sup.- viral DNA-TPC (the E1- viral DNA may also contain deletions elsewhere in the genome such as in the E4 genes or in the E2a gene as packaging cell lines expressing the E4 ORF 6 or 6/7 and lines expressing E2a genes are avaialble) to generate helper virus containing loxP sites flanking the packaging signals as well as a deletion in the pol gene or the pol and pTP genes. The resulting helper virus(es) is used to cotransfect 293 cells expressing pol or pol and pTP along with the desired EAM construct. The resulting EAM preparation should contain little if any helper virus and any contaminating helper virus present would be replication defective and incapable of expressing viral late gene products. Helper viruses containing loxP sequences and deletions in all essential early genes may be employed in conjunction with Cre recombinanse-expressing cell lines expressing in trans the E1, E4 ORF 6, E2a, and E2b (e.g., Ad polymerase and pTP) proteins (the E3 proteins are dispensible for growth in culture). Cell lines coexpressing E1, polymerase and pTP are provided herein. Cell lines expressing E1 and E4 proteins have been recently described [Krougliak and Graham (1995) Hum. Gene Ther. 6:1575 and Wang et al. (1995) Gene Ther. 2:775] and cell lines expressing E1 and E2a proteins have been recently described [Zhou et al. (1996) J. Virol. 70:7030]. Therefore, a cell line co-expressing E1, E2a, E2b, and E4 is consructed by introduction of expression plasmids containing the E2a and E4 coding regions into the E1-, Ad polymerase- and pTP-expressing cell lines of the present invention. These packaging cell lines are used in conjunction with helper viruses containing deletions in the E1 F2a, E2b and E4 regions.
All publications and patents mentioned in the above specification are herein incorporated by reference. Various modifications and variations of the described method and system of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Although the invention has been described in connection with specific preferred embodiments, it should be understood that the invention as claimed should not be unduly limited to such specific embodiments. Indeed, various modifications of the described modes for carrying out the invention which are obvious to those skilled in molecular biology or related fields are intended to be within the scope of the following claims.
__________________________________________________________________________# SEQUENCE LISTING - - - - (1) GENERAL INFORMATION: - - (iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 15 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:1: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 35935 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:1: - - CATCATCAAT AATATACCTT ATTTTGGATT GAAGCCAATA TGATAATGAG GG -#GGTGGAGT 60 - - TTGTGACGTG GCGCGGGGCG TGGGAACGGG GCGGGTGACG TAGTAGTGTG GC -#GGAAGTGT 120 - - GATGTTGCAA GTGTGGCGGA ACACATGTAA GCGACGGATG TGGCAAAAGT GA -#CGTTTTTG 180 - - GTGTGCGCCG GTGTACACAG GAAGTGACAA TTTTCGCGCG GTTTTAGGCG GA -#TGTTGTAG 240 - - TAAATTTGGG CGTAACCGAG TAAGATTTGG CCATTTTCGC GGGAAAACTG AA -#TAAGAGGA 300 - - AGTGAAATCT GAATAATTTT GTGTTACTCA TAGCGCGTAA TATTTGTCTA GG -#GCCGCGGG 360 - - GACTTTGACC GTTTACGTGG AGACTCGCCC AGGTGTTTTT CTCAGGTGTT TT -#CCGCGTTC 420 - - CGGGTCAAAG TTGGCGTTTT ATTATTATAG TCAGCTGACG TGTAGTGTAT TT -#ATACCCGG 480 - - TGAGTTCCTC AAGAGGCCAC TCTTGAGTGC CAGCGAGTAG AGTTTTCTCC TC -#CGAGCCGC 540 - - TCCGACACCG GGACTGAAAA TGAGACATAT TATCTGCCAC GGAGGTGTTA TT -#ACCGAAGA 600 - - AATGGCCGCC AGTCTTTTGG ACCAGCTGAT CGAAGAGGTA CTGGCTGATA AT -#CTTCCACC 660 - - TCCTAGCCAT TTTGAACCAC CTACCCTTCA CGAACTGTAT GATTTAGACG TG -#ACGGCCCC 720 - - CGAAGATCCC AACGAGGAGG CGGTTTCGCA GATTTTTCCC GACTCTGTAA TG -#TTGGCGGT 780 - - GCAGGAAGGG ATTGACTTAC TCACTTTTCC GCCGGCGCCC GGTTCTCCGG AG -#CCGCCTCA 840 - - CCTTTCCCGG CAGCCCGAGC AGCCGGAGCA GAGAGCCTTG GGTCCGGTTT CT -#ATGCCAAA 900 - - CCTTGTACCG GAGGTGATCG ATCTTACCTG CCACGAGGCT GGCTTTCCAC CC -#AGTGACGA 960 - - CGAGGATGAA GAGGGTGAGG AGTTTGTGTT AGATTATGTG GAGCACCCCG GG -#CACGGTTG 1020 - - CAGGTCTTGT CATTATCACC GGAGGAATAC GGGGGACCCA GATATTATGT GT -#TCGCTTTG 1080 - - CTATATGAGG ACCTGTGGCA TGTTTGTCTA CAGTAAGTGA AAATTATGGG CA -#GTGGGTGA 1140 - - TAGAGTGGTG GGTTTGGTGT GGTAATTTTT TTTTTAATTT TTACAGTTTT GT -#GGTTTAAA 1200 - - GAATTTTGTA TTGTGATTTT TTTAAAAGGT CCTGTGTCTG AACCTGAGCC TG -#AGCCCGAG 1260 - - CCAGAACCGG AGCCTGCAAG ACCTACCCGC CGTCCTAAAA TGGCGCCTGC TA -#TCCTGAGA 1320 - - CGCCCGACAT CACCTGTGTC TAGAGAATGC AATAGTAGTA CGGATAGCTG TG -#ACTCCGGT 1380 - - CCTTCTAACA CACCTCCTGA GATACACCCG GTGGTCCCGC TGTGCCCCAT TA -#AACCAGTT 1440 - - GCCGTGAGAG TTGGTGGGCG TCGCCAGGCT GTGGAATGTA TCGAGGACTT GC -#TTAACGAG 1500 - - CCTGGGCAAC CTTTGGACTT GAGCTGTAAA CGCCCCAGGC CATAAGGTGT AA -#ACCTGTGA 1560 - - TTGCGTGTGT GGTTAACGCC TTTGTTTGCT GAATGAGTTG ATGTAAGTTT AA -#TAAAGGGT 1620 - - GAGATAATGT TTAACTTGCA TGGCGTGTTA AATGGGGCGG GGCTTAAAGG GT -#ATATAATG 1680 - - CGCCGTGGGC TAATCTTGGT TACATCTGAC CTCATGGAGG CTTGGGAGTG TT -#TGGAAGAT 1740 - - TTTTCTGCTG TGCGTAACTT GCTGGAACAG AGCTCTAACA GTACCTCTTG GT -#TTTGGAGG 1800 - - TTTCTGTGGG GCTCATCCCA GGCAAAGTTA GTCTGCAGAA TTAAGGAGGA TT -#ACAAGTGG 1860 - - GAATTTGAAG AGCTTTTGAA ATCCTGTGGT GAGCTGTTTG ATTCTTTGAA TC -#TGGGTCAC 1920 - - CAGGCGCTTT TCCAAGAGAA GGTCATCAAG ACTTTGGATT TTTCCACACC GG -#GGCGCGCT 1980 - - GCGGCTGCTG TTGCTTTTTT GAGTTTTATA AAGGATAAAT GGAGCGAAGA AA -#CCCATCTG 2040 - - AGCGGGGGGT ACCTGCTGGA TTTTCTGGCC ATGCATCTGT GGAGAGCGGT TG -#TGAGACAC 2100 - - AAGAATCGCC TGCTACTGTT GTCTTCCGTC CGCCCGGCGA TAATACCGAC GG -#AGGAGCAG 2160 - - CAGCAGCAGC AGGAGGAAGC CAGGCGGCGG CGGCAGGAGC AGAGCCCATG GA -#ACCCGAGA 2220 - - GCCGGCCTGG ACCCTCGGGA ATGAATGTTG TACAGGTGGC TGAACTGTAT CC -#AGAACTGA 2280 - - GACGCATTTT GACAATTACA GAGGATGGGC AGGGGCTAAA GGGGGTAAAG AG -#GGAGCGGG 2340 - - GGGCTTGTGA GGCTACAGAG GAGGCTAGGA ATCTAGCTTT TAGCTTAATG AC -#CAGACACC 2400 - - GTCCTGAGTG TATTACTTTT CAACAGATCA AGGATAATTG CGCTAATGAG CT -#TGATCTGC 2460 - - TGGCGCAGAA GTATTCCATA GAGCAGCTGA CCACTTACTG GCTGCAGCCA GG -#GGATGATT 2520 - - TTGAGGAGGC TATTAGGGTA TATGCAAAGG TGGCACTTAG GCCAGATTGC AA -#GTACAAGA 2580 - - TCAGCAAACT TGTAAATATC AGGAATTGTT GCTACATTTC TGGGAACGGG GC -#CGAGGTGG 2640 - - AGATAGATAC GGAGGATAGG GTGGCCTTTA GATGTAGCAT GATAAATATG TG -#GCCGGGGG 2700 - - TGCTTGGCAT GGACGGGGTG GTTATTATGA ATGTAAGGTT TACTGGCCCC AA -#TTTTAGCG 2760 - - GTACGGTTTT CCTGGCCAAT ACCAACCTTA TCCTACACGG TGTAAGCTTC TA -#TGGGTTTA 2820 - - ACAATACCTG TGTGGAAGCC TGGACCGATG TAAGGGTTCG GGGCTGTGCC TT -#TTACTGCT 2880 - - GCTGGAAGGG GGTGGTGTGT CGCCCCAAAA GCAGGGCTTC AATTAAGAAA TG -#CCTCTTTG 2940 - - AAAGGTGTAC CTTGGGTATC CTGTCTGAGG GTAACTCCAG GGTGCGCCAC AA -#TGTGGCCT 3000 - - CCGACTGTGG TTGCTTCATG CTAGTGAAAA GCGTGGCTGT GATTAAGCAT AA -#CATGGTAT 3060 - - GTGGCAACTG CGAGGACAGG GCCTCTCAGA TGCTGACCTG CTCGGACGGC AA -#CTGTCACC 3120 - - TGCTGAAGAC CATTCACGTA GCCAGCCACT CTCGCAAGGC CTGGCCAGTG TT -#TGAGCATA 3180 - - ACATACTGAC CCGCTGTTCC TTGCATTTGG GTAACAGGAG GGGGGTGTTC CT -#ACCTTACC 3240 - - AATGCAATTT GAGTCACACT AAGATATTGC TTGAGCCCGA GAGCATGTCC AA -#GGTGAACC 3300 - - TGAACGGGGT GTTTGACATG ACCATGAAGA TCTGGAAGGT GCTGAGGTAC GA -#TGAGACCC 3360 - - GCACCAGGTG CAGACCCTGC GAGTGTGGCG GTAAACATAT TAGGAACCAG CC -#TGTGATGC 3420 - - TGGATGTGAC CGAGGAGCTG AGGCCCGATC ACTTGGTGCT GGCCTGCACC CG -#CGCTGAGT 3480 - - TTGGCTCTAG CGATGAAGAT ACAGATTGAG GTACTGAAAT GTGTGGGCGT GG -#CTTAAGGG 3540 - - TGGGAAAGAA TATATAAGGT GGGGGTCTTA TGTAGTTTTG TATCTGTTTT GC -#AGCAGCCG 3600 - - CCGCCGCCAT GAGCACCAAC TCGTTTGATG GAAGCATTGT GAGCTCATAT TT -#GACAACGC 3660 - - GCATGCCCCC ATGGGCCGGG GTGCGTCAGA ATGTGATGGG CTCCAGCATT GA -#TGGTCGCC 3720 - - CCGTCCTGCC CGCAAACTCT ACTACCTTGA CCTACGAGAC CGTGTCTGGA AC -#GCCGTTGG 3780 - - AGACTGCAGC CTCCGCCGCC GCTTCAGCCG CTGCAGCCAC CGCCCGCGGG AT -#TGTGACTG 3840 - - ACTTTGCTTT CCTGAGCCCG CTTGCAAGCA GTGCAGCTTC CCGTTCATCC GC -#CCGCGATG 3900 - - ACAAGTTGAC GGCTCTTTTG GCACAATTGG ATTCTTTGAC CCGGGAACTT AA -#TGTCGTTT 3960 - - CTCAGCAGCT GTTGGATCTG CGCCAGCAGG TTTCTGCCCT GAAGGCTTCC TC -#CCCTCCCA 4020 - - ATGCGGTTTA AAACATAAAT AAAAAACCAG ACTCTGTTTG GATTTGGATC AA -#GCAAGTGT 4080 - - CTTGCTGTCT TTATTTAGGG GTTTTGCGCG CGCGGTAGGC CCGGGACCAG CG -#GTCTCGGT 4140 - - CGTTGAGGGT CCTGTGTATT TTTTCCAGGA CGTGGTAAAG GTGACTCTGG AT -#GTTCAGAT 4200 - - ACATGGGCAT AAGCCCGTCT CTGGGGTGGA GGTAGCACCA CTGCAGAGCT TC -#ATGCTGCG 4260 - - GGGTGGTGTT GTAGATGATC CAGTCGTAGC AGGAGCGCTG GGCGTGGTGC CT -#AAAAATGT 4320 - - CTTTCAGTAG CAAGCTGATT GCCAGGGGCA GGCCCTTGGT GTAAGTGTTT AC -#AAAGCGGT 4380 - - TAAGCTGGGA TGGGTGCATA CGTGGGGATA TGAGATGCAT CTTGGACTGT AT -#TTTTAGGT 4440 - - TGGCTATGTT CCCAGCCATA TCCCTCCGGG GATTCATGTT GTGCAGAACC AC -#CAGCACAG 4500 - - TGTATCCGGT GCACTTGGGA AATTTGTCAT GTAGCTTAGA AGGAAATGCG TG -#GAAGAACT 4560 - - TGGAGACGCC CTTGTGACCT CCAAGATTTT CCATGCATTC GTCCATAATG AT -#GGCAATGG 4620 - - GCCCACGGGC GGCGGCCTGG GCGAAGATAT TTCTGGGATC ACTAACGTCA TA -#GTTGTGTT 4680 - - CCAGGATGAG ATCGTCATAG GCCATTTTTA CAAAGCGCGG GCGGAGGGTG CC -#AGACTGCG 4740 - - GTATAATGGT TCCATCCGGC CCAGGGGCGT AGTTACCCTC ACAGATTTGC AT -#TTCCCACG 4800 - - CTTTGAGTTC AGATGGGGGG ATCATGTCTA CCTGCGGGGC GATGAAGAAA AC -#GGTTTCCG 4860 - - GGGTAGGGGA GATCAGCTGG GAAGAAAGCA GGTTCCTGAG CAGCTGCGAC TT -#ACCGCAGC 4920 - - CGGTGGGCCC GTAAATCACA CCTATTACCG GGTGCAACTG GTAGTTAAGA GA -#GCTGCAGC 4980 - - TGCCGTCATC CCTGAGCAGG GGGGCCACTT CGTTAAGCAT GTCCCTGACT CG -#CATGTTTT 5040 - - CCCTGACCAA ATCCGCCAGA AGGCGCTCGC CGCCCAGCGA TAGCAGTTCT TG -#CAAGGAAG 5100 - - CAAAGTTTTT CAACGGTTTG AGACCGTCCG CCGTAGGCAT GCTTTTGAGC GT -#TTGACCAA 5160 - - GCAGTTCCAG GCGGTCCCAC AGCTCGGTCA CCTGCTCTAC GGCATCTCGA TC -#CAGCATAT 5220 - - CTCCTCGTTT CGCGGGTTGG GGCGGCTTTC GCTGTACGGC AGTAGTCGGT GC -#TCGTCCAG 5280 - - ACGGGCCAGG GTCATGTCTT TCCACGGGCG CAGGGTCCTC GTCAGCGTAG TC -#TGGGTCAC 5340 - - GGTGAAGGGG TGCGCTCCGG GCTGCGCGCT GGCCAGGGTG CGCTTGAGGC TG -#GTCCTGCT 5400 - - GGTGCTGAAG CGCTGCCGGT CTTCGCCCTG CGCGTCGGCC AGGTAGCATT TG -#ACCATGGT 5460 - - GTCATAGTCC AGCCCCTCCG CGGCGTGGCC CTTGGCGCGC AGCTTGCCCT TG -#GAGGAGGC 5520 - - GCCGCACGAG GGGCAGTGCA GACTTTTGAG GGCGTAGAGC TTGGGCGCGA GA -#AATACCGA 5580 - - TTCCGGGGAG TAGGCATCCG CGCCGCAGGC CCCGCAGACG GTCTCGCATT CC -#ACGAGCCA 5640 - - GGTGAGCTCT GGCCGTTCGG GGTCAAAAAC CAGGTTTCCC CCATGCTTTT TG -#ATGCGTTT 5700 - - CTTACCTCTG GTTTCCATGA GCCGGTGTCC ACGCTCGGTG ACGAAAAGGC TG -#TCCGTGTC 5760 - - CCCGTATACA GACTTGAGAG GCCTGTCCTC GAGCGGTGTT CCGCGGTCCT CC -#TCGTATAG 5820 - - AAACTCGGAC CACTCTGAGA CAAAGGCTCG CGTCCAGGCC AGCACGAAGG AG -#GCTAAGTG 5880 - - GGAGGGGTAG CGGTCGTTGT CCACTAGGGG GTCCACTCGC TCCAGGGTGT GA -#AGACACAT 5940 - - GTCGCCCTCT TCGGCATCAA GGAAGGTGAT TGGTTTGTAG GTGTAGGCCA CG -#TGACCGGG 6000 - - TGTTCCTGAA GGGGGGCTAT AAAAGGGGGT GGGGGCGCGT TCGTCCTCAC TC -#TCTTCCGC 6060 - - ATCGCTGTCT GCGAGGGCCA GCTGTTGGGG TGAGTACTCC CTCTGAAAAG CG -#GGCATGAC 6120 - - TTCTGCGCTA AGATTGTCAG TTTCCAAAAA CGAGGAGGAT TTGATATTCA CC -#TGGCCCGC 6180 - - GGTGATGCCT TTGAGGGTGG CCGCATCCAT CTGGTCAGAA AAGACAATCT TT -#TTGTTGTC 6240 - - AAGCTTGGTG GCAAACGACC CGTAGAGGGC GTTGGACAGC AACTTGGCGA TG -#GAGCGCAG 6300 - - GGTTTGGTTT TTGTCGCGAT CGGCGCGCTC CTTGGCCGCG ATGTTTAGCT GC -#ACGTATTC 6360 - - GCGCGCAACG CACCGCCATT CGGGAAAGAC GGTGGTGCGC TCGTCGGGCA CC -#AGGTGCAC 6420 - - GCGCCAACCG CGGTTGTGCA GGGTGACAAG GTCAACGCTG GTGGCTACCT CT -#CCGCGTAG 6480 - - GCGCTCGTTG GTCCAGCAGA GGCGGCCGCC CTTGCGCGAG CAGAATGGCG GT -#AGGGGGTC 6540 - - TAGCTGCGTC TCGTCCGGGG GGTCTGCGTC CACGGTAAAG ACCCCGGGCA GC -#AGGCGCGC 6600 - - GTCGAAGTAG TCTATCTTGC ATCCTTGCAA GTCTAGCGCC TGCTGCCATG CG -#CGGGCGGC 6660 - - AAGCGCGCGC TCGTATGGGT TGAGTGGGGG ACCCCATGGC ATGGGGTGGG TG -#AGCGCGGA 6720 - - GGCGTACATG CCGCAAATGT CGTAAACGTA GAGGGGCTCT CTGAGTATTC CA -#AGATATGT 6780 - - AGGGTAGCAT CTTCCACCGC GGATGCTGGC GCGCACGTAA TCGTATAGTT CG -#TGCGAGGG 6840 - - AGCGAGGAGG TCGGGACCGA GGTTGCTACG GGCGGGCTGC TCTGCTCGGA AG -#ACTATCTG 6900 - - CCTGAAGATG GCATGTGAGT TGGATGATAT GGTTGGACGC TGGAAGACGT TG -#AAGCTGGC 6960 - - GTCTGTGAGA CCTACCGCGT CACGCACGAA GGAGGCGTAG GAGTCGCGCA GC -#TTGTTGAC 7020 - - CAGCTCGGCG GTGACCTGCA CGTCTAGGGC GCAGTAGTCC AGGGTTTCCT TG -#ATGATGTC 7080 - - ATACTTATCC TGTCCCTTTT TTTTCCACAG CTCGCGGTTG AGGACAAACT CT -#TCGCGGTC 7140 - - TTTCCAGTAC TCTTGGATCG GAAACCCGTC GGCCTCCGAA CGGTAAGAGC CT -#AGCATGTA 7200 - - GAACTGGTTG ACGGCCTGGT AGGCGCAGCA TCCCTTTTCT ACGGGTAGCG CG -#TATGCCTG 7260 - - CGCGGCCTTC CGGAGCGAGG TGTGGGTGAG CGCAAAGGTG TCCCTGACCA TG -#ACTTTGAG 7320 - - GTACTGGTAT TTGAAGTCAG TGTCGTCGCA TCCGCCCTGC TCCCAGAGCA AA -#AAGTCCGT 7380 - - GCGCTTTTTG GAACGCGGAT TTGGCAGGGC GAAGGTGACA TCGTTGAAGA GT -#ATCTTTCC 7440 - - CGCGCGAGGC ATAAAGTTGC GTGTGATGCG GAAGGGTCCC GGCACCTCGG AA -#CGGTTGTT 7500 - - AATTACCTGG GCGGCGAGCA CGATCTCGTC AAAGCCGTTG ATGTTGTGGC CC -#ACAATGTA 7560 - - AAGTTCCAAG AAGCGCGGGA TGCCCTTGAT GGAAGGCAAT TTTTTAAGTT CC -#TCGTAGGT 7620 - - GAGCTCTTCA GGGGAGCTGA GCCCGTGCTC TGAAAGGGCC CAGTCTGCAA GA -#TGAGGGTT 7680 - - GGAAGCGACG AATGAGCTCC ACAGGTCACG GGCCATTAGC ATTTGCAGGT GG -#TCGCGAAA 7740 - - GGTCCTAAAC TGGCGACCTA TGGCCATTTT TTCTGGGGTG ATGCAGTAGA AG -#GTAAGCGG 7800 - - GTCTTGTTCC CAGCGGTCCC ATCCAAGGTT CGCGGCTAGG TCTCGCGCGG CA -#GTCACTAG 7860 - - AGGCTCATCT CCGCCGAACT TCATGACCAG CATGAAGGGC ACGAGCTGCT TC -#CCAAAGGC 7920 - - CCCCATCCAA GTATAGGTCT CTACATCGTA GGTGACAAAG AGACGCTCGG TG -#CGAGGATG 7980 - - CGAGCCGATC GGGAAGAACT GGATCTCCCG CCACCAATTG GAGGAGTGGC TA -#TTGATGTG 8040 - - GTGAAAGTAG AAGTCCCTGC GACGGGCCGA ACACTCGTGC TGGCTTTTGT AA -#AAACGTGC 8100 - - GCAGTACTGG CAGCGGTGCA CGGGCTGTAC ATCCTGCACG AGGTTGACCT GA -#CGACCGCG 8160 - - CACAAGGAAG CAGAGTGGGA ATTTGAGCCC CTCGCCTGGC GGGTTTGGCT GG -#TGGTCTTC 8220 - - TACTTCGGCT GCTTGTCCTT GACCGTCTGG CTGCTCGAGG GGAGTTACGG TG -#GATCGGAC 8280 - - CACCACGCCG CGCGAGCCCA AAGTCCAGAT GTCCGCGCGC GGCGGTCGGA GC -#TTGATGAC 8340 - - AACATCGCGC AGATGGGAGC TGTCCATGGT CTGGAGCTCC CGCGGCGTCA GG -#TCAGGCGG 8400 - - GAGCTCCTGC AGGTTTACCT CGCATAGACG GGTCAGGGCG CGGGCTAGAT CC -#AGGTGATA 8460 - - CCTAATTTCC AGGGGCTGGT TGGTGGCGGC GTCGATGGCT TGCAAGAGGC CG -#CATCCCCG 8520 - - CGGCGCGACT ACGGTACCGC GCGGCGGGCG GTGGGCCGCG GGGGTGTCCT TG -#GATGATGC 8580 - - ATCTAAAAGC GGTGACGCGG GCGAGCCCCC GGAGGTAGGG GGGGCTCCGG AC -#CCGCCGGG 8640 - - AGAGGGGGCA GGGGCACGTC GGCGCCGCGC GCGGGCAGGA GCTGGTGCTG CG -#CGCGTAGG 8700 - - TTGCTGGCGA ACGCGACGAC GCGGCGGTTG ATCTCCTGAA TCTGGCGCCT CT -#GCGTGAAG 8760 - - ACGACGGGCC CGGTGAGCTT GAGCCTGAAA GAGAGTTCGA CAGAATCAAT TT -#CGGTGTCG 8820 - - TTGACGGCGG CCTGGCGCAA AATCTCCTGC ACGTCTCCTG AGTTGTCTTG AT -#AGGCGATC 8880 - - TCGGCCATGA ACTGCTCGAT CTCTTCCTCC TGGAGATCTC CGCGTCCGGC TC -#GCTCCACG 8940 - - GTGGCGGCGA GGTCGTTGGA AATGCGGGCC ATGAGCTGCG AGAAGGCGTT GA -#GGCCTCCC 9000 - - TCGTTCCAGA CGCGGCTGTA GACCACGCCC CCTTCGGCAT CGCGGGCGCG CA -#TGACCACC 9060 - - TGCGCGAGAT TGAGCTCCAC GTGCCGGGCG AAGACGGCGT AGTTTCGCAG GC -#GCTGAAAG 9120 - - AGGTAGTTGA GGGTGGTGGC GGTGTGTTCT GCCACGAAGA AGTACATAAC CC -#AGCGTCGC 9180 - - AACGTGGATT CGTTGATATC CCCCAAGGCC TCAAGGCGCT CCATGGCCTC GT -#AGAAGTCC 9240 - - ACGGCGAAGT TGAAAAACTG GGAGTTGCGC GCCGACACGG TTAACTCCTC CT -#CCAGAAGA 9300 - - CGGATGAGCT CGGCGACAGT GTCGCGCACC TCGCGCTCAA AGGCTACAGG GG -#CCTCTTCT 9360 - - TCTTCTTCAA TCTCCTCTTC CATAAGGGCC TCCCCTTCTT CTTCTTCTGG CG -#GCGGTGGG 9420 - - GGAGGGGGGA CACGGCGGCG ACGACGGCGC ACCGGGAGGC GGTCGACAAA GC -#GCTCGATC 9480 - - ATCTCCCCGC GGCGACGGCG CATGGTCTCG GTGACGGCGC GGCCGTTCTC GC -#GGGGGCGC 9540 - - AGTTGGAAGA CGCCGCCCGT CATGTCCCGG TTATGGGTTG GCGGGGGGCT GC -#CATGCGGC 9600 - - AGGGATACGG CGCTAACGAT GCATCTCAAC AATTGTTGTG TAGGTACTCC GC -#CGCCGAGG 9660 - - GACCTGAGCG AGTCCGCATC GACCGGATCG GAAAACCTCT CGAGAAAGGC GT -#CTAACCAG 9720 - - TCACAGTCGC AAGGTAGGCT GAGCACCGTG GCGGGCGGCA GCGGGCGGCG GT -#CGGGGTTG 9780 - - TTTCTGGCGG AGGTGCTGCT GATGATGTAA TTAAAGTAGG CGGTCTTGAG AC -#GGCGGATG 9840 - - GTCGACAGAA GCACCATGTC CTTGGGTCCG GCCTGCTGAA TGCGCAGGCG GT -#CGGCCATG 9900 - - CCCCAGGCTT CGTTTTGACA TCGGCGCAGG TCTTTGTAGT AGTCTTGCAT GA -#GCCTTTCT 9960 - - ACCGGCACTT CTTCTTCTCC TTCCTCTTGT CCTGCATCTC TTGCATCTAT CG -#CTGCGGCG 10020 - - GCGGCGGAGT TTGGCCGTAG GTGGCGCCCT CTTCCTCCCA TGCGTGTGAC CC -#CGAAGCCC 10080 - - CTCATCGGCT GAAGCAGGGC TAGGTCGGCG ACAACGCGCT CGGCTAATAT GG -#CCTGCTGC 10140 - - ACCTGCGTGA GGGTAGACTG GAAGTCATCC ATGTCCACAA AGCGGTGGTA TG -#CGCCCGTG 10200 - - TTGATGGTGT AAGTGCAGTT GGCCATAACG GACCAGTTAA CGGTCTGGTG AC -#CCGGCTGC 10260 - - GAGAGCTCGG TGTACCTGAG ACGCGAGTAA GCCCTCGAGT CAAATACGTA GT -#CGTTGCAA 10320 - - GTCCGCACCA GGTACTGGTA TCCCACCAAA AAGTGCGGCG GCGGCTGGCG GT -#AGAGGGGC 10380 - - CAGCGTAGGG TGGCCGGGGC TCCGGGGGCG AGATCTTCCA ACATAAGGCG AT -#GATATCCG 10440 - - TAGATGTACC TGGACATCCA GGTGATGCCG GCGGCGGTGG TGGAGGCGCG CG -#GAAAGTCG 10500 - - CGGACGCGGT TCCAGATGTT GCGCAGCGGC AAAAAGTGCT CCATGGTCGG GA -#CGCTCTGG 10560 - - CCGGTCAGGC GCGCGCAATC GTTGACGCTC TAGACCGTGC AAAAGGAGAG CC -#TGTAAGCG 10620 - - GGCACTCTTC CGTGGTCTGG TGGATAAATT CGCAAGGGTA TCATGGCGGA CG -#ACCGGGGT 10680 - - TCGAGCCCCG TATCCGGCCG TCCGCCGTGA TCCATGCGGT TACCGCCCGC GT -#GTCGAACC 10740 - - CAGGTGTGCG ACGTCAGACA ACGGGGGAGT GCTCCTTTTG GCTTCCTTCC AG -#GCGCGGCG 10800 - - GCTGCTGCGC TAGCTTTTTT GGCCACTGGC CGCGCGCAGC GTAAGCGGTT AG -#GCTGGAAA 10860 - - GCGAAAGCAT TAAGTGGCTC GCTCCCTGTA GCCGGAGGGT TATTTTCCAA GG -#GTTGAGTC 10920 - - GCGGGACCCC CGGTTCGAGT CTCGGACCGG CCGGACTGCG GCGAACGGGG GT -#TTGCCTCC 10980 - - CCGTCATGCA AGACCCCGCT TGCAAATTCC TCCGGAAACA GGGACGAGCC CC -#TTTTTTGC 11040 - - TTTTCCCAGA TGCATCCGGT GCTGCGGCAG ATGCGCCCCC CTCCTCAGCA GC -#GGCAAGAG 11100 - - CAAGAGCAGC GGCAGACATG CAGGGCACCC TCCCCTCCTC CTACCGCGTC AG -#GAGGGGCG 11160 - - ACATCCGCGG TTGACGCGGC AGCAGATGGT GATTACGAAC CCCCGCGGCG CC -#GGGCCCGG 11220 - - CACTACCTGG ACTTGGAGGA GGGCGAGGGC CTGGCGCGGC TAGGAGCGCC CT -#CTCCTGAG 11280 - - CGGTACCCAA GGGTGCAGCT GAAGCGTGAT ACGCGTGAGG CGTACGTGCC GC -#GGCAGAAC 11340 - - CTGTTTCGCG ACCGCGAGGG AGAGGAGCCC GAGGAGATGC GGGATCGAAA GT -#TCCACGCA 11400 - - GGGCGCGAGC TGCGGCATGG CCTGAATCGC GAGCGGTTGC TGCGCGAGGA GG -#ACTTTGAG 11460 - - CCCGACGCGC GAACCGGGAT TAGTCCCGCG CGCGCACACG TGGCGGCCGC CG -#ACCTGGTA 11520 - - ACCGCATACG AGCAGACGGT GAACCAGGAG ATTAACTTTC AAAAAAGCTT TA -#ACAACCAC 11580 - - GTGCGTACGC TTGTGGCGCG CGAGGAGGTG GCTATAGGAC TGATGCATCT GT -#GGGACTTT 11640 - - GTAAGCGCGC TGGAGCAAAA CCCAAATAGC AAGCCGCTCA TGGCGCAGCT GT -#TCCTTATA 11700 - - GTGCAGCACA GCAGGGACAA CGAGGCATTC AGGGATGCGC TGCTAAACAT AG -#TAGAGCCC 11760 - - GAGGGCCGCT GGCTGCTCGA TTTGATAAAC ATCCTGCAGA GCATAGTGGT GC -#AGGAGCGC 11820 - - AGCTTGAGCC TGGCTGACAA GGTGGCCGCC ATCAACTATT CCATGCTTAG CC -#TGGGCAAG 11880 - - TTTTACGCCC GCAAGATATA CCATACCCCT TACGTTCCCA TAGACAAGGA GG -#TAAAGATC 11940 - - GAGGGGTTCT ACATGCGCAT GGCGCTGAAG GTGCTTACCT TGAGCGACGA CC -#TGGGCGTT 12000 - - TATCGCAACG AGCGCATCCA CAAGGCCGTG AGCGTGAGCC GGCGGCGCGA GC -#TCAGCGAC 12060 - - CGCGAGCTGA TGCACAGCCT GCAAAGGGCC CTGGCTGGCA CGGGCAGCGG CG -#ATAGAGAG 12120 - - GCCGAGTCCT ACTTTGACGC GGGCGCTGAC CTGCGCTGGG CCCCAAGCCG AC -#GCGCCCTG 12180 - - GAGGCAGCTG GGGCCGGACC TGGGCTGGCG GTGGCACCCG CGCGCGCTGG CA -#ACGTCGGC 12240 - - GGCGTGGAGG AATATGACGA GGACGATGAG TACGAGCCAG AGGACGGCGA GT -#ACTAAGCG 12300 - - GTGATGTTTC TGATCAGATG ATGCAAGACG CAACGGACCC GGCGGTGCGG GC -#GGCGCTGC 12360 - - AGAGCCAGCC GTCCGGCCTT AACTCCACGG ACGACTGGCG CCAGGTCATG GA -#CCGCATCA 12420 - - TGTCGCTGAC TGCGCGCAAT CCTGACGCGT TCCGGCAGCA GCCGCAGGCC AA -#CCGGCTCT 12480 - - CCGCAATTCT GGAAGCGGTG GTCCCGGCGC GCGCAAACCC CACGCACGAG AA -#GGTGCTGG 12540 - - CGATCGTAAA CGCGCTGGCC GAAAACAGGG CCATCCGGCC CGACGAGGCC GG -#CCTGGTCT 12600 - - ACGACGCGCT GCTTCAGCGC GTGGCTCGTT ACAACAGCGG CAACGTGCAG AC -#CAACCTGG 12660 - - ACCGGCTGGT GGGGGATGTG CGCGAGGCCG TGGCGCAGCG TGAGCGCGCG CA -#GCAGCAGG 12720 - - GCAACCTGGG CTCCATGGTT GCACTAAACG CCTTCCTGAG TACACAGCCC GC -#CAACGTGC 12780 - - CGCGGGGACA GGAGGACTAC ACCAACTTTG TGAGCGCACT GCGGCTAATG GT -#GACTGAGA 12840 - - CACCGCAAAG TGAGGTGTAC CAGTCTGGGC CAGACTATTT TTTCCAGACC AG -#TAGACAAG 12900 - - GCCTGCAGAC CGTAAACCTG AGCCAGGCTT TCAAAAACTT GCAGGGGCTG TG -#GGGGGTGC 12960 - - GGGCTCCCAC AGGCGACCGC GCGACCGTGT CTAGCTTGCT GACGCCCAAC TC -#GCGCCTGT 13020 - - TGCTGCTGCT AATAGCGCCC TTCACGGACA GTGGCAGCGT GTCCCGGGAC AC -#ATACCTAG 13080 - - GTCACTTGCT GACACTGTAC CGCGAGGCCA TAGGTCAGGC GCATGTGGAC GA -#GCATACTT 13140 - - TCCAGGAGAT TACAAGTGTC AGCCGCGCGC TGGGGCAGGA GGACACGGGC AG -#CCTGGAGG 13200 - - CAACCCTAAA CTACCTGCTG ACCAACCGGC GGCAGAAGAT CCCCTCGTTG CA -#CAGTTTAA 13260 - - ACAGCGAGGA GGAGCGCATT TTGCGCTACG TGCAGCAGAG CGTGAGCCTT AA -#CCTGATGC 13320 - - GCGACGGGGT AACGCCCAGC GTGGCGCTGG ACATGACCGC GCGCAACATG GA -#ACCGGGCA 13380 - - TGTATGCCTC AAACCGGCCG TTTATCAACC GCCTAATGGA CTACTTGCAT CG -#CGCGGCCG 13440 - - CCGTGAACCC CGAGTATTTC ACCAATGCCA TCTTGAACCC GCACTGGCTA CC -#GCCCCCTG 13500 - - GTTTCTACAC CGGGGGATTC GAGGTGCCCG AGGGTAACGA TGGATTCCTC TG -#GGACGACA 13560 - - TAGACGACAG CGTGTTTTCC CCGCAACCGC AGACCCTGCT AGAGTTGCAA CA -#GCGCGAGC 13620 - - AGGCAGAGGC GGCGCTGCGA AAGGAAAGCT TCCGCAGGCC AAGCAGCTTG TC -#CGATCTAG 13680 - - GCGCTGCGGC CCCGCGGTCA GATGCTAGTA GCCCATTTCC AAGCTTGATA GG -#GTCTCTTA 13740 - - CCAGCACTCG CACCACCCGC CCGCGCCTGC TGGGCGAGGA GGAGTACCTA AA -#CAACTCGC 13800 - - TGCTGCAGCC GCAGCGCGAA AAAAACCTGC CTCCGGCATT TCCCAACAAC GG -#GATAGAGA 13860 - - GCCTAGTGGA CAAGATGAGT AGATGGAAGA CGTACGCGCA GGAGCACAGG GA -#CGTGCCAG 13920 - - GCCCGCGCCC GCCCACCCGT CGTCAAAGGC ACGACCGTCA GCGGGGTCTG GT -#GTGGGAGG 13980 - - ACGATGACTC GGCAGACGAC AGCAGCGTCC TGGATTTGGG AGGGAGTGGC AA -#CCCGTTTG 14040 - - CGCACCTTCG CCCCAGGCTG GGGAGAATGT TTTAAAAAAA AAAAAGCATG AT -#GCAAAATA 14100 - - AAAAACTCAC CAAGGCCATG GCACCGAGCG TTGGTTTTCT TGTATTCCCC TT -#AGTATGCG 14160 - - GCGCGCGGCG ATGTATGAGG AAGGTCCTCC TCCCTCCTAC GAGAGTGTGG TG -#AGCGCGGC 14220 - - GCCAGTGGCG GCGGCGCTGG GTTCTCCCTT CGATGCTCCC CTGGACCCGC CG -#TTTGTGCC 14280 - - TCCGCGGTAC CTGCGGCCTA CCGGGGGGAG AAACAGCATC CGTTACTCTG AG -#TTGGCACC 14340 - - CCTATTCGAC ACCACCCGTG TGTACCTGGT GGACAACAAG TCAACGGATG TG -#GCATCCCT 14400 - - GAACTACCAG AACGACCACA GCAACTTTCT GACCACGGTC ATTCAAAACA AT -#GACTACAG 14460 - - CCCGGGGGAG GCAAGCACAC AGACCATCAA TCTTGACGAC CGGTCGCACT GG -#GGCGGCGA 14520 - - CCTGAAAACC ATCCTGCATA CCAACATGCC AAATGTGAAC GAGTTCATGT TT -#ACCAATAA 14580 - - GTTTAAGGCG CGGGTGATGG TGTCGCGCTT GCCTACTAAG GACAATCAGG TG -#GAGCTGAA 14640 - - ATACGAGTGG GTGGAGTTCA CGCTGCCCGA GGGCAACTAC TCCGAGACCA TG -#ACCATAGA 14700 - - CCTTATGAAC AACGCGATCG TGGAGCACTA CTTGAAAGTG GGCAGACAGA AC -#GGGGTTCT 14760 - - GGAAAGCGAC ATCGGGGTAA AGTTTGACAC CCGCAACTTC AGACTGGGGT TT -#GACCCCGT 14820 - - CACTGGTCTT GTCATGCCTG GGGTATATAC AAACGAAGCC TTCCATCCAG AC -#ATCATTTT 14880 - - GCTGCCAGGA TGCGGGGTGG ACTTCACCCA CAGCCGCCTG AGCAACTTGT TG -#GGCATCCG 14940 - - CAAGCGGCAA CCCTTCCAGG AGGGCTTTAG GATCACCTAC GATGATCTGG AG -#GGTGGTAA 15000 - - CATTCCCGCA CTGTTGGATG TGGACGCCTA CCAGGCGAGC TTGAAAGATG AC -#ACCGAACA 15060 - - GGGCGGGGGT GGCGCAGGCG GCAGCAACAG CAGTGGCAGC GGCGCGGAAG AG -#AACTCCAA 15120 - - CGCGGCAGCC GCGGCAATGC AGCCGGTGGA GGACATGAAC GATCATGCCA TT -#CGCGGCGA 15180 - - CACCTTTGCC ACACGGGCTG AGGAGAAGCG CGCTGAGGCC GAAGCAGCGG CC -#GAAGCTGC 15240 - - CGCCCCCGCT GCGCAACCCG AGGTCGAGAA GCCTCAGAAG AAACCGGTGA TC -#AAACCCCT 15300 - - GACAGAGGAC AGCAAGAAAC GCAGTTACAA CCTAATAAGC AATGACAGCA CC -#TTCACCCA 15360 - - GTACCGCAGC TGGTACCTTG CATACAACTA CGGCGACCCT CAGACCGGAA TC -#CGCTCATG 15420 - - GACCCTGCTT TGCACTCCTG ACGTAACCTG CGGCTCGGAG CAGGTCTACT GG -#TCGTTGCC 15480 - - AGACATGATG CAAGACCCCG TGACCTTCCG CTCCACGCGC CAGATCAGCA AC -#TTTCCGGT 15540 - - GGTGGGCGCC GAGCTGTTGC CCGTGCACTC CAAGAGCTTC TACAACGACC AG -#GCCGTCTA 15600 - - CTCCCAACTC ATCCGCCAGT TTACCTCTCT GACCCACGTG TTCAATCGCT TT -#CCCGAGAA 15660 - - CCAGATTTTG GCGCGCCCGC CAGCCCCCAC CATCACCACC GTCAGTGAAA AC -#GTTCCTGC 15720 - - TCTCACAGAT CACGGGACGC TACCGCTGCG CAACAGCATC GGAGGAGTCC AG -#CGAGTGAC 15780 - - CATTACTGAC GCCAGACGCC GCACCTGCCC CTACGTTTAC AAGGCCCTGG GC -#ATAGTCTC 15840 - - GCCGCGCGTC CTATCGAGCC GCACTTTTTG AGCAAGCATG TCCATCCTTA TA -#TCGCCCAG 15900 - - CAATAACACA GGCTGGGGCC TGCGCTTCCC AAGCAAGATG TTTGGCGGGG CC -#AAGAAGCG 15960 - - CTCCGACCAA CACCCAGTGC GCGTGCGCGG GCACTACCGC GCGCCCTGGG GC -#GCGCACAA 16020 - - ACGCGGCCGC ACTGGGCGCA CCACCGTCGA TGACGCCATC GACGCGGTGG TG -#GAGGAGGC 16080 - - GCGCAACTAC ACGCCCACGC CGCCACCAGT GTCCACAGTG GACGCGGCCA TT -#CAGACCGT 16140 - - GGTGCGCGGA GCCCGGCGCT ATGCTAAAAT GAAGAGACGG CGGAGGCGCG TA -#GCACGTCG 16200 - - CCACCGCCGC CGACCCGGCA CTGCCGCCCA ACGCGCGGCG GCGGCCCTGC TT -#AACCGCGC 16260 - - ACGTCGCACC GGCCGACGGG CGGCCATGCG GGCCGCTCGA AGGCTGGCCG CG -#GGTATTGT 16320 - - CACTGTGCCC CCCAGGTCCA GGCGACGAGC GGCCGCCGCA GCAGCCGCGG CC -#ATTAGTGC 16380 - - TATGACTCAG GGTCGCAGGG GCAACGTGTA TTGGGTGCGC GACTCGGTTA GC -#GGCCTGCG 16440 - - CGTGCCCGTG CGCACCCGCC CCCCGCGCAA CTAGATTGCA AGAAAAAACT AC -#TTAGACTC 16500 - - GTACTGTTGT ATGTATCCAG CGGCGGCGGC GCGCAACGAA GCTATGTCCA AG -#CGCAAAAT 16560 - - CAAAGAAGAG ATGCTCCAGG TCATCGCGCC GGAGATCTAT GGCCCCCCGA AG -#AAGGAAGA 16620 - - GCAGGATTAC AAGCCCCGAA AGCTAAAGCG GGTCAAAAAG AAAAAGAAAG AT -#GATGATGA 16680 - - TGAACTTGAC GACGAGGTGG AACTGCTGCA CGCTACCGCG CCCAGGCGAC GG -#GTACAGTG 16740 - - GAAAGGTCGA CGCGTAAAAC GTGTTTTGCG ACCCGGCACC ACCGTAGTCT TT -#ACGCCCGG 16800 - - TGAGCGCTCC ACCCGCACCT ACAAGCGCGT GTATGATGAG GTGTACGGCG AC -#GAGGACCT 16860 - - GCTTGAGCAG GCCAACGAGC GCCTCGGGGA GTTTGCCTAC GGAAAGCGGC AT -#AAGGACAT 16920 - - GCTGGCGTTG CCGCTGGACG AGGGCAACCC AACACCTAGC CTAAAGCCCG TA -#ACACTGCA 16980 - - GCAGGTGCTG CCCGCGCTTG CACCGTCCGA AGAAAAGCGC GGCCTAAAGC GC -#GAGTCTGG 17040 - - TGACTTGGCA CCCACCGTGC AGCTGATGGT ACCCAAGCGC CAGCGACTGG AA -#GATGTCTT 17100 - - GGAAAAAATG ACCGTGGAAC CTGGGCTGGA GCCCGAGGTC CGCGTGCGGC CA -#ATCAAGCA 17160 - - GGTGGCGCCG GGACTGGGCG TGCAGACCGT GGACGTTCAG ATACCCACTA CC -#AGTAGCAC 17220 - - CAGTATTGCC ACCGCCACAG AGGGCATGGA GACACAAACG TCCCCGGTTG CC -#TCAGCGGT 17280 - - GGCGGATGCC GCGGTGCAGG CGGTCGCTGC GGCCGCGTCC AAGACCTCTA CG -#GAGGTGCA 17340 - - AACGGACCCG TGGATGTTTC GCGTTTCAGC CCCCCGGCGC CCGCGCGGTT CG -#AGGAAGTA 17400 - - CGGCGCCGCC AGCGCGCTAC TGCCCGAATA TGCCCTACAT CCTTCCATTG CG -#CCTACCCC 17460 - - CGGCTATCGT GGCTACACCT ACCGCCCCAG AAGACGAGCA ACTACCCGAC GC -#CGAACCAC 17520 - - CACTGGAACC CGCCGCCGCC GTCGCCGTCG CCAGCCCGTG CTGGCCCCGA TT -#TCCGTGCG 17580 - - CAGGGTGGCT CGCGAAGGAG GCAGGACCCT GGTGCTGCCA ACAGCGCGCT AC -#CACCCCAG 17640 - - CATCGTTTAA AAGCCGGTCT TTGTGGTTCT TGCAGATATG GCCCTCACCT GC -#CGCCTCCG 17700 - - TTTCCCGGTG CCGGGATTCC GAGGAAGAAT GCACCGTAGG AGGGGCATGG CC -#GGCCACGG 17760 - - CCTGACGGGC GGCATGCGTC GTGCGCACCA CCGGCGGCGG CGCGCGTCGC AC -#CGTCGCAT 17820 - - GCGCGGCGGT ATCCTGCCCC TCCTTATTCC ACTGATCGCC GCGGCGATTG GC -#GCCGTGCC 17880 - - CGGAATTGCA TCCGTGGCCT TGCAGGCGCA GAGACACTGA TTAAAAACAA GT -#TGCATGTG 17940 - - GAAAAATCAA AATAAAAAGT CTGGACTCTC ACGCTCGCTT GGTCCTGTAA CT -#ATTTTGTA 18000 - - GAATGGAAGA CATCAACTTT GCGTCTCTGG CCCCGCGACA CGGCTCGCGC CC -#GTTCATGG 18060 - - GAAACTGGCA AGATATCGGC ACCAGCAATA TGAGCGGTGG CGCCTTCAGC TG -#GGGCTCGC 18120 - - TGTGGAGCGG CATTAAAAAT TTCGGTTCCA CCGTTAAGAA CTATGGCAGC AA -#GGCCTGGA 18180 - - ACAGCAGCAC AGGCCAGATG CTGAGGGATA AGTTGAAAGA GCAAAATTTC CA -#ACAAAAGG 18240 - - TGGTAGATGG CCTGGCCTCT GGCATTAGCG GGGTGGTGGA CCTGGCCAAC CA -#GGCAGTGC 18300 - - AAAATAAGAT TAACAGTAAG CTTGATCCCC GCCCTCCCGT AGAGGAGCCT CC -#ACCGGCCG 18360 - - TGGAGACAGT GTCTCCAGAG GGGCGTGGCG AAAAGCGTCC GCGCCCCGAC AG -#GGAAGAAA 18420 - - CTCTGGTGAC GCAAATAGAC GAGCCTCCCT CGTACGAGGA GGCACTAAAG CA -#AGGCCTGC 18480 - - CCACCACCCG TCCCATCGCG CCCATGGCTA CCGGAGTGCT GGGCCAGCAC AC -#ACCCGTAA 18540 - - CGCTGGACCT GCCTCCCCCC GCCGACACCC AGCAGAAACC TGTGCTGCCA GG -#CCCGACCG 18600 - - CCGTTGTTGT AACCCGTCCT AGCCGCGCGT CCCTGCGCCG CGCCGCCAGC GG -#TCCGCGAT 18660 - - CGTTGCGGCC CGTAGCCAGT GGCAACTGGC AAAGCACACT GAACAGCATC GT -#GGGTCTGG 18720 - - GGGTGCAATC CCTGAAGCGC CGACGATGCT TCTGAATAGC TAACGTGTCG TA -#TGTGTGTC 18780 - - ATGTATGCGT CCATGTCGCC GCCAGAGGAG CTGCTGAGCC GCCGCGCGCC CG -#CTTTCCAA 18840 - - GATGGCTACC CCTTCGATGA TGCCGCAGTG GTCTTACATG CACATCTCGG GC -#CAGGACGC 18900 - - CTCGGAGTAC CTGAGCCCCG GGCTGGTGCA GTTTGCCCGC GCCACCGAGA CG -#TACTTCAG 18960 - - CCTGAATAAC AAGTTTAGAA ACCCCACGGT GGCGCCTACG CACGACGTGA CC -#ACAGACCG 19020 - - GTCCCAGCGT TTGACGCTGC GGTTCATCCC TGTGGACCGT GAGGATACTG CG -#TACTCGTA 19080 - - CAAGGCGCGG TTCACCCTAG CTGTGGGTGA TAACCGTGTG CTGGACATGG CT -#TCCACGTA 19140 - - CTTTGACATC CGCGGCGTGC TGGACAGGGG CCCTACTTTT AAGCCCTACT CT -#GGCACTGC 19200 - - CTACAACGCC CTGGCTCCCA AGGGTGCCCC AAATCCTTGC GAATGGGATG AA -#GCTGCTAC 19260 - - TGCTCTTGAA ATAAACCTAG AAGAAGAGGA CGATGACAAC GAAGACGAAG TA -#GACGAGCA 19320 - - AGCTGAGCAG CAAAAAACTC ACGTATTTGG GCAGGCGCCT TATTCTGGTA TA -#AATATTAC 19380 - - AAAGGAGGGT ATTCAAATAG GTGTCGAAGG TCAAACACCT AAATATGCCG AT -#AAAACATT 19440 - - TCAACCTGAA CCTCAAATAG GAGAATCTCA GTGGTACGAA ACTGAAATTA AT -#CATGCAGC 19500 - - TGGGAGAGTC CTTAAAAAGA CTACCCCAAT GAAACCATGT TACGGTTCAT AT -#GCAAAACC 19560 - - CACAAATGAA AATGGAGGGC AAGGCATTCT TGTAAAGCAA CAAAATGGAA AG -#CTAGAAAG 19620 - - TCAAGTGGAA ATGCAATTTT TCTCAACTAC TGAGGCGACC GCAGGCAATG GT -#GATAACTT 19680 - - GACTCCTAAA GTGGTATTGT ACAGTGAAGA TGTAGATATA GAAACCCCAG AC -#ACTCATAT 19740 - - TTCTTACATG CCCACTATTA AGGAAGGTAA CTCACGAGAA CTAATGGGCC AA -#CAATCTAT 19800 - - GCCCAACAGG CCTAATTACA TTGCTTTTAG GGACAATTTT ATTGGTCTAA TG -#TATTACAA 19860 - - CAGCACGGGT AATATGGGTG TTCTGGCGGG CCAAGCATCG CAGTTGAATG CT -#GTTGTAGA 19920 - - TTTGCAAGAC AGAAACACAG AGCTTTCATA CCAGCTTTTG CTTGATTCCA TT -#GGTGATAG 19980 - - AACCAGGTAC TTTTCTATGT GGAATCAGGC TGTTGACAGC TATGATCCAG AT -#GTTAGAAT 20040 - - TATTGAAAAT CATGGAACTG AAGATGAACT TCCAAATTAC TGCTTTCCAC TG -#GGAGGTGT 20100 - - GATTAATACA GAGACTCTTA CCAAGGTAAA ACCTAAAACA GGTCAGGAAA AT -#GGATGGGA 20160 - - AAAAGATGCT ACAGAATTTT CAGATAAAAA TGAAATAAGA GTTGGAAATA AT -#TTTGCCAT 20220 - - GGAAATCAAT CTAAATGCCA ACCTGTGGAG AAATTTCCTG TACTCCAACA TA -#GCGCTGTA 20280 - - TTTGCCCGAC AAGCTAAAGT ACAGTCCTTC CAACGTAAAA ATTTCTGATA AC -#CCAAACAC 20340 - - CTACGACTAC ATGAACAAGC GAGTGGTGGC TCCCGGGTTA GTGGACTGCT AC -#ATTAACCT 20400 - - TGGAGCACGC TGGTCCCTTG ACTATATGGA CAACGTCAAC CCATTTAACC AC -#CACCGCAA 20460 - - TGCTGGCCTG CGCTACCGCT CAATGTTGCT GGGCAATGGT CGCTATGTGC CC -#TTCCACAT 20520 - - CCAGGTGCCT CAGAAGTTCT TTGCCATTAA AAACCTCCTT CTCCTGCCGG GC -#TCATACAC 20580 - - CTACGAGTGG AACTTCAGGA AGGATGTTAA CATGGTTCTG CAGAGCTCCC TA -#GGAAATGA 20640 - - CCTAAGGGTT GACGGAGCCA GCATTAAGTT TGATAGCATT TGCCTTTACG CC -#ACCTTCTT 20700 - - CCCCATGGCC CACAACACCG CCTCCACGCT TGAGGCCATG CTTAGAAACG AC -#ACCAACGA 20760 - - CCAGTCCTTT AACGACTATC TCTCCGCCGC CAACATGCTC TACCCTATAC CC -#GCCAACGC 20820 - - TACCAACGTG CCCATATCCA TCCCCTCCCG CAACTGGGCG GCTTTCCGCG GC -#TGGGCCTT 20880 - - CACGCGCCTT AAGACTAAGG AAACCCCATC ACTGGGCTCG GGCTACGACC CT -#TATTACAC 20940 - - CTACTCTGGC TCTATACCCT ACCTAGATGG AACCTTTTAC CTCAACCACA CC -#TTTAAGAA 21000 - - GGTGGCCATT ACCTTTGACT CTTCTGTCAG CTGGCCTGGC AATGACCGCC TG -#CTTACCCC 21060 - - CAACGAGTTT GAAATTAAGC GCTCAGTTGA CGGGGAGGGT TACAACGTTG CC -#CAGTGTAA 21120 - - CATGACCAAA GACTGGTTCC TGGTACAAAT GCTAGCTAAC TACAACATTG GC -#TACCAGGG 21180 - - CTTCTATATC CCAGAGAGCT ACAAGGACCG CATGTACTCC TTCTTTAGAA AC -#TTCCAGCC 21240 - - CATGAGCCGT CAGGTGGTGG ATGATACTAA ATACAAGGAC TACCAACAGG TG -#GGCATCCT 21300 - - ACACCAACAC AACAACTCTG GATTTGTTGG CTACCTTGCC CCCACCATGC GC -#GAAGGACA 21360 - - GGCCTACCCT GCTAACTTCC CCTATCCGCT TATAGGCAAG ACCGCAGTTG AC -#AGCATTAC 21420 - - CCAGAAAAAG TTTCTTTGCG ATCGCACCCT TTGGCGCATC CCATTCTCCA GT -#AACTTTAT 21480 - - GTCCATGGGC GCACTCACAG ACCTGGGCCA AAACCTTCTC TACGCCAACT CC -#GCCCACGC 21540 - - GCTAGACATG ACTTTTGAGG TGGATCCCAT GGACGAGCCC ACCCTTCTTT AT -#GTTTTGTT 21600 - - TGAAGTCTTT GACGTGGTCC GTGTGCACCG GCCGCACCGC GGCGTCATCG AA -#ACCGTGTA 21660 - - CCTGCGCACG CCCTTCTCGG CCGGCAACGC CACAACATAA AGAAGCAAGC AA -#CATCAACA 21720 - - ACAGCTGCCG CCATGGGCTC CAGTGAGCAG GAACTGAAAG CCATTGTCAA AG -#ATCTTGGT 21780 - - TGTGGGCCAT ATTTTTTGGG CACCTATGAC AAGCGCTTTC CAGGCTTTGT TT -#CTCCACAC 21840 - - AAGCTCGCCT GCGCCATAGT CAATACGGCC GGTCGCGAGA CTGGGGGCGT AC -#ACTGGATG 21900 - - GCCTTTGCCT GGAACCCGCA CTCAAAAACA TGCTACCTCT TTGAGCCCTT TG -#GCTTTTCT 21960 - - GACCAGCGAC TCAAGCAGGT TTACCAGTTT GAGTACGAGT CACTCCTGCG CC -#GTAGCGCC 22020 - - ATTGCTTCTT CCCCCGACCG CTGTATAACG CTGGAAAAGT CCACCCAAAG CG -#TACAGGGG 22080 - - CCCAACTCGG CCGCCTGTGG ACTATTCTGC TGCATGTTTC TCCACGCCTT TG -#CCAACTGG 22140 - - CCCCAAACTC CCATGGATCA CAACCCCACC ATGAACCTTA TTACCGGGGT AC -#CCAACTCC 22200 - - ATGCTCAACA GTCCCCAGGT ACAGCCCACC CTGCGTCGCA ACCAGGAACA GC -#TCTACAGC 22260 - - TTCCTGGAGC GCCACTCGCC CTACTTCCGC AGCCACAGTG CGCAGATTAG GA -#GCGCCACT 22320 - - TCTTTTTGTC ACTTGAAAAA CATGTAAAAA TAATGTACTA GAGACACTTT CA -#ATAAAGGC 22380 - - AAATGCTTTT ATTTGTACAC TCTCGGGTGA TTATTTACCC CCACCCTTGC CG -#TCTGCGCC 22440 - - GTTTAAAAAT CAAAGGGGTT CTGCCGCGCA TCGCTATGCG CCACTGGCAG GG -#ACACGTTG 22500 - - CGATACTGGT GTTTAGTGCT CCACTTAAAC TCAGGCACAA CCATCCGCGG CA -#GCTCGGTG 22560 - - AAGTTTTCAC TCCACAGGCT GCGCACCATC ACCAACGCGT TTAGCAGGTC GG -#GCGCCGAT 22620 - - ATCTTGAAGT CGCAGTTGGG GCCTCCGCCC TGCGCGCGCG AGTTGCGATA CA -#CAGGGTTG 22680 - - CAGCACTGGA ACACTATCAG CGCCGGGTGG TGCACGCTGG CCAGCACGCT CT -#TGTCGGAG 22740 - - ATCAGATCCG CGTCCAGGTC CTCCGCGTTG CTCAGGGCGA ACGGAGTCAA CT -#TTGGTAGC 22800 - - TGCCTTCCCA AAAAGGGCGC GTGCCCAGGC TTTGAGTTGC ACTCGCACCG TA -#GTGGCATC 22860 - - AAAAGGTGAC CGTGCCCGGT CTGGGCGTTA GGATACAGCG CCTGCATAAA AG -#CCTTGATC 22920 - - TGCTTAAAAG CCACCTGAGC CTTTGCGCCT TCAGAGAAGA ACATGCCGCA AG -#ACTTGCCG 22980 - - GAAAACTGAT TGGCCGGACA GGCCGCGTCG TGCACGCAGC ACCTTGCGTC GG -#TGTTGGAG 23040 - - ATCTGCACCA CATTTCGGCC CCACCGGTTC TTCACGATCT TGGCCTTGCT AG -#ACTGCTCC 23100 - - TTCAGCGCGC GCTGCCCGTT TTCGCTCGTC ACATCCATTT CAATCACGTG CT -#CCTTATTT 23160 - - ATCATAATGC TTCCGTGTAG ACACTTAAGC TCGCCTTCGA TCTCAGCGCA GC -#GGTGCAGC 23220 - - CACAACGCGC AGCCCGTGGG CTCGTGATGC TTGTAGGTCA CCTCTGCAAA CG -#ACTGCAGG 23280 - - TACGCCTGCA GGAATCGCCC CATCATCGTC ACAAAGGTCT TGTTGCTGGT GA -#AGGTCAGC 23340 - - TGCAACCCGC GGTGCTCCTC GTTCAGCCAG GTCTTGCATA CGGCCGCCAG AG -#CTTCCACT 23400 - - TGGTCAGGCA GTAGTTTGAA GTTCGCCTTT AGATCGTTAT CCACGTGGTA CT -#TGTCCATC 23460 - - AGCGCGCGCG CAGCCTCCAT GCCCTTCTCC CACGCAGACA CGATCGGCAC AC -#TCAGCGGG 23520 - - TTCATCACCG TAATTTCACT TTCCGCTTCG CTGGGCTCTT CCTCTTCCTC TT -#GCGTCCGC 23580 - - ATACCACGCG CCACTGGGTC GTCTTCATTC AGCCGCCGCA CTGTGCGCTT AC -#CTCCTTTG 23640 - - CCATGCTTGA TTAGCACCGG TGGGTTGCTG AAACCCACCA TTTGTAGCGC CA -#CATCTTCT 23700 - - CTTTCTTCCT CGCTGTCCAC GATTACCTCT GGTGATGGCG GGCGCTCGGG CT -#TGGGAGAA 23760 - - GGGCGCTTCT TTTTCTTCTT GGGCGCAATG GCCAAATCCG CCGCCGAGGT CG -#ATGGCCGC 23820 - - GGGCTGGGTG TGCGCGGCAC CAGCGCGTCT TGTGATGAGT CTTCCTCGTC CT -#CGGACTCG 23880 - - ATACGCCGCC TCATCCGCTT TTTTGGGGGC GCCCGGGGAG GCGGCGGCGA CG -#GGGACGGG 23940 - - GACGACACGT CCTCCATGGT TGGGGGACGT CGCGCCGCAC CGCGTCCGCG CT -#CGGGGGTG 24000 - - GTTTCGCGCT GCTCCTCTTC CCGACTGGCC ATTTCCTTCT CCTATAGGCA GA -#AAAAGATC 24060 - - ATGGAGTCAG TCGAGAAGAA GGACAGCCTA ACCGCCCCCT CTGAGTTCGC CA -#CCACCGCC 24120 - - TCCACCGATG CCGCCAACGC GCCTACCACC TTCCCCGTCG AGGCACCCCC GC -#TTGAGGAG 24180 - - GAGGAAGTGA TTATCGAGCA GGACCCAGGT TTTGTAAGCG AAGACGACGA GG -#ACCGCTCA 24240 - - GTACCAACAG AGGATAAAAA GCAAGACCAG GACAACGCAG AGGCAAACGA GG -#AACAAGTC 24300 - - GGGCGGGGGG ACGAAAGGCA TGGCGACTAC CTAGATGTGG GAGACGACGT GC -#TGTTGAAG 24360 - - CATCTGCAGC GCCAGTGCGC CATTATCTGC GACGCGTTGC AAGAGCGCAG CG -#ATGTGCCC 24420 - - CTCGCCATAG CGGATGTCAG CCTTGCCTAC GAACGCCACC TATTCTCACC GC -#GCGTACCC 24480 - - CCCAAACGCC AAGAAAACGG CACATGCGAG CCCAACCCGC GCCTCAACTT CT -#ACCCCGTA 24540 - - TTTGCCGTGC CAGAGGTGCT TGCCACCTAT CACATCTTTT TCCAAAACTG CA -#AGATACCC 24600 - - CTATCCTGCC GTGCCAACCG CAGCCGAGCG GACAAGCAGC TGGCCTTGCG GC -#AGGGCGCT 24660 - - GTCATACCTG ATATCGCCTC GCTCAACGAA GTGCCAAAAA TCTTTGAGGG TC -#TTGGACGC 24720 - - GACGAGAAGC GCGCGGCAAA CGCTCTGCAA CAGGAAAACA GCGAAAATGA AA -#GTCACTCT 24780 - - GGAGTGTTGG TGGAACTCGA GGGTGACAAC GCGCGCCTAG CCGTACTAAA AC -#GCAGCATC 24840 - - GAGGTCACCC ACTTTGCCTA CCCGGCACTT AACCTACCCC CCAAGGTCAT GA -#GCACAGTC 24900 - - ATGAGTGAGC TGATCGTGCG CCGTGCGCAG CCCCTGGAGA GGGATGCAAA TT -#TGCAAGAA 24960 - - CAAACAGAGG AGGGCCTACC CGCAGTTGGC GACGAGCAGC TAGCGCGCTG GC -#TTCAAACG 25020 - - CGCGAGCCTG CCGACTTGGA GGAGCGACGC AAACTAATGA TGGCCGCAGT GC -#TCGTTACC 25080 - - GTGGAGCTTG AGTGCATGCA GCGGTTCTTT GCTGACCCGG AGATGCAGCG CA -#AGCTAGAG 25140 - - GAAACATTGC ACTACACCTT TCGACAGGGC TACGTACGCC AGGCCTGCAA GA -#TCTCCAAC 25200 - - GTGGAGCTCT GCAACCTGGT CTCCTACCTT GGAATTTTGC ACGAAAACCG CC -#TTGGGCAA 25260 - - AACGTGCTTC ATTCCACGCT CAAGGGCGAG GCGCGCCGCG ACTACGTCCG CG -#ACTGCGTT 25320 - - TACTTATTTC TATGCTACAC CTGGCAGACG GCCATGGGCG TTTGGCAGCA GT -#GCTTGGAG 25380 - - GAGTGCAACC TCAAGGAGCT GCAGAAACTG CTAAAGCAAA ACTTGAAGGA CC -#TATGGACG 25440 - - GCCTTCAACG AGCGCTCCGT GGCCGCGCAC CTGGCGGACA TCATTTTCCC CG -#AACGCCTG 25500 - - CTTAAAACCC TGCAACAGGG TCTGCCAGAC TTCACCAGTC AAAGCATGTT GC -#AGAACTTT 25560 - - AGGAACTTTA TCCTAGAGCG CTCAGGAATC TTGCCCGCCA CCTGCTGTGC AC -#TTCCTAGC 25620 - - GACTTTGTGC CCATTAAGTA CCGCGAATGC CCTCCGCCGC TTTGGGGCCA CT -#GCTACCTT 25680 - - CTGCAGCTAG CCAACTACCT TGCCTACCAC TCTGACATAA TGGAAGACGT GA -#GCGGTGAC 25740 - - GGTCTACTGG AGTGTCACTG TCGCTGCAAC CTATGCACCC CGCACCGCTC CC -#TGGTTTGC 25800 - - AATTCGCAGC TGCTTAACGA AAGTCAAATT ATCGGTACCT TTGAGCTGCA GG -#GTCCCTCG 25860 - - CCTGACGAAA AGTCCGCGGC TCCGGGGTTG AAACTCACTC CGGGGCTGTG GA -#CGTCGGCT 25920 - - TACCTTCGCA AATTTGTACC TGAGGACTAC CACGCCCACG AGATTAGGTT CT -#ACGAAGAC 25980 - - CAATCCCGCC CGCCAAATGC GGAGCTTACC GCCTGCGTCA TTACCCAGGG CC -#ACATTCTT 26040 - - GGCCAATTGC AAGCCATCAA CAAAGCCCGC CAAGAGTTTC TGCTACGAAA GG -#GACGGGGG 26100 - - GTTTACTTGG ACCCCCAGTC CGGCGAGGAG CTCAACCCAA TCCCCCCGCC GC -#CGCAGCCC 26160 - - TATCAGCAGC AGCCGCGGGC CCTTGCTTCC CAGGATGGCA CCCAAAAAGA AG -#CTGCAGCT 26220 - - GCCGCCGCCA CCCACGGACG AGGAGGAATA CTGGGACAGT CAGGCAGAGG AG -#GTTTTGGA 26280 - - CGAGGAGGAG GAGGACATGA TGGAAGACTG GGAGAGCCTA GACGAGGAAG CT -#TCCGAGGT 26340 - - CGAAGAGGTG TCAGACGAAA CACCGTCACC CTCGGTCGCA TTCCCCTCGC CG -#GCGCCCCA 26400 - - GAAATCGGCA ACCGGTTCCA GCATGGCTAC AACCTCCGCT CCTCAGGCGC CG -#CCGGCACT 26460 - - GCCCGTTCGC CGACCCAACC GTAGATGGGA CACCACTGGA ACCAGGGCCG GT -#AAGTCCAA 26520 - - GCAGCCGCCG CCGTTAGCCC AAGAGCAACA ACAGCGCCAA GGCTACCGCT CA -#TGGCGCGG 26580 - - GCACAAGAAC GCCATAGTTG CTTGCTTGCA AGACTGTGGG GGCAACATCT CC -#TTCGCCCG 26640 - - CCGCTTTCTT CTCTACCATC ACGGCGTGGC CTTCCCCCGT AACATCCTGC AT -#TACTACCG 26700 - - TCATCTCTAC AGCCCATACT GCACCGGCGG CAGCGGCAGC GGCAGCAACA GC -#AGCGGCCA 26760 - - CACAGAAGCA AAGGCGACCG GATAGCAAGA CTCTGACAAA GCCCAAGAAA TC -#CACAGCGG 26820 - - CGGCAGCAGC AGGAGGAGGA GCGCTGCGTC TGGCGCCCAA CGAACCCGTA TC -#GACCCGCG 26880 - - AGCTTAGAAA CAGGATTTTT CCCACTCTGT ATGCTATATT TCAACAGAGC AG -#GGGCCAAG 26940 - - AACAAGAGCT GAAAATAAAA AACAGGTCTC TGCGATCCCT CACCCGCAGC TG -#CCTGTATC 27000 - - ACAAAAGCGA AGATCAGCTT CGGCGCACGC TGGAAGACGC GGAGGCTCTC TT -#CAGTAAAT 27060 - - ACTGCGCGCT GACTCTTAAG GACTAGTTTC GCGCCCTTTC TCAAATTTAA GC -#GCGAAAAC 27120 - - TACGTCATCT CCAGCGGCCA CACCCGGCGC CAGCACCTGT CGTCAGCGCC AT -#TATGAGCA 27180 - - AGGAAATTCC CACGCCCTAC ATGTGGAGTT ACCAGCCACA AATGGGACTT GC -#GGCTGGAG 27240 - - CTGCCCAAGA CTACTCAACC CGAATAAACT ACATGAGCGC GGGACCCCAC AT -#GATATCCC 27300 - - GGGTCAACGG AATCCGCGCC CACCGAAACC GAATTCTCTT GGAACAGGCG GC -#TATTACCA 27360 - - CCACACCTCG TAATAACCTT AATCCCCGTA GTTGGCCCGC TGCCCTGGTG TA -#CCAGGAAA 27420 - - GTCCCGCTCC CACCACTGTG GTACTTCCCA GAGACGCCCA GGCCGAAGTT CA -#GATGACTA 27480 - - ACTCAGGGGC GCAGCTTGCG GGCGGCTTTC GTCACAGGGT GCGGTCGCCC GG -#GCAGGGTA 27540 - - TAACTCACCT GACAATCAGA GGGCGAGGTA TTCAGCTCAA CGACGAGTCG GT -#GAGCTCCT 27600 - - CGCTTGGTCT CCGTCCGGAC GGGACATTTC AGATCGGCGG CGCCGGCCGT CC -#TTCATTCA 27660 - - CGCCTCGTCA GGCAATCCTA ACTCTGCAGA CCTCGTCCTC TGAGCCGCGC TC -#TGGAGGCA 27720 - - TTGGAACTCT GCAATTTATT GAGGAGTTTG TGCCATCGGT CTACTTTAAC CC -#CTTCTCGG 27780 - - GACCTCCCGG CCACTATCCG GATCAATTTA TTCCTAACTT TGACGCGGTA AA -#GGACTCGG 27840 - - CGGACGGCTA CGACTGAATG TTAAGTGGAG AGGCAGAGCA ACTGCGCCTG AA -#ACACCTGG 27900 - - TCCACTGTCG CCGCCACAAG TGCTTTGCCC GCGACTCCGG TGAGTTTTGC TA -#CTTTGAAT 27960 - - TGCCCGAGGA TCATATCGAG GGCCCGGCGC ACGGCGTCCG GCTTACCGCC CA -#GGGAGAGC 28020 - - TTGCCCGTAG CCTGATTCGG GAGTTTACCC AGCGCCCCCT GCTAGTTGAG CG -#GGACAGGG 28080 - - GACCCTGTGT TCTCACTGTG ATTTGCAACT GTCCTAACCT TGGATTACAT CA -#AGATCTTT 28140 - - GTTGCCATCT CTGTGCTGAG TATAATAAAT ACAGAAATTA AAATATACTG GG -#GCTCCTAT 28200 - - CGCCATCCTG TAAACGCCAC CGTCTTCACC CGCCCAAGCA AACCAAGGCG AA -#CCTTACCT 28260 - - GGTACTTTTA ACATCTCTCC CTCTGTGATT TACAACAGTT TCAACCCAGA CG -#GAGTGAGT 28320 - - CTACGAGAGA ACCTCTCCGA GCTCAGCTAC TCCATCAGAA AAAACACCAC CC -#TCCTTACC 28380 - - TGCCGGGAAC GTACGAGTGC GTCACCGGCC GCTGCACCAC ACCTACCGCC TG -#ACCGTAAA 28440 - - CCAGACTTTT TCCGGACAGA CCTCAATAAC TCTGTTTACC AGAACAGGAG GT -#GAGCTTAG 28500 - - AAAACCCTTA GGGTATTAGG CCAAAGGCGC AGCTACTGTG GGGTTTATGA AC -#AATTCAAG 28560 - - CAACTCTACG GGCTATTCTA ATTCAGGTTT CTCTAGAATC GGGGTTGGGG TT -#ATTCTCTG 28620 - - TCTTGTGATT CTCTTTATTC TTATACTAAC GCTTCTCTGC CTAAGGCTCG CC -#GCCTGCTG 28680 - - TGTGCACATT TGCATTTATT GTCAGCTTTT TAAACGCTGG GGTCGCCACC CA -#AGATGATT 28740 - - AGGTACATAA TCCTAGGTTT ACTCACCCTT GCGTCAGCCC ACGGTACCAC CC -#AAAAGGTG 28800 - - GATTTTAAGG AGCCAGCCTG TAATGTTACA TTCGCAGCTG AAGCTAATGA GT -#GCACCACT 28860 - - CTTATAAAAT GCACCACAGA ACATGAAAAG CTGCTTATTC GCCACAAAAA CA -#AAATTGGC 28920 - - AAGTATGCTG TTTATGCTAT TTGGCAGCCA GGTGACACTA CAGAGTATAA TG -#TTACAGTT 28980 - - TTCCAGGGTA AAAGTCATAA AACTTTTATG TATACTTTTC CATTTTATGA AA -#TGTGCGAC 29040 - - ATTACCATGT ACATGAGCAA ACAGTATAAG TTGTGGCCCC CACAAAATTG TG -#TGGAAAAC 29100 - - ACTGGCACTT TCTGCTGCAC TGCTATGCTA ATTACAGTGC TCGCTTTGGT CT -#GTACCCTA 29160 - - CTCTATATTA AATACAAAAG CAGACGCAGC TTTATTGAGG AAAAGAAAAT GC -#CTTAATTT 29220 - - ACTAAGTTAC AAAGCTAATG TCACCACTAA CTGCTTTACT CGCTGCTTGC AA -#AACAAATT 29280 - - CAAAAAGTTA GCATTATAAT TAGAATAGGA TTTAAACCCC CCGGTCATTT CC -#TGCTCAAT 29340 - - ACCATTCCCC TGAACAATTG ACTCTATGTG GGATATGCTC CAGCGCTACA AC -#CTTGAAGT 29400 - - CAGGCTTCCT GGATGTCAGC ATCTGACTTT GGCCAGCACC TGTCCCGCGG AT -#TTGTTCCA 29460 - - GTCCAACTAC AGCGACCCAC CCTAACAGAG ATGACCAACA CAACCAACGC GG -#CCGCCGCT 29520 - - ACCGGACTTA CATCTACCAC AAATACACCC CAAGTTTCTG CCTTTGTCAA TA -#ACTGGGAT 29580 - - AACTTGGGCA TGTGGTGGTT CTCCATAGCG CTTATGTTTG TATGCCTTAT TA -#TTATGTGG 29640 - - CTCATCTGCT GCCTAAAGCG CAAACGCGCC CGACCACCCA TCTATAGTCC CA -#TCATTGTG 29700 - - CTACACCCAA ACAATGATGG AATCCATAGA TTGGACGGAC TGAAACACAT GT -#TCTTTTCT 29760 - - CTTACAGTAT GATTAAATGA GACATGATTC CTCGAGTTTT TATATTACTG AC -#CCTTGTTG 29820 - - CGCTTTTTTG TGCGTGCTCC ACATTGGCTG CGGTTTCTCA CATCGAAGTA GA -#CTGCATTC 29880 - - CAGCCTTCAC AGTCTATTTG CTTTACGGAT TTGTCACCCT CACGCTCATC TG -#CAGCCTCA 29940 - - TCACTGTGGT CATCGCCTTT ATCCAGTGCA TTGACTGGGT CTGTGTGCGC TT -#TGCATATC 30000 - - TCAGACACCA TCCCCAGTAC AGGGACAGGA CTATAGCTGA GCTTCTTAGA AT -#TCTTTAAT 30060 - - TATGAAATTT ACTGTGACTT TTCTGCTGAT TATTTGCACC CTATCTGCGT TT -#TGTTCCCC 30120 - - GACCTCCAAG CCTCAAAGAC ATATATCATG CAGATTCACT CGTATATGGA AT -#ATTCCAAG 30180 - - TTGCTACAAT GAAAAAAGCG ATCTTTCCGA AGCCTGGTTA TATGCAATCA TC -#TCTGTTAT 30240 - - GGTGTTCTGC AGTACCATCT TAGCCCTAGC TATATATCCC TACCTTGACA TT -#GGCTGGAA 30300 - - ACGAATAGAT GCCATGAACC ACCCAACTTT CCCCGCGCCC GCTATGCTTC CA -#CTGCAACA 30360 - - AGTTGTTGCC GGCGGCTTTG TCCCAGCCAA TCAGCCTCGC CCCACTTCTC CC -#ACCCCCAC 30420 - - TGAAATCAGC TACTTTAATC TAACAGGAGG AGATGACTGA CACCCTAGAT CT -#AGAAATGG 30480 - - ACGGAATTAT TACAGAGCAG CGCCTGCTAG AAAGACGCAG GGCAGCGGCC GA -#GCAACAGC 30540 - - GCATGAATCA AGAGCTCCAA GACATGGTTA ACTTGCACCA GTGCAAAAGG GG -#TATCTTTT 30600 - - GTCTGGTAAA GCAGGCCAAA GTCACCTACG ACAGTAATAC CACCGGACAC CG -#CCTTAGCT 30660 - - ACAAGTTGCC AACCAAGCGT CAGAAATTGG TGGTCATGGT GGGAGAAAAG CC -#CATTACCA 30720 - - TAACTCAGCA CTCGGTAGAA ACCGAAGGCT GCATTCACTC ACCTTGTCAA GG -#ACCTGAGG 30780 - - ATCTCTGCAC CCTTATTAAG ACCCTGTGCG GTCTCAAAGA TCTTATTCCC TT -#TAACTAAT 30840 - - AAAAAAAAAT AATAAAGCAT CACTTACTTA AAATCAGTTA GCAAATTTCT GT -#CCAGTTTA 30900 - - TTCAGCAGCA CCTCCTTGCC CTCCTCCCAG CTCTGGTATT GCAGCTTCCT CC -#TGGCTGCA 30960 - - AACTTTCTCC ACAATCTAAA TGGAATGTCA GTTTCCTCCT GTTCCTGTCC AT -#CCGCACCC 31020 - - ACTATCTTCA TGTTGTTGCA GATGAAGCGC GCAAGACCGT CTGAAGATAC CT -#TCAACCCC 31080 - - GTGTATCCAT ATGACACGGA AACCGGTCCT CCAACTGTGC CTTTTCTTAC TC -#CTCCCTTT 31140 - - GTATCCCCCA ATGGGTTTCA AGAGAGTCCC CCTGGGGTAC TCTCTTTGCG CC -#TATCCGAA 31200 - - CCTCTAGTTA CCTCCAATGG CATGCTTGCG CTCAAAATGG GCAACGGCCT CT -#CTCTGGAC 31260 - - GAGGCCGGCA ACCTTACCTC CCAAAATGTA ACCACTGTGA GCCCACCTCT CA -#AAAAAACC 31320 - - AAGTCAAACA TAAACCTGGA AATATCTGCA CCCCTCACAG TTACCTCAGA AG -#CCCTAACT 31380 - - GTGGCTGCCG CCGCACCTCT AATGGTCGCG GGCAACACAC TCACCATGCA AT -#CACAGGCC 31440 - - CCGCTAACCG TGCACGACTC CAAACTTAGC ATTGCCACCC AAGGACCCCT CA -#CAGTGTCA 31500 - - GAAGGAAAGC TAGCCCTGCA AACATCAGGC CCCCTCACCA CCACCGATAG CA -#GTACCCTT 31560 - - ACTATCACTG CCTCACCCCC TCTAACTACT GCCACTGGTA GCTTGGGCAT TG -#ACTTGAAA 31620 - - GAGCCCATTT ATACACAAAA TGGAAAACTA GGACTAAAGT ACGGGGCTCC TT -#TGCATGTA 31680 - - ACAGACGACC TAAACACTTT GACCGTAGCA ACTGGTCCAG GTGTGACTAT TA -#ATAATACT 31740 - - TCCTTGCAAA CTAAAGTTAC TGGAGCCTTG GGTTTTGATT CACAAGGCAA TA -#TGCAACTT 31800 - - AATGTAGCAG GAGGACTAAG GATTGATTCT CAAAACAGAC GCCTTATACT TG -#ATGTTAGT 31860 - - TATCCGTTTG ATGCTCAAAA CCAACTAAAT CTAAGACTAG GACAGGGCCC TC -#TTTTTATA 31920 - - AACTCAGCCC ACAACTTGGA TATTAACTAC AACAAAGGCC TTTACTTGTT TA -#CAGCTTCA 31980 - - AACAATTCCA AAAAGCTTGA GGTTAACCTA AGCACTGCCA AGGGGTTGAT GT -#TTGACGCT 32040 - - ACAGCCATAG CCATTAATGC AGGAGATGGG CTTGAATTTG GTTCACCTAA TG -#CACCAAAC 32100 - - ACAAATCCCC TCAAAACAAA AATTGGCCAT GGCCTAGAAT TTGATTCAAA CA -#AGGCTATG 32160 - - GTTCCTAAAC TAGGAACTGG CCTTAGTTTT GACAGCACAG GTGCCATTAC AG -#TAGGAAAC 32220 - - AAAAATAATG ATAAGCTAAC TTTGTGGACC ACACCAGCTC CATCTCCTAA CT -#GTAGACTA 32280 - - AATGCAGAGA AAGATGCTAA ACTCACTTTG GTCTTAACAA AATGTGGCAG TC -#AAATACTT 32340 - - GCTACAGTTT CAGTTTTGGC TGTTAAAGGC AGTTTGGCTC CAATATCTGG AA -#CAGTTCAA 32400 - - AGTGCTCATC TTATTATAAG ATTTGACGAA AATGGAGTGC TACTAAACAA TT -#CCTTCCTG 32460 - - GACCCAGAAT ATTGGAACTT TAGAAATGGA GATCTTACTG AAGGCACAGC CT -#ATACAAAC 32520 - - GCTGTTGGAT TTATGCCTAA CCTATCAGCT TATCCAAAAT CTCACGGTAA AA -#CTGCCAAA 32580 - - AGTAACATTG TCAGTCAAGT TTACTTAAAC GGAGACAAAA CTAAACCTGT AA -#CACTAACC 32640 - - ATTACACTAA ACGGTACACA GGAAACAGGA GACACAACTC CAAGTGCATA CT -#CTATGTCA 32700 - - TTTTCATGGG ACTGGTCTGG CCACAACTAC ATTAATGAAA TATTTGCCAC AT -#CCTCTTAC 32760 - - ACTTTTTCAT ACATTGCCCA AGAATAAAGA ATCGTTTGTG TTATGTTTCA AC -#GTGTTTAT 32820 - - TTTTCAATTG CAGAAAATTT CAAGTCATTT TTCATTCAGT AGTATAGCCC CA -#CCACCACA 32880 - - TAGCTTATAC AGATCACCGT ACCTTAATCA AACTCACAGA ACCCTAGTAT TC -#AACCTGCC 32940 - - ACCTCCCTCC CAACACACAG AGTACACAGT CCTTTCTCCC CGGCTGGCCT TA -#AAAAGCAT 33000 - - CATATCATGG GTAACAGACA TATTCTTAGG TGTTATATTC CACACGGTTT CC -#TGTCGAGC 33060 - - CAAACGCTCA TCAGTGATAT TAATAAACTC CCCGGGCAGC TCACTTAAGT TC -#ATGTCGCT 33120 - - GTCCAGCTGC TGAGCCACAG GCTGCTGTCC AACTTGCGGT TGCTTAACGG GC -#GGCGAAGG 33180 - - AGAAGTCCAC GCCTACATGG GGGTAGAGTC ATAATCGTGC ATCAGGATAG GG -#CGGTGGTG 33240 - - CTGCAGCAGC GCGCGAATAA ACTGCTGCCG CCGCCGCTCC GTCCTGCAGG AA -#TACAACAT 33300 - - GGCAGTGGTC TCCTCAGCGA TGATTCGCAC CGCCCGCAGC ATAAGGCGCC TT -#GTCCTCCG 33360 - - GGCACAGCAG CGCACCCTGA TCTCACTTAA ATCAGCACAG TAACTGCAGC AC -#AGCACCAC 33420 - - AATATTGTTC AAAATCCCAC AGTGCAAGGC GCTGTATCCA AAGCTCATGG CG -#GGGACCAC 33480 - - AGAACCCACG TGGCCATCAT ACCACAAGCG CAGGTAGATT AAGTGGCGAC CC -#CTCATAAA 33540 - - CACGCTGGAC ATAAACATTA CCTCTTTTGG CATGTTGTAA TTCACCACCT CC -#CGGTACCA 33600 - - TATAAACCTC TGATTAAACA TGGCGCCATC CACCACCATC CTAAACCAGC TG -#GCCAAAAC 33660 - - CTGCCCGCCG GCTATACACT GCAGGGAACC GGGACTGGAA CAATGACAGT GG -#AGAGCCCA 33720 - - GGACTCGTAA CCATGGATCA TCATGCTCGT CATGATATCA ATGTTGGCAC AA -#CACAGGCA 33780 - - CACGTGCATA CACTTCCTCA GGATTACAAG CTCCTCCCGC GTTAGAACCA TA -#TCCCAGGG 33840 - - AACAACCCAT TCCTGAATCA GCGTAAATCC CACACTGCAG GGAAGACCTC GC -#ACGTAACT 33900 - - CACGTTGTGC ATTGTCAAAG TGTTACATTC GGGCAGCAGC GGATGATCCT CC -#AGTATGGT 33960 - - AGCGCGGGTT TCTGTCTCAA AAGGAGGTAG ACGATCCCTA CTGTACGGAG TG -#CGCCGAGA 34020 - - CAACCGAGAT CGTGTTGGTC GTAGTGTCAT GCCAAATGGA ACGCCGGACG TA -#GTCATATT 34080 - - TCCTGAAGCA AAACCAGGTG CGGGCGTGAC AAACAGATCT GCGTCTCCGG TC -#TCGCCGCT 34140 - - TAGATCGCTC TGTGTAGTAG TTGTAGTATA TCCACTCTCT CAAAGCATCC AG -#GCGCCCCC 34200 - - TGGCTTCGGG TTCTATGTAA ACTCCTTCAT GCGCCGCTGC CCTGATAACA TC -#CACCACCG 34260 - - CAGAATAAGC CACACCCAGC CAACCTACAC ATTCGTTCTG CGAGTCACAC AC -#GGGAGGAG 34320 - - CGGGAAGAGC TGGAAGAACC ATGTTTTTTT TTTTATTCCA AAAGATTATC CA -#AAACCTCA 34380 - - AAATGAAGAT CTATTAAGTG AACGCGCTCC CCTCCGGTGG CGTGGTCAAA CT -#CTACAGCC 34440 - - AAAGAACAGA TAATGGCATT TGTAAGATGT TGCACAATGG CTTCCAAAAG GC -#AAACGGCC 34500 - - CTCACGTCCA AGTGGACGTA AAGGCTAAAC CCTTCAGGGT GAATCTCCTC TA -#TAAACATT 34560 - - CCAGCACCTT CAACCATGCC CAAATAATTC TCATCTCGCC ACCTTCTCAA TA -#TATCTCTA 34620 - - AGCAAATCCC GAATATTAAG TCCGGCCATT GTAAAAATCT GCTCCAGAGC GC -#CCTCCACC 34680 - - TTCAGCCTCA AGCAGCGAAT CATGATTGCA AAAATTCAGG TTCCTCACAG AC -#CTGTATAA 34740 - - GATTCAAAAG CGGAACATTA ACAAAAATAC CGCGATCCCG TAGGTCCCTT CG -#CAGGGCCA 34800 - - GCTGAACATA ATCGTGCAGG TCTGCACGGA CCAGCGCGGC CACTTCCCCG CC -#AGGAACCT 34860 - - TGACAAAAGA ACCCACACTG ATTATGACAC GCATACTCGG AGCTATGCTA AC -#CAGCGTAG 34920 - - CCCCGATGTA AGCTTTGTTG CATGGGCGGC GATATAAAAT GCAAGGTGCT GC -#TCAAAAAA 34980 - - TCAGGCAAAG CCTCGCGCAA AAAAGAAAGC ACATCGTAGT CATGCTCATG CA -#GATAAAGG 35040 - - CAGGTAAGCT CCGGAACCAC CACAGAAAAA GACACCATTT TTCTCTCAAA CA -#TGTCTGCG 35100 - - GGTTTCTGCA TAAACACAAA ATAAAATAAC AAAAAAACAT TTAAACATTA GA -#AGCCTGTC 35160 - - TTACAACAGG AAAAACAACC CTTATAAGCA TAAGACGGAC TACGGCCATG CC -#GGCGTGAC 35220 - - CGTAAAAAAA CTGGTCACCG TGATTAAAAA GCACCACCGA CAGCTCCTCG GT -#CATGTCCG 35280 - - GAGTCATAAT GTAAGACTCG GTAAACACAT CAGGTTGATT CATCGGTCAG TG -#CTAAAAAG 35340 - - CGACCGAAAT AGCCCGGGGG AATACATACC CGCAGGCGTA GAGACAACAT TA -#CAGCCCCC 35400 - - ATAGGAGGTA TAACAAAATT AATAGGAGAG AAAAACACAT AAACACCTGA AA -#AACCCTCC 35460 - - TGCCTAGGCA AAATAGCACC CTCCCGCTCC AGAACAACAT ACAGCGCTTC AC -#AGCGGCAG 35520 - - CCTAACAGTC AGCCTTACCA GTAAAAAAGA AAACCTATTA AAAAAACACC AC -#TCGACACG 35580 - - GCACCAGCTC AATCAGTCAC AGTGTAAAAA AGGGCCAAGT GCAGAGCGAG TA -#TATATAGG 35640 - - ACTAAAAAAT GACGTAACGG TTAAAGTCCA CAAAAAACAC CCAGAAAACC GC -#ACGCGAAC 35700 - - CTACGCCCAG AAACGAAAGC CAAAAAACCC ACAACTTCCT CAAATCGTCA CT -#TCCGTTTT 35760 - - CCCACGTTAC GTAACTTCCC ATTTTAAGAA AACTACAATT CCCAACACAT AC -#AAGTTACT 35820 - - CCGCCCTAAA ACCTACGTCA CCCGCCCCGT TCCCACGCCC CGCGCCACGT CA -#CAAACTCC 35880 - - ACCCCCTCAT TATCATATTG GCTTCAATCC AAAATAAGGT ATATTATTGA TG - #ATG 35935 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:2: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 25 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:2: - - TTCATTTTAT GTTTCAGGTT CAGGG - # - # 25 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:3: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 20 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:3: - - TTACCGCCAC ACTCGCAGGG - # - # - # 20 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:4: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 34303 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:4: - - TTATTTTGGA TTGAAGCCAA TATGATAATG AGGGGGTGGA GTTTGTGACG TG -#GCGCGGGG 60 - - CGTGGGAACG GGGCGGGTGA CGTAGTAGTG TGGCGGAAGT GTGATGTTGC AA -#GTGTGGCG 120 - - GAACACATGT AAGCGACGGA TGTGGCAAAA GTGACGTTTT TGGTGTGCGC CG -#GATCCACA 180 - - GGACGGGTGT GGTCGCCATG ATCGCGTAGT CGATAGTGGC TCCAAGTAGC GA -#AGCGAGCA 240 - - GGACTGGGCG GCGGCCAAAG CGGTCGGACA GTGCTCCGAG AACGGGTGCG CA -#TAGAAATT 300 - - GCATCAACGC ATATAGCGCT AGCAGCACGC CATAGTGACT GGCGATGCTG TC -#GGAATGGA 360 - - CGATATCCCG CAAGAGGCCC GGCAGTACCG GCATAACCAA GCCTATGCCT AC -#AGCATCCA 420 - - GGGTGACGGT GCCGAGGATG ACGATGAGCG CATTGTTAGA TTTCATACAC GG -#TGCCTGAC 480 - - TGCGTTAGCA ATTTAACTGT GATAAACTAC CGCATTAAAG CTTATCGATG AT -#AAGCTGTC 540 - - AAACATGAGA ATTCTTGAAG ACGAAAGGGC CTCGTGATAC GCCTATTTTT AT -#AGGTTAAT 600 - - GTCATGATAA TAATGGTTTC TTAGACGTCA GGTGGCACTT TTCGGGGAAA TG -#TGCGCGGA 660 - - ACCCCTATTT GTTTATTTTT CTAAATACAT TCAAATATGT ATCCGCTCAT GA -#GACAATAA 720 - - CCCTGATAAA TGCTTCAATA ATATTGAAAA AGGAAGAGTA TGAGTATTCA AC -#ATTTCCGT 780 - - GTCGCCCTTA TTCCCTTTTT TGCGGCATTT TGCCTTCCTG TTTTTGCTCA CC -#CAGAAACG 840 - - CTGGTGAAAG TAAAAGATGC TGAAGATCAG TTGGGTGCAC GAGTGGGTTA CA -#TCGAACTG 900 - - GATCTCAACA GCGGTAAGAT CCTTGAGAGT TTTCGCCCCG AAGAACGTTT TC -#CAATGATG 960 - - AGCACTTTTA AAGTTCTGCT ATGTGGCGCG GTATTATCCC GTGTTGACGC CG -#GGCAAGAG 1020 - - CAACTCGGTC GCCGCATACA CTATTCTCAG AATGACTTGG TTGAGTACTC AC -#CAGTCACA 1080 - - GAAAAGCATC TTACGGATGG CATGACAGTA AGAGAATTAT GCAGTGCTGC CA -#TAACCATG 1140 - - AGTGATAACA CTGCGGCCAA CTTACTTCTG ACAACGATCG GAGGACCGAA GG -#AGCTAACC 1200 - - GCTTTTTTGC ACAACATGGG GGATCATGTA ACTCGCCTTG ATCGTTGGGA AC -#CGGAGCTG 1260 - - AATGAAGCCA TACCAAACGA CGAGCGTGAC ACCACGATGC CTGCAGCAAT GG -#CAACAACG 1320 - - TTGCGCAAAC TATTAACTGG CGAACTACTT ACTCTAGCTT CCCGGCAACA AT -#TAATAGAC 1380 - - TGGATGGAGG CGGATAAAGT TGCAGGACCA CTTCTGCGCT CGGCCCTTCC GG -#CTGGCTGG 1440 - - TTTATTGCTG ATAAATCTGG AGCCGGTGAG CGTGGGTCTC GCGGTATCAT TG -#CAGCACTG 1500 - - GGGCCAGATG GTAAGCCCTC CCGTATCGTA GTTATCTACA CGACGGGGAG TC -#AGGCAACT 1560 - - ATGGATGAAC GAAATAGACA GATCGCTGAG ATAGGTGCCT CACTGATTAA GC -#ATTGGTAA 1620 - - CTGTCAGACC AAGTTTACTC ATATATACTT TAGATTGATT TAAAACTTCA TT -#TTTAATTT 1680 - - AAAAGGATCT AGGTGAAGAT CCTTTTTGAT AATCTCATGA CCAAAATCCC TT -#AACGTGAG 1740 - - TTTTCGTTCC ACTGAGCGTC AGACCCCGTA GAAAAGATCA AAGGATCTTC TT -#GAGATCCT 1800 - - TTTTTTCTGC GCGTAATCTG CTGCTTGCAA ACAAAAAAAC CACCGCTACC AG -#CGGTGGTT 1860 - - TGTTTGCCGG ATCAAGAGCT ACCAACTCTT TTTCCGAAGG TAACTGGCTT CA -#GCAGAGCG 1920 - - CAGATACCAA ATACTGTCCT TCTAGTGTAG CCGTAGTTAG GCCACCACTT CA -#AGAACTCT 1980 - - GTAGCACCGC CTACATACCT CGCTCTGCTA ATCCTGTTAC CAGTGGCTGC TG -#CCAGTGGC 2040 - - GATAAGTCGT GTCTTACCGG GTTGGACTCA AGACGATAGT TACCGGATAA GG -#CGCAGCGG 2100 - - TCGGGCTGAA CGGGGGGTTC GTGCACACAG CCCAGCTTGG AGCGAACGAC CT -#ACACCGAA 2160 - - CTGAGATACC TACAGCGTGA GCATTGAGAA AGCGCCACGC TTCCCGAAGG GA -#GAAAGGCG 2220 - - GACAGGTATC CGGTAAGCGG CAGGGTCGGA ACAGGAGAGC GCACGAGGGA GC -#TTCCAGGG 2280 - - GGAAACGCCT GGTATCTTTA TAGTCCTGTC GGGTTTCGCC ACCTCTGACT TG -#AGCGTCGA 2340 - - TTTTTGTGAT GCTCGTCAGG GGGGCGGAGC CTATGGAAAA ACGCCAGCAA CG -#CGGCCTTT 2400 - - TTACGGTTCC TGGCCTTTTG CTGGCCTTTT GCTCACATGT TCTTTCCTGC GT -#TATCCCCT 2460 - - GATTCTGTGG ATAACCGTAT TACCGCCTTT GAGTGAGCTG ATACCGCTCG CC -#GCAGCCGA 2520 - - ACGACCGAGC GCAGCGAGTC AGTGAGCGAG GAAGCGGAAG AGCGCCTGAT GC -#GGTATTTT 2580 - - CTCCTTACGC ATCTGTGCGG TATTTCACAC CGCATATGGT GCACTCTCAG TA -#CAATCTGC 2640 - - TCTGATGCCG CATAGTTAAG CCAGTATACA CTCCGCTATC GCTACGTGAC TG -#GGTCATGG 2700 - - CTGCGCCCCG ACACCCGCCA ACACCCGCTG ACGCGCCCTG ACGGGCTTGT CT -#GCTCCCGG 2760 - - CATCCGCTTA CAGACAAGCT GTGACCGTCT CCGGGAGCTG CATGTGTCAG AG -#GTTTTCAC 2820 - - CGTCATCACC GAAACGCGCG AGGCAGTCTA GACAATAGTA GTACGGATAG CT -#GTGACTCC 2880 - - GGTCCTTCTA ACACACCTCC TGAGATACAC CCGGTGGTCC CGCTGTGCCC CA -#TTAAACCA 2940 - - GTTGCCGTGA GAGTTGGTGG GCGTCGCCAG GCTGTGGAAT GTATCGAGGA CT -#TGCTTAAC 3000 - - GAGCCTGGGC AACCTTTGGA CTTGAGCTGT AAACGCCCCA GGCCATAAGG TG -#TAAACCTG 3060 - - TGATTGCGTG TGTGGTTAAC GCCTTTGTTT GCTGAATGAG TTGATGTAAG TT -#TAATAAAG 3120 - - GGTGAGATAA TGTTTAACTT GCATGGCGTG TTAAATGGGG CGGGGCTTAA AG -#GGTATATA 3180 - - ATGCGCCGTG GGCTAATCTT GGTTACATCT GACCTCATGG AGGCTTGGGA GT -#GTTTGGAA 3240 - - GATTTTTCTG CTGTGCGTAA CTTGCTGGAA CAGAGCTCTA ACAGTACCTC TT -#GGTTTTGG 3300 - - AGGTTTCTGT GGGGCTCATC CCAGGCAAAG TTAGTCTGCA GAATTAAGGA GG -#ATTACAAG 3360 - - TGGGAATTTG AAGAGCTTTT GAAATCCTGT GGTGAGCTGT TTGATTCTTT GA -#ATCTGGGT 3420 - - CACCAGGCGC TTTTCCAAGA GAAGGTCATC AAGACTTTGG ATTTTTCCAC AC -#CGGGGCGC 3480 - - GCTGCGGCTG CTGTTGCTTT TTTGAGTTTT ATAAAGGATA AATGGAGCGA AG -#AAACCCAT 3540 - - CTGAGCGGGG GGTACCTGCT GGATTTTCTG GCCATGCATC TGTGGAGAGC GG -#TTGTGAGA 3600 - - CACAAGAATC GCCTGCTACT GTTGTCTTCC GTCCGCCCGG CGATAATACC GA -#CGGAGGAG 3660 - - CAGCAGCAGC AGCAGGAGGA AGCCAGGCGG CGGCGGCAGG AGCAGAGCCC AT -#GGAACCCG 3720 - - AGAGCCGGCC TGGACCCTCG GGAATGAATG TTGTACAGGT GGCTGAACTG TA -#TCCAGAAC 3780 - - TGAGACGCAT TTTGACAATT ACAGAGGATG GGCAGGGGCT AAAGGGGGTA AA -#GAGGGAGC 3840 - - GGGGGGCTTG TGAGGCTACA GAGGAGGCTA GGAATCTAGC TTTTAGCTTA AT -#GACCAGAC 3900 - - ACCGTCCTGA GTGTATTACT TTTCAACAGA TCAAGGATAA TTGCGCTAAT GA -#GCTTGATC 3960 - - TGCTGGCGCA GAAGTATTCC ATAGAGCAGC TGACCACTTA CTGGCTGCAG CC -#AGGGGATG 4020 - - ATTTTGAGGA GGCTATTAGG GTATATGCAA AGGTGGCACT TAGGCCAGAT TG -#CAAGTACA 4080 - - AGATCAGCAA ACTTGTAAAT ATCAGGAATT GTTGCTACAT TTCTGGGAAC GG -#GGCCGAGG 4140 - - TGGAGATAGA TACGGAGGAT AGGGTGGCCT TTAGATGTAG CATGATAAAT AT -#GTGGCCGG 4200 - - GGGTGCTTGG CATGGACGGG GTGGTTATTA TGAATGTAAG GTTTACTGGC CC -#CAATTTTA 4260 - - GCGGTACGGT TTTCCTGGCC AATACCAACC TTATCCTACA CGGTGTAAGC TT -#CTATGGGT 4320 - - TTAACAATAC CTGTGTGGAA GCCTGGACCG ATGTAAGGGT TCGGGGCTGT GC -#CTTTTACT 4380 - - GCTGCTGGAA GGGGGTGGTG TGTCGCCCCA AAAGCAGGGC TTCAATTAAG AA -#ATGCCTCT 4440 - - TTGAAAGGTG TACCTTGGGT ATCCTGTCTG AGGGTAACTC CAGGGTGCGC CA -#CAATGTGG 4500 - - CCTCCGACTG TGGTTGCTTC ATGCTAGTGA AAAGCGTGGC TGTGATTAAG CA -#TAACATGG 4560 - - TATGTGGCAA CTGCGAGGAC AGGGCCTCTC AGATGCTGAC CTGCTCGGAC GG -#CAACTGTC 4620 - - ACCTGCTGAA GACCATTCAC GTAGCCAGCC ACTCTCGCAA GGCCTGGCCA GT -#GTTTGAGC 4680 - - ATAACATACT GACCCGCTGT TCCTTGCATT TGGGTAACAG GAGGGGGGTG TT -#CCTACCTT 4740 - - ACCAATGCAA TTTGAGTCAC ACTAAGATAT TGCTTGAGCC CGAGAGCATG TC -#CAAGGTGA 4800 - - ACCTGAACGG GGTGTTTGAC ATGACCATGA AGATCTGGAA GGTGCTGAGG TA -#CGATGAGA 4860 - - CCCGCACCAG GTGCAGACCC TGCGAGTGTG GCGGTAAACA TATTAGGAAC CA -#GCCTGTGA 4920 - - TGCTGGATGT GACCGAGGAG CTGAGGCCCG ATCACTTGGT GCTGGCCTGC AC -#CCGCGCTG 4980 - - AGTTTGGCTC TAGCGATGAA GATACAGATT GAGGTACTGA AATGTGTGGG CG -#TGGCTTAA 5040 - - GGGTGGGAAA GAATATATAA GGTGGGGGTC TTATGTAGTT TTGTATCTGT TT -#TGCAGCAG 5100 - - CCGCCGCCGC CATGAGCACC AACTCGTTTG ATGGAAGCAT TGTGAGCTCA TA -#TTTGACAA 5160 - - CGCGCATGCC CCCATGGGCC GGGGTGCGTC AGAATGTGAT GGGCTCCAGC AT -#TGATGGTC 5220 - - GCCCCGTCCT GCCCGCAAAC TCTACTACCT TGACCTACGA GACCGTGTCT GG -#AACGCCGT 5280 - - TGGAGACTGC AGCCTCCGCC GCCGCTTCAG CCGCTGCAGC CACCGCCCGC GG -#GATTGTGA 5340 - - CTGACTTTGC TTTCCTGAGC CCGCTTGCAA GCAGTGCAGC TTCCCGTTCA TC -#CGCCCGCG 5400 - - ATGACAAGTT GACGGCTCTT TTGGCACAAT TGGATTCTTT GACCCGGGAA CT -#TAATGTCG 5460 - - TTTCTCAGCA GCTGTTGGAT CTGCGCCAGC AGGTTTCTGC CCTGAAGGCT TC -#CTCCCCTC 5520 - - CCAATGCGGT TTAAAACATA AATAAAAAAC CAGACTCTGT TTGGATTTGG AT -#CAAGCAAG 5580 - - TGTCTTGCTG TCTTTATTTA GGGGTTTTGC GCGCGCGGTA GGCCCGGGAC CA -#GCGGTCTC 5640 - - GGTCGTTGAG GGTCCTGTGT ATTTTTTCCA GGACGTGGTA AAGGTGACTC TG -#GATGTTCA 5700 - - GATACATGGG CATAAGCCCG TCTCTGGGGT GGAGGTAGCA CCACTGCAGA GC -#TTCATGCT 5760 - - GCGGGGTGGT GTTGTAGATG ATCCAGTCGT AGCAGGAGCG CTGGGCGTGG TG -#CCTAAAAA 5820 - - TGTCTTTCAG TAGCAAGCTG ATTGCCAGGG GCAGGCCCTT GGTGTAAGTG TT -#TACAAAGC 5880 - - GGTTAAGCTG GGATGGGTGC ATACGTGGGG ATATGAGATG CATCTTGGAC TG -#TATTTTTA 5940 - - GGTTGGCTAT GTTCCCAGCC ATATCCCTCC GGGGATTCAT GTTGTGCAGA AC -#CACCAGCA 6000 - - CAGTGTATCC GGTGCACTTG GGAAATTTGT CATGTAGCTT AGAAGGAAAT GC -#GTGGAAGA 6060 - - ACTTGGAGAC GCCCTTGTGA CCTCCAAGAT TTTCCATGCA TTCGTCCATA AT -#GATGGCAA 6120 - - TGGGCCCACG GGCGGCGGCC TGGGCGAAGA TATTTCTGGG ATCACTAACG TC -#ATAGTTGT 6180 - - GTTCCAGGAT GAGATCGTCA TAGGCCATTT TTACAAAGCG CGGGCGGAGG GT -#GCCAGACT 6240 - - GCGGTATAAT GGTTCCATCC GGCCCAGGGG CGTAGTTACC CTCACAGATT TG -#CATTTCCC 6300 - - ACGCTTTGAG TTCAGATGGG GGGATCATGT CTACCTGCGG GGCGATGAAG AA -#AACGGTTT 6360 - - CCGGGGTAGG GGAGATCAGC TGGGAAGAAA GCAGGTTCCT GAGCAGCTGC GA -#CTTACCGC 6420 - - AGCCGGTGGG CCCGTAAATC ACACCTATTA CCGGGTGCAA CTGGTAGTTA AG -#AGAGCTGC 6480 - - AGCTGCCGTC ATCCCTGAGC AGGGGGGCCA CTTCGTTAAG CATGTCCCTG AC -#TCGCATGT 6540 - - TTTCCCTGAC CAAATCCGCC AGAAGGCGCT CGCCGCCCAG CGATAGCAGT TC -#TTGCAAGG 6600 - - AAGCAAAGTT TTTCAACGGT TTGAGACCGT CCGCCGTAGG CATGCTTTTG AG -#CGTTTGAC 6660 - - CAAGCAGTTC CAGGCGGTCC CACAGCTCGG TCACCTGCTC TACGGCATCT CG -#ATCCAGCA 6720 - - TATCTCCTCG TTTCGCGGGT TGGGGCGGCT TTCGCTGTAC GGCAGTAGTC GG -#TGCTCGTC 6780 - - CAGACGGGCC AGGGTCATGT CTTTCCACGG GCGCAGGGTC CTCGTCAGCG TA -#GTCTGGGT 6840 - - CACGGTGAAG GGGTGCGCTC CGGGCTGCGC GCTGGCCAGG GTGCGCTTGA GG -#CTGGTCCT 6900 - - GCTGGTGCTG AAGCGCTGCC GGTCTTCGCC CTGCGCGTCG GCCAGGTAGC AT -#TTGACCAT 6960 - - GGTGTCATAG TCCAGCCCCT CCGCGGCGTG GCCCTTGGCG CGCAGCTTGC CC -#TTGGAGGA 7020 - - GGCGCCGCAC GAGGGGCAGT GCAGACTTTT GAGGGCGTAG AGCTTGGGCG CG -#AGAAATAC 7080 - - CGATTCCGGG GAGTAGGCAT CCGCGCCGCA GGCCCCGCAG ACGGTCTCGC AT -#TCCACGAG 7140 - - CCAGGTGAGC TCTGGCCGTT CGGGGTCAAA AACCAGGTTT CCCCCATGCT TT -#TTGATGCG 7200 - - TTTCTTACCT CTGGTTTCCA TGAGCCGGTG TCCACGCTCG GTGACGAAAA GG -#CTGTCCGT 7260 - - GTCCCCGTAT ACAGACTTGA GAGGCCTGTC CTCGAGCGGT GTTCCGCGGT CC -#TCCTCGTA 7320 - - TAGAAACTCG GACCACTCTG AGACAAAGGC TCGCGTCCAG GCCAGCACGA AG -#GAGGCTAA 7380 - - GTGGGAGGGG TAGCGGTCGT TGTCCACTAG GGGGTCCACT CGCTCCAGGG TG -#TGAAGACA 7440 - - CATGTCGCCC TCTTCGGCAT CAAGGAAGGT GATTGGTTTG TAGGTGTAGG CC -#ACGTGACC 7500 - - GGGTGTTCCT GAAGGGGGGC TATAAAAGGG GGTGGGGGCG CGTTCGTCCT CA -#CTCTCTTC 7560 - - CGCATCGCTG TCTGCGAGGG CCAGCTGTTG GGGTGAGTAC TCCCTCTGAA AA -#GCGGGCAT 7620 - - GACTTCTGCG CTAAGATTGT CAGTTTCCAA AAACGAGGAG GATTTGATAT TC -#ACCTGGCC 7680 - - CGCGGTGATG CCTTTGAGGG TGGCCGCATC CATCTGGTCA GAAAAGACAA TC -#TTTTTGTT 7740 - - GTCAAGCTTG GTGGCAAACG ACCCGTAGAG GGCGTTGGAC AGCAACTTGG CG -#ATGGAGCG 7800 - - CAGGGTTTGG TTTTTGTCGC GATCGGCGCG CTCCTTGGCC GCGATGTTTA GC -#TGCACGTA 7860 - - TTCGCGCGCA ACGCACCGCC ATTCGGGAAA GACGGTGGTG CGCTCGTCGG GC -#ACCAGGTG 7920 - - CACGCGCCAA CCGCGGTTGT GCAGGGTGAC AAGGTCAACG CTGGTGGCTA CC -#TCTCCGCG 7980 - - TAGGCGCTCG TTGGTCCAGC AGAGGCGGCC GCCCTTGCGC GAGCAGAATG GC -#GGTAGGGG 8040 - - GTCTAGCTGC GTCTCGTCCG GGGGGTCTGC GTCCACGGTA AAGACCCCGG GC -#AGCAGGCG 8100 - - CGCGTCGAAG TAGTCTATCT TGCATCCTTG CAAGTCTAGC GCCTGCTGCC AT -#GCGCGGGC 8160 - - GGCAAGCGCG CGCTCGTATG GGTTGAGTGG GGGACCCCAT GGCATGGGGT GG -#GTGAGCGC 8220 - - GGAGGCGTAC ATGCCGCAAA TGTCGTAAAC GTAGAGGGGC TCTCTGAGTA TT -#CCAAGATA 8280 - - TGTAGGGTAG CATCTTCCAC CGCGGATGCT GGCGCGCACG TAATCGTATA GT -#TCGTGCGA 8340 - - GGGAGCGAGG AGGTCGGGAC CGAGGTTGCT ACGGGCGGGC TGCTCTGCTC GG -#AAGACTAT 8400 - - CTGCCTGAAG ATGGCATGTG AGTTGGATGA TATGGTTGGA CGCTGGAAGA CG -#TTGAAGCT 8460 - - GGCGTCTGTG AGACCTACCG CGTCACGCAC GAAGGAGGCG TAGGAGTCGC GC -#AGCTTGTT 8520 - - GACCAGCTCG GCGGTGACCT GCACGTCTAG GGCGCAGTAG TCCAGGGTTT CC -#TTGATGAT 8580 - - GTCATACTTA TCCTGTCCCT TTTTTTTCCA CAGCTCGCGG TTGAGGACAA AC -#TCTTCGCG 8640 - - GTCTTTCCAG TACTCTTGGA TCGGAAACCC GTCGGCCTCC GAACGGTAAG AG -#CCTAGCAT 8700 - - GTAGAACTGG TTGACGGCCT GGTAGGCGCA GCATCCCTTT TCTACGGGTA GC -#GCGTATGC 8760 - - CTGCGCGGCC TTCCGGAGCG AGGTGTGGGT GAGCGCAAAG GTGTCCCTGA CC -#ATGACTTT 8820 - - GAGGTACTGG TATTTGAAGT CAGTGTCGTC GCATCCGCCC TGCTCCCAGA GC -#AAAAAGTC 8880 - - CGTGCGCTTT TTGGAACGCG GATTTGGCAG GGCGAAGGTG ACATCGTTGA AG -#AGTATCTT 8940 - - TCCCGCGCGA GGCATAAAGT TGCGTGTGAT GCGGAAGGGT CCCGGCACCT CG -#GAACGGTT 9000 - - GTTAATTACC TGGGCGGCGA GCACGATCTC GTCAAAGCCG TTGATGTTGT GG -#CCCACAAT 9060 - - GTAAAGTTCC AAGAAGCGCG GGATGCCCTT GATGGAAGGC AATTTTTTAA GT -#TCCTCGTA 9120 - - GGTGAGCTCT TCAGGGGAGC TGAGCCCGTG CTCTGAAAGG GCCCAGTCTG CA -#AGATGAGG 9180 - - GTTGGAAGCG ACGAATGAGC TCCACAGGTC ACGGGCCATT AGCATTTGCA GG -#TGGTCGCG 9240 - - AAAGGTCCTA AACTGGCGAC CTATGGCCAT TTTTTCTGGG GTGATGCAGT AG -#AAGGTAAG 9300 - - CGGGTCTTGT TCCCAGCGGT CCCATCCAAG GTTCGCGGCT AGGTCTCGCG CG -#GCAGTCAC 9360 - - TAGAGGCTCA TCTCCGCCGA ACTTCATGAC CAGCATGAAG GGCACGAGCT GC -#TTCCCAAA 9420 - - GGCCCCCATC CAAGTATAGG TCTCTACATC GTAGGTGACA AAGAGACGCT CG -#GTGCGAGG 9480 - - ATGCGAGCCG ATCGGGAAGA ACTGGATCTC CCGCCACCAA TTGGAGGAGT GG -#CTATTGAT 9540 - - GTGGTGAAAG TAGAAGTCCC TGCGACGGGC CGAACACTCG TGCTGGCTTT TG -#TAAAAACG 9600 - - TGCGCAGTAC TGGCAGCGGT GCACGGGCTG TACATCCTGC ACGAGGTTGA CC -#TGACGACC 9660 - - GCGCACAAGG AAGCAGAGTG GGAATTTGAG CCCCTCGCCT GGCGGGTTTG GC -#TGGTGGTC 9720 - - TTCTACTTCG GCTGCTTGTC CTTGACCGTC TGGCTGCTCG AGGGGAGTTA CG -#GTGGATCG 9780 - - GACCACCACG CCGCGCGAGC CCAAAGTCCA GATGTCCGCG CGCGGCGGTC GG -#AGCTTGAT 9840 - - GACAACATCG CGCAGATGGG AGCTGTCCAT GGTCTGGAGC TCCCGCGGCG TC -#AGGTCAGG 9900 - - CGGGAGCTCC TGCAGGTTTA CCTCGCATAG ACGGGTCAGG GCGCGGGCTA GA -#TCCAGGTG 9960 - - ATACCTAATT TCCAGGGGCT GGTTGGTGGC GGCGTCGATG GCTTGCAAGA GG -#CCGCATCC 10020 - - CCGCGGCGCG ACTACGGTAC CGCGCGGCGG GCGGTGGGCC GCGGGGGTGT CC -#TTGGATGA 10080 - - TGCATCTAAA AGCGGTGACG CGGGCGAGCC CCCGGAGGTA GGGGGGGCTC CG -#GACCCGCC 10140 - - GGGAGAGGGG GCAGGGGCAC GTCGGCGCCG CGCGCGGGCA GGAGCTGGTG CT -#GCGCGCGT 10200 - - AGGTTGCTGG CGAACGCGAC GACGCGGCGG TTGATCTCCT GAATCTGGCG CC -#TCTGCGTG 10260 - - AAGACGACGG GCCCGGTGAG CTTGAGCCTG AAAGAGAGTT CGACAGAATC AA -#TTTCGGTG 10320 - - TCGTTGACGG CGGCCTGGCG CAAAATCTCC TGCACGTCTC CTGAGTTGTC TT -#GATAGGCG 10380 - - ATCTCGGCCA TGAACTGCTC GATCTCTTCC TCCTGGAGAT CTCCGCGTCC GG -#CTCGCTCC 10440 - - ACGGTGGCGG CGAGGTCGTT GGAAATGCGG GCCATGAGCT GCGAGAAGGC GT -#TGAGGCCT 10500 - - CCCTCGTTCC AGACGCGGCT GTAGACCACG CCCCCTTCGG CATCGCGGGC GC -#GCATGACC 10560 - - ACCTGCGCGA GATTGAGCTC CACGTGCCGG GCGAAGACGG CGTAGTTTCG CA -#GGCGCTGA 10620 - - AAGAGGTAGT TGAGGGTGGT GGCGGTGTGT TCTGCCACGA AGAAGTACAT AA -#CCCAGCGT 10680 - - CGCAACGTGG ATTCGTTGAT ATCCCCCAAG GCCTCAAGGC GCTCCATGGC CT -#CGTAGAAG 10740 - - TCCACGGCGA AGTTGAAAAA CTGGGAGTTG CGCGCCGACA CGGTTAACTC CT -#CCTCCAGA 10800 - - AGACGGATGA GCTCGGCGAC AGTGTCGCGC ACCTCGCGCT CAAAGGCTAC AG -#GGGCCTCT 10860 - - TCTTCTTCTT CAATCTCCTC TTCCATAAGG GCCTCCCCTT CTTCTTCTTC TG -#GCGGCGGT 10920 - - GGGGGAGGGG GGACACGGCG GCGACGACGG CGCACCGGGA GGCGGTCGAC AA -#AGCGCTCG 10980 - - ATCATCTCCC CGCGGCGACG GCGCATGGTC TCGGTGACGG CGCGGCCGTT CT -#CGCGGGGG 11040 - - CGCAGTTGGA AGACGCCGCC CGTCATGTCC CGGTTATGGG TTGGCGGGGG GC -#TGCCATGC 11100 - - GGCAGGGATA CGGCGCTAAC GATGCATCTC AACAATTGTT GTGTAGGTAC TC -#CGCCGCCG 11160 - - AGGGACCTGA GCGAGTCCGC ATCGACCGGA TCGGAAAACC TCTCGAGAAA GG -#CGTCTAAC 11220 - - CAGTCACAGT CGCAAGGTAG GCTGAGCACC GTGGCGGGCG GCAGCGGGCG GC -#GGTCGGGG 11280 - - TTGTTTCTGG CGGAGGTGCT GCTGATGATG TAATTAAAGT AGGCGGTCTT GA -#GACGGCGG 11340 - - ATGGTCGACA GAAGCACCAT GTCCTTGGGT CCGGCCTGCT GAATGCGCAG GC -#GGTCGGCC 11400 - - ATGCCCCAGG CTTCGTTTTG ACATCGGCGC AGGTCTTTGT AGTAGTCTTG CA -#TGAGCCTT 11460 - - TCTACCGGCA CTTCTTCTTC TCCTTCCTCT TGTCCTGCAT CTCTTGCATC TA -#TCGCTGCG 11520 - - GCGGCGGCGG AGTTTGGCCG TAGGTGGCGC CCTCTTCCTC CCATGCGTGT GA -#CCCCGAAG 11580 - - CCCCTCATCG GCTGAAGCAG GGCTAGGTCG GCGACAACGC GCTCGGCTAA TA -#TGGCCTGC 11640 - - TGCACCTGCG TGAGGGTAGA CTGGAAGTCA TCCATGTCCA CAAAGCGGTG GT -#ATGCGCCC 11700 - - GTGTTGATGG TGTAAGTGCA GTTGGCCATA ACGGACCAGT TAACGGTCTG GT -#GACCCGGC 11760 - - TGCGAGAGCT CGGTGTACCT GAGACGCGAG TAAGCCCTCG AGTCAAATAC GT -#AGTCGTTG 11820 - - CAAGTCCGCA CCAGGTACTG GTATCCCACC AAAAAGTGCG GCGGCGGCTG GC -#GGTAGAGG 11880 - - GGCCAGCGTA GGGTGGCCGG GGCTCCGGGG GCGAGATCTT CCAACATAAG GC -#GATGATAT 11940 - - CCGTAGATGT ACCTGGACAT CCAGGTGATG CCGGCGGCGG TGGTGGAGGC GC -#GCGGAAAG 12000 - - TCGCGGACGC GGTTCCAGAT GTTGCGCAGC GGCAAAAAGT GCTCCATGGT CG -#GGACGCTC 12060 - - TGGCCGGTCA GGCGCGCGCA ATCGTTGACG CTCTACCGTG CAAAAGGAGA GC -#CTGTAAGC 12120 - - GGGCACTCTT CCGTGGTCTG GTGGATAAAT TCGCAAGGGT ATCATGGCGG AC -#GACCGGGG 12180 - - TTCGAGCCCC GTATCCGGCC GTCCGCCGTG ATCCATGCGG TTACCGCCCG CG -#TGTCGAAC 12240 - - CCAGGTGTGC GACGTCAGAC AACGGGGGAG TGCTCCTTTT GGCTTCCTTC CA -#GGCGCGGC 12300 - - GGCTGCTGCG CTAGCTTTTT TGGCCACTGG CCGCGCGCAG CGTAAGCGGT TA -#GGCTGGAA 12360 - - AGCGAAAGCA TTAAGTGGCT CGCTCCCTGT AGCCGGAGGG TTATTTTCCA AG -#GGTTGAGT 12420 - - CGCGGGACCC CCGGTTCGAG TCTCGGACCG GCCGGACTGC GGCGAACGGG GG -#TTTGCCTC 12480 - - CCCGTCATGC AAGACCCCGC TTGCAAATTC CTCCGGAAAC AGGGACGAGC CC -#CTTTTTTG 12540 - - CTTTTCCCAG ATGCATCCGG TGCTGCGGCA GATGCGCCCC CCTCCTCAGC AG -#CGGCAAGA 12600 - - GCAAGAGCAG CGGCAGACAT GCAGGGCACC CTCCCCTCCT CCTACCGCGT CA -#GGAGGGGC 12660 - - GACATCCGCG GTTGACGCGG CAGCAGATGG TGATTACGAA CCCCCGCGGC GC -#CGGGCCCG 12720 - - GCACTACCTG GACTTGGAGG AGGGCGAGGG CCTGGCGCGG CTAGGAGCGC CC -#TCTCCTGA 12780 - - GCGGTACCCA AGGGTGCAGC TGAAGCGTGA TACGCGTGAG GCGTACGTGC CG -#CGGCAGAA 12840 - - CCTGTTTCGC GACCGCGAGG GAGAGGAGCC CGAGGAGATG CGGGATCGAA AG -#TTCCACGC 12900 - - AGGGCGCGAG CTGCGGCATG GCCTGAATCG CGAGCGGTTG CTGCGCGAGG AG -#GACTTTGA 12960 - - GCCCGACGCG CGAACCGGGA TTAGTCCCGC GCGCGCACAC GTGGCGGCCG CC -#GACCTGGT 13020 - - AACCGCATAC GAGCAGACGG TGAACCAGGA GATTAACTTT CAAAAAAGCT TT -#AACAACCA 13080 - - CGTGCGTACG CTTGTGGCGC GCGAGGAGGT GGCTATAGGA CTGATGCATC TG -#TGGGACTT 13140 - - TGTAAGCGCG CTGGAGCAAA ACCCAAATAG CAAGCCGCTC ATGGCGCAGC TG -#TTCCTTAT 13200 - - AGTGCAGCAC AGCAGGGACA ACGAGGCATT CAGGGATGCG CTGCTAAACA TA -#GTAGAGCC 13260 - - CGAGGGCCGC TGGCTGCTCG ATTTGATAAA CATCCTGCAG AGCATAGTGG TG -#CAGGAGCG 13320 - - CAGCTTGAGC CTGGCTGACA AGGTGGCCGC CATCAACTAT TCCATGCTTA GC -#CTGGGCAA 13380 - - GTTTTACGCC CGCAAGATAT ACCATACCCC TTACGTTCCC ATAGACAAGG AG -#GTAAAGAT 13440 - - CGAGGGGTTC TACATGCGCA TGGCGCTGAA GGTGCTTACC TTGAGCGACG AC -#CTGGGCGT 13500 - - TTATCGCAAC GAGCGCATCC ACAAGGCCGT GAGCGTGAGC CGGCGGCGCG AG -#CTCAGCGA 13560 - - CCGCGAGCTG ATGCACAGCC TGCAAAGGGC CCTGGCTGGC ACGGGCAGCG GC -#GATAGAGA 13620 - - GGCCGAGTCC TACTTTGACG CGGGCGCTGA CCTGCGCTGG GCCCCAAGCC GA -#CGCGCCCT 13680 - - GGAGGCAGCT GGGGCCGGAC CTGGGCTGGC GGTGGCACCC GCGCGCGCTG GC -#AACGTCGG 13740 - - CGGCGTGGAG GAATATGACG AGGACGATGA GTACGAGCCA GAGGACGGCG AG -#TACTAAGC 13800 - - GGTGATGTTT CTGATCAGAT GATGCAAGAC GCAACGGACC CGGCGGTGCG GG -#CGGCGCTG 13860 - - CAGAGCCAGC CGTCCGGCCT TAACTCCACG GACGACTGGC GCCAGGTCAT GG -#ACCGCATC 13920 - - ATGTCGCTGA CTGCGCGCAA TCCTGACGCG TTCCGGCAGC AGCCGCAGGC CA -#ACCGGCTC 13980 - - TCCGCAATTC TGGAAGCGGT GGTCCCGGCG CGCGCAAACC CCACGCACGA GA -#AGGTGCTG 14040 - - GCGATCGTAA ACGCGCTGGC CGAAAACAGG GCCATCCGGC CCGACGAGGC CG -#GCCTGGTC 14100 - - TACGACGCGC TGCTTCAGCG CGTGGCTCGT TACAACAGCG GCAACGTGCA GA -#CCAACCTG 14160 - - GACCGGCTGG TGGGGGATGT GCGCGAGGCC GTGGCGCAGC GTGAGCGCGC GC -#AGCAGCAG 14220 - - GGCAACCTGG GCTCCATGGT TGCACTAAAC GCCTTCCTGA GTACACAGCC CG -#CCAACGTG 14280 - - CCGCGGGGAC AGGAGGACTA CACCAACTTT GTGAGCGCAC TGCGGCTAAT GG -#TGACTGAG 14340 - - ACACCGCAAA GTGAGGTGTA CCAGTCTGGG CCAGACTATT TTTTCCAGAC CA -#GTAGACAA 14400 - - GGCCTGCAGA CCGTAAACCT GAGCCAGGCT TTCAAAAACT TGCAGGGGCT GT -#GGGGGGTG 14460 - - CGGGCTCCCA CAGGCGACCG CGCGACCGTG TCTAGCTTGC TGACGCCCAA CT -#CGCGCCTG 14520 - - TTGCTGCTGC TAATAGCGCC CTTCACGGAC AGTGGCAGCG TGTCCCGGGA CA -#CATACCTA 14580 - - GGTCACTTGC TGACACTGTA CCGCGAGGCC ATAGGTCAGG CGCATGTGGA CG -#AGCATACT 14640 - - TTCCAGGAGA TTACAAGTGT CAGCCGCGCG CTGGGGCAGG AGGACACGGG CA -#GCCTGGAG 14700 - - GCAACCCTAA ACTACCTGCT GACCAACCGG CGGCAGAAGA TCCCCTCGTT GC -#ACAGTTTA 14760 - - AACAGCGAGG AGGAGCGCAT TTTGCGCTAC GTGCAGCAGA GCGTGAGCCT TA -#ACCTGATG 14820 - - CGCGACGGGG TAACGCCCAG CGTGGCGCTG GACATGACCG CGCGCAACAT GG -#AACCGGGC 14880 - - ATGTATGCCT CAAACCGGCC GTTTATCAAC CGCCTAATGG ACTACTTGCA TC -#GCGCGGCC 14940 - - GCCGTGAACC CCGAGTATTT CACCAATGCC ATCTTGAACC CGCACTGGCT AC -#CGCCCCCT 15000 - - GGTTTCTACA CCGGGGGATT CGAGGTGCCC GAGGGTAACG ATGGATTCCT CT -#GGGACGAC 15060 - - ATAGACGACA GCGTGTTTTC CCCGCAACCG CAGACCCTGC TAGAGTTGCA AC -#AGCGCGAG 15120 - - CAGGCAGAGG CGGCGCTGCG AAAGGAAAGC TTCCGCAGGC CAAGCAGCTT GT -#CCGATCTA 15180 - - GGCGCTGCGG CCCCGCGGTC AGATGCTAGT AGCCCATTTC CAAGCTTGAT AG -#GGTCTCTT 15240 - - ACCAGCACTC GCACCACCCG CCCGCGCCTG CTGGGCGAGG AGGAGTACCT AA -#ACAACTCG 15300 - - CTGCTGCAGC CGCAGCGCGA AAAAAACCTG CCTCCGGCAT TTCCCAACAA CG -#GGATAGAG 15360 - - AGCCTAGTGG ACAAGATGAG TAGATGGAAG ACGTACGCGC AGGAGCACAG GG -#ACGTGCCA 15420 - - GGCCCGCGCC CGCCCACCCG TCGTCAAAGG CACGACCGTC AGCGGGGTCT GG -#TGTGGGAG 15480 - - GACGATGACT CGGCAGACGA CAGCAGCGTC CTGGATTTGG GAGGGAGTGG CA -#ACCCGTTT 15540 - - GCGCACCTTC GCCCCAGGCT GGGGAGAATG TTTTAAAAAA AAAAAAGCAT GA -#TGCAAAAT 15600 - - AAAAAACTCA CCAAGGCCAT GGCACCGAGC GTTGGTTTTC TTGTATTCCC CT -#TAGTATGC 15660 - - GGCGCGCGGC GATGTATGAG GAAGGTCCTC CTCCCTCCTA CGAGAGTGTG GT -#GAGCGCGG 15720 - - CGCCAGTGGC GGCGGCGCTG GGTTCTCCCT TCGATGCTCC CCTGGACCCG CC -#GTTTGTGC 15780 - - CTCCGCGGTA CCTGCGGCCT ACCGGGGGGA GAAACAGCAT CCGTTACTCT GA -#GTTGGCAC 15840 - - CCCTATTCGA CACCACCCGT GTGTACCTGG TGGACAACAA GTCAACGGAT GT -#GGCATCCC 15900 - - TGAACTACCA GAACGACCAC AGCAACTTTC TGACCACGGT CATTCAAAAC AA -#TGACTACA 15960 - - GCCCGGGGGA GGCAAGCACA CAGACCATCA ATCTTGACGA CCGGTCGCAC TG -#GGGCGGCG 16020 - - ACCTGAAAAC CATCCTGCAT ACCAACATGC CAAATGTGAA CGAGTTCATG TT -#TACCAATA 16080 - - AGTTTAAGGC GCGGGTGATG GTGTCGCGCT TGCCTACTAA GGACAATCAG GT -#GGAGCTGA 16140 - - AATACGAGTG GGTGGAGTTC ACGCTGCCCG AGGGCAACTA CTCCGAGACC AT -#GACCATAG 16200 - - ACCTTATGAA CAACGCGATC GTGGAGCACT ACTTGAAAGT GGGCAGACAG AA -#CGGGGTTC 16260 - - TGGAAAGCGA CATCGGGGTA AAGTTTGACA CCCGCAACTT CAGACTGGGG TT -#TGACCCCG 16320 - - TCACTGGTCT TGTCATGCCT GGGGTATATA CAAACGAAGC CTTCCATCCA GA -#CATCATTT 16380 - - TGCTGCCAGG ATGCGGGGTG GACTTCACCC ACAGCCGCCT GAGCAACTTG TT -#GGGCATCC 16440 - - GCAAGCGGCA ACCCTTCCAG GAGGGCTTTA GGATCACCTA CGATGATCTG GA -#GGGTGGTA 16500 - - ACATTCCCGC ACTGTTGGAT GTGGACGCCT ACCAGGCGAG CTTGAAAGAT GA -#CACCGAAC 16560 - - AGGGCGGGGG TGGCGCAGGC GGCAGCAACA GCAGTGGCAG CGGCGCGGAA GA -#GAACTCCA 16620 - - ACGCGGCAGC CGCGGCAATG CAGCCGGTGG AGGACATGAA CGATCATGCC AT -#TCGCGGCG 16680 - - ACACCTTTGC CACACGGGCT GAGGAGAAGC GCGCTGAGGC CGAAGCAGCG GC -#CGAAGCTG 16740 - - CCGCCCCCGC TGCGCAACCC GAGGTCGAGA AGCCTCAGAA GAAACCGGTG AT -#CAAACCCC 16800 - - TGACAGAGGA CAGCAAGAAA CGCAGTTACA ACCTAATAAG CAATGACAGC AC -#CTTCACCC 16860 - - AGTACCGCAG CTGGTACCTT GCATACAACT ACGGCGACCC TCAGACCGGA AT -#CCGCTCAT 16920 - - GGACCCTGCT TTGCACTCCT GACGTAACCT GCGGCTCGGA GCAGGTCTAC TG -#GTCGTTGC 16980 - - CAGACATGAT GCAAGACCCC GTGACCTTCC GCTCCACGCG CCAGATCAGC AA -#CTTTCCGG 17040 - - TGGTGGGCGC CGAGCTGTTG CCCGTGCACT CCAAGAGCTT CTACAACGAC CA -#GGCCGTCT 17100 - - ACTCCCAACT CATCCGCCAG TTTACCTCTC TGACCCACGT GTTCAATCGC TT -#TCCCGAGA 17160 - - ACCAGATTTT GGCGCGCCCG CCAGCCCCCA CCATCACCAC CGTCAGTGAA AA -#CGTTCCTG 17220 - - CTCTCACAGA TCACGGGACG CTACCGCTGC GCAACAGCAT CGGAGGAGTC CA -#GCGAGTGA 17280 - - CCATTACTGA CGCCAGACGC CGCACCTGCC CCTACGTTTA CAAGGCCCTG GG -#CATAGTCT 17340 - - CGCCGCGCGT CCTATCGAGC CGCACTTTTT GAGCAAGCAT GTCCATCCTT AT -#ATCGCCCA 17400 - - GCAATAACAC AGGCTGGGGC CTGCGCTTCC CAAGCAAGAT GTTTGGCGGG GC -#CAAGAAGC 17460 - - GCTCCGACCA ACACCCAGTG CGCGTGCGCG GGCACTACCG CGCGCCCTGG GG -#CGCGCACA 17520 - - AACGCGGCCG CACTGGGCGC ACCACCGTCG ATGACGCCAT CGACGCGGTG GT -#GGAGGAGG 17580 - - CGCGCAACTA CACGCCCACG CCGCCACCAG TGTCCACAGT GGACGCGGCC AT -#TCAGACCG 17640 - - TGGTGCGCGG AGCCCGGCGC TATGCTAAAA TGAAGAGACG GCGGAGGCGC GT -#AGCACGTC 17700 - - GCCACCGCCG CCGACCCGGC ACTGCCGCCC AACGCGCGGC GGCGGCCCTG CT -#TAACCGCG 17760 - - CACGTCGCAC CGGCCGACGG GCGGCCATGC GGGCCGCTCG AAGGCTGGCC GC -#GGGTATTG 17820 - - TCACTGTGCC CCCCAGGTCC AGGCGACGAG CGGCCGCCGC AGCAGCCGCG GC -#CATTAGTG 17880 - - CTATGACTCA GGGTCGCAGG GGCAACGTGT ATTGGGTGCG CGACTCGGTT AG -#CGGCCTGC 17940 - - GCGTGCCCGT GCGCACCCGC CCCCCGCGCA ACTAGATTGC AAGAAAAAAC TA -#CTTAGACT 18000 - - CGTACTGTTG TATGTATCCA GCGGCGGCGG CGCGCAACGA AGCTATGTCC AA -#GCGCAAAA 18060 - - TCAAAGAAGA GATGCTCCAG GTCATCGCGC CGGAGATCTA TGGCCCCCCG AA -#GAAGGAAG 18120 - - AGCAGGATTA CAAGCCCCGA AAGCTAAAGC GGGTCAAAAA GAAAAAGAAA GA -#TGATGATG 18180 - - ATGAACTTGA CGACGAGGTG GAACTGCTGC ACGCTACCGC GCCCAGGCGA CG -#GGTACAGT 18240 - - GGAAAGGTCG ACGCGTAAAA CGTGTTTTGC GACCCGGCAC CACCGTAGTC TT -#TACGCCCG 18300 - - GTGAGCGCTC CACCCGCACC TACAAGCGCG TGTATGATGA GGTGTACGGC GA -#CGAGGACC 18360 - - TGCTTGAGCA GGCCAACGAG CGCCTCGGGG AGTTTGCCTA CGGAAAGCGG CA -#TAAGGACA 18420 - - TGCTGGCGTT GCCGCTGGAC GAGGGCAACC CAACACCTAG CCTAAAGCCC GT -#AACACTGC 18480 - - AGCAGGTGCT GCCCGCGCTT GCACCGTCCG AAGAAAAGCG CGGCCTAAAG CG -#CGAGTCTG 18540 - - GTGACTTGGC ACCCACCGTG CAGCTGATGG TACCCAAGCG CCAGCGACTG GA -#AGATGTCT 18600 - - TGGAAAAAAT GACCGTGGAA CCTGGGCTGG AGCCCGAGGT CCGCGTGCGG CC -#AATCAAGC 18660 - - AGGTGGCGCC GGGACTGGGC GTGCAGACCG TGGACGTTCA GATACCCACT AC -#CAGTAGCA 18720 - - CCAGTATTGC CACCGCCACA GAGGGCATGG AGACACAAAC GTCCCCGGTT GC -#CTCAGCGG 18780 - - TGGCGGATGC CGCGGTGCAG GCGGTCGCTG CGGCCGCGTC CAAGACCTCT AC -#GGAGGTGC 18840 - - AAACGGACCC GTGGATGTTT CGCGTTTCAG CCCCCCGGCG CCCGCGCGGT TC -#GAGGAAGT 18900 - - ACGGCGCCGC CAGCGCGCTA CTGCCCGAAT ATGCCCTACA TCCTTCCATT GC -#GCCTACCC 18960 - - CCGGCTATCG TGGCTACACC TACCGCCCCA GAAGACGAGC AACTACCCGA CG -#CCGAACCA 19020 - - CCACTGGAAC CCGCCGCCGC CGTCGCCGTC GCCAGCCCGT GCTGGCCCCG AT -#TTCCGTGC 19080 - - GCAGGGTGGC TCGCGAAGGA GGCAGGACCC TGGTGCTGCC AACAGCGCGC TA -#CCACCCCA 19140 - - GCATCGTTTA AAAGCCGGTC TTTGTGGTTC TTGCAGATAT GGCCCTCACC TG -#CCGCCTCC 19200 - - GTTTCCCGGT GCCGGGATTC CGAGGAAGAA TGCACCGTAG GAGGGGCATG GC -#CGGCCACG 19260 - - GCCTGACGGG CGGCATGCGT CGTGCGCACC ACCGGCGGCG GCGCGCGTCG CA -#CCGTCGCA 19320 - - TGCGCGGCGG TATCCTGCCC CTCCTTATTC CACTGATCGC CGCGGCGATT GG -#CGCCGTGC 19380 - - CCGGAATTGC ATCCGTGGCC TTGCAGGCGC AGAGACACTG ATTAAAAACA AG -#TTGCATGT 19440 - - GGAAAAATCA AAATAAAAAG TCTGGACTCT CACGCTCGCT TGGTCCTGTA AC -#TATTTTGT 19500 - - AGAATGGAAG ACATCAACTT TGCGTCTCTG GCCCCGCGAC ACGGCTCGCG CC -#CGTTCATG 19560 - - GGAAACTGGC AAGATATCGG CACCAGCAAT ATGAGCGGTG GCGCCTTCAG CT -#GGGGCTCG 19620 - - CTGTGGAGCG GCATTAAAAA TTTCGGTTCC ACCGTTAAGA ACTATGGCAG CA -#AGGCCTGG 19680 - - AACAGCAGCA CAGGCCAGAT GCTGAGGGAT AAGTTGAAAG AGCAAAATTT CC -#AACAAAAG 19740 - - GTGGTAGATG GCCTGGCCTC TGGCATTAGC GGGGTGGTGG ACCTGGCCAA CC -#AGGCAGTG 19800 - - CAAAATAAGA TTAACAGTAA GCTTGATCCC CGCCCTCCCG TAGAGGAGCC TC -#CACCGGCC 19860 - - GTGGAGACAG TGTCTCCAGA GGGGCGTGGC GAAAAGCGTC CGCGCCCCGA CA -#GGGAAGAA 19920 - - ACTCTGGTGA CGCAAATAGA CGAGCCTCCC TCGTACGAGG AGGCACTAAA GC -#AAGGCCTG 19980 - - CCCACCACCC GTCCCATCGC GCCCATGGCT ACCGGAGTGC TGGGCCAGCA CA -#CACCCGTA 20040 - - ACGCTGGACC TGCCTCCCCC CGCCGACACC CAGCAGAAAC CTGTGCTGCC AG -#GCCCGACC 20100 - - GCCGTTGTTG TAACCCGTCC TAGCCGCGCG TCCCTGCGCC GCGCCGCCAG CG -#GTCCGCGA 20160 - - TCGTTGCGGC CCGTAGCCAG TGGCAACTGG CAAAGCACAC TGAACAGCAT CG -#TGGGTCTG 20220 - - GGGGTGCAAT CCCTGAAGCG CCGACGATGC TTCTGAATAG CTAACGTGTC GT -#ATGTGTGT 20280 - - CATGTATGCG TCCATGTCGC CGCCAGAGGA GCTGCTGAGC CGCCGCGCGC CC -#GCTTTCCA 20340 - - AGATGGCTAC CCCTTCGATG ATGCCGCAGT GGTCTTACAT GCACATCTCG GG -#CCAGGACG 20400 - - CCTCGGAGTA CCTGAGCCCC GGGCTGGTGC AGTTTGCCCG CGCCACCGAG AC -#GTACTTCA 20460 - - GCCTGAATAA CAAGTTTAGA AACCCCACGG TGGCGCCTAC GCACGACGTG AC -#CACAGACC 20520 - - GGTCCCAGCG TTTGACGCTG CGGTTCATCC CTGTGGACCG TGAGGATACT GC -#GTACTCGT 20580 - - ACAAGGCGCG GTTCACCCTA GCTGTGGGTG ATAACCGTGT GCTGGACATG GC -#TTCCACGT 20640 - - ACTTTGACAT CCGCGGCGTG CTGGACAGGG GCCCTACTTT TAAGCCCTAC TC -#TGGCACTG 20700 - - CCTACAACGC CCTGGCTCCC AAGGGTGCCC CAAATCCTTG CGAATGGGAT GA -#AGCTGCTA 20760 - - CTGCTCTTGA AATAAACCTA GAAGAAGAGG ACGATGACAA CGAAGACGAA GT -#AGACGAGC 20820 - - AAGCTGAGCA GCAAAAAACT CACGTATTTG GGCAGGCGCC TTATTCTGGT AT -#AAATATTA 20880 - - CAAAGGAGGG TATTCAAATA GGTGTCGAAG GTCAAACACC TAAATATGCC GA -#TAAAACAT 20940 - - TTCAACCTGA ACCTCAAATA GGAGAATCTC AGTGGTACGA AACTGAAATT AA -#TCATGCAG 21000 - - CTGGGAGAGT CCTTAAAAAG ACTACCCCAA TGAAACCATG TTACGGTTCA TA -#TGCAAAAC 21060 - - CCACAAATGA AAATGGAGGG CAAGGCATTC TTGTAAAGCA ACAAAATGGA AA -#GCTAGAAA 21120 - - GTCAAGTGGA AATGCAATTT TTCTCAACTA CTGAGGCGAC CGCAGGCAAT GG -#TGATAACT 21180 - - TGACTCCTAA AGTGGTATTG TACAGTGAAG ATGTAGATAT AGAAACCCCA GA -#CACTCATA 21240 - - TTTCTTACAT GCCCACTATT AAGGAAGGTA ACTCACGAGA ACTAATGGGC CA -#ACAATCTA 21300 - - TGCCCAACAG GCCTAATTAC ATTGCTTTTA GGGACAATTT TATTGGTCTA AT -#GTATTACA 21360 - - ACAGCACGGG TAATATGGGT GTTCTGGCGG GCCAAGCATC GCAGTTGAAT GC -#TGTTGTAG 21420 - - ATTTGCAAGA CAGAAACACA GAGCTTTCAT ACCAGCTTTT GCTTGATTCC AT -#TGGTGATA 21480 - - GAACCAGGTA CTTTTCTATG TGGAATCAGG CTGTTGACAG CTATGATCCA GA -#TGTTAGAA 21540 - - TTATTGAAAA TCATGGAACT GAAGATGAAC TTCCAAATTA CTGCTTTCCA CT -#GGGAGGTG 21600 - - TGATTAATAC AGAGACTCTT ACCAAGGTAA AACCTAAAAC AGGTCAGGAA AA -#TGGATGGG 21660 - - AAAAAGATGC TACAGAATTT TCAGATAAAA ATGAAATAAG AGTTGGAAAT AA -#TTTTGCCA 21720 - - TGGAAATCAA TCTAAATGCC AACCTGTGGA GAAATTTCCT GTACTCCAAC AT -#AGCGCTGT 21780 - - ATTTGCCCGA CAAGCTAAAG TACAGTCCTT CCAACGTAAA AATTTCTGAT AA -#CCCAAACA 21840 - - CCTACGACTA CATGAACAAG CGAGTGGTGG CTCCCGGGTT AGTGGACTGC TA -#CATTAACC 21900 - - TTGGAGCACG CTGGTCCCTT GACTATATGG ACAACGTCAA CCCATTTAAC CA -#CCACCGCA 21960 - - ATGCTGGCCT GCGCTACCGC TCAATGTTGC TGGGCAATGG TCGCTATGTG CC -#CTTCCACA 22020 - - TCCAGGTGCC TCAGAAGTTC TTTGCCATTA AAAACCTCCT TCTCCTGCCG GG -#CTCATACA 22080 - - CCTACGAGTG GAACTTCAGG AAGGATGTTA ACATGGTTCT GCAGAGCTCC CT -#AGGAAATG 22140 - - ACCTAAGGGT TGACGGAGCC AGCATTAAGT TTGATAGCAT TTGCCTTTAC GC -#CACCTTCT 22200 - - TCCCCATGGC CCACAACACC GCCTCCACGC TTGAGGCCAT GCTTAGAAAC GA -#CACCAACG 22260 - - ACCAGTCCTT TAACGACTAT CTCTCCGCCG CCAACATGCT CTACCCTATA CC -#CGCCAACG 22320 - - CTACCAACGT GCCCATATCC ATCCCCTCCC GCAACTGGGC GGCTTTCCGC GG -#CTGGGCCT 22380 - - TCACGCGCCT TAAGACTAAG GAAACCCCAT CACTGGGCTC GGGCTACGAC CC -#TTATTACA 22440 - - CCTACTCTGG CTCTATACCC TACCTAGATG GAACCTTTTA CCTCAACCAC AC -#CTTTAAGA 22500 - - AGGTGGCCAT TACCTTTGAC TCTTCTGTCA GCTGGCCTGG CAATGACCGC CT -#GCTTACCC 22560 - - CCAACGAGTT TGAAATTAAG CGCTCAGTTG ACGGGGAGGG TTACAACGTT GC -#CCAGTGTA 22620 - - ACATGACCAA AGACTGGTTC CTGGTACAAA TGCTAGCTAA CTACAACATT GG -#CTACCAGG 22680 - - GCTTCTATAT CCCAGAGAGC TACAAGGACC GCATGTACTC CTTCTTTAGA AA -#CTTCCAGC 22740 - - CCATGAGCCG TCAGGTGGTG GATGATACTA AATACAAGGA CTACCAACAG GT -#GGGCATCC 22800 - - TACACCAACA CAACAACTCT GGATTTGTTG GCTACCTTGC CCCCACCATG CG -#CGAAGGAC 22860 - - AGGCCTACCC TGCTAACTTC CCCTATCCGC TTATAGGCAA GACCGCAGTT GA -#CAGCATTA 22920 - - CCCAGAAAAA GTTTCTTTGC GATCGCACCC TTTGGCGCAT CCCATTCTCC AG -#TAACTTTA 22980 - - TGTCCATGGG CGCACTCACA GACCTGGGCC AAAACCTTCT CTACGCCAAC TC -#CGCCCACG 23040 - - CGCTAGACAT GACTTTTGAG GTGGATCCCA TGGACGAGCC CACCCTTCTT TA -#TGTTTTGT 23100 - - TTGAAGTCTT TGACGTGGTC CGTGTGCACC GGCCGCACCG CGGCGTCATC GA -#AACCGTGT 23160 - - ACCTGCGCAC GCCCTTCTCG GCCGGCAACG CCACAACATA AAGAAGCAAG CA -#ACATCAAC 23220 - - AACAGCTGCC GCCATGGGCT CCAGTGAGCA GGAACTGAAA GCCATTGTCA AA -#GATCTTGG 23280 - - TTGTGGGCCA TATTTTTTGG GCACCTATGA CAAGCGCTTT CCAGGCTTTG TT -#TCTCCACA 23340 - - CAAGCTCGCC TGCGCCATAG TCAATACGGC CGGTCGCGAG ACTGGGGGCG TA -#CACTGGAT 23400 - - GGCCTTTGCC TGGAACCCGC ACTCAAAAAC ATGCTACCTC TTTGAGCCCT TT -#GGCTTTTC 23460 - - TGACCAGCGA CTCAAGCAGG TTTACCAGTT TGAGTACGAG TCACTCCTGC GC -#CGTAGCGC 23520 - - CATTGCTTCT TCCCCCGACC GCTGTATAAC GCTGGAAAAG TCCACCCAAA GC -#GTACAGGG 23580 - - GCCCAACTCG GCCGCCTGTG GACTATTCTG CTGCATGTTT CTCCACGCCT TT -#GCCAACTG 23640 - - GCCCCAAACT CCCATGGATC ACAACCCCAC CATGAACCTT ATTACCGGGG TA -#CCCAACTC 23700 - - CATGCTCAAC AGTCCCCAGG TACAGCCCAC CCTGCGTCGC AACCAGGAAC AG -#CTCTACAG 23760 - - CTTCCTGGAG CGCCACTCGC CCTACTTCCG CAGCCACAGT GCGCAGATTA GG -#AGCGCCAC 23820 - - TTCTTTTTGT CACTTGAAAA ACATGTAAAA ATAATGTACT AGAGACACTT TC -#AATAAAGG 23880 - - CAAATGCTTT TATTTGTACA CTCTCGGGTG ATTATTTACC CCCACCCTTG CC -#GTCTGCGC 23940 - - CGTTTAAAAA TCAAAGGGGT TCTGCCGCGC ATCGCTATGC GCCACTGGCA GG -#GACACGTT 24000 - - GCGATACTGG TGTTTAGTGC TCCACTTAAA CTCAGGCACA ACCATCCGCG GC -#AGCTCGGT 24060 - - GAAGTTTTCA CTCCACAGGC TGCGCACCAT CACCAACGCG TTTAGCAGGT CG -#GGCGCCGA 24120 - - TATCTTGAAG TCGCAGTTGG GGCCTCCGCC CTGCGCGCGC GAGTTGCGAT AC -#ACAGGGTT 24180 - - GCAGCACTGG AACACTATCA GCGCCGGGTG GTGCACGCTG GCCAGCACGC TC -#TTGTCGGA 24240 - - GATCAGATCC GCGTCCAGGT CCTCCGCGTT GCTCAGGGCG AACGGAGTCA AC -#TTTGGTAG 24300 - - CTGCCTTCCC AAAAAGGGCG CGTGCCCAGG CTTTGAGTTG CACTCGCACC GT -#AGTGGCAT 24360 - - CAAAAGGTGA CCGTGCCCGG TCTGGGCGTT AGGATACAGC GCCTGCATAA AA -#GCCTTGAT 24420 - - CTGCTTAAAA GCCACCTGAG CCTTTGCGCC TTCAGAGAAG AACATGCCGC AA -#GACTTGCC 24480 - - GGAAAACTGA TTGGCCGGAC AGGCCGCGTC GTGCACGCAG CACCTTGCGT CG -#GTGTTGGA 24540 - - GATCTGCACC ACATTTCGGC CCCACCGGTT CTTCACGATC TTGGCCTTGC TA -#GACTGCTC 24600 - - CTTCAGCGCG CGCTGCCCGT TTTCGCTCGT CACATCCATT TCAATCACGT GC -#TCCTTATT 24660 - - TATCATAATG CTTCCGTGTA GACACTTAAG CTCGCCTTCG ATCTCAGCGC AG -#CGGTGCAG 24720 - - CCACAACGCG CAGCCCGTGG GCTCGTGATG CTTGTAGGTC ACCTCTGCAA AC -#GACTGCAG 24780 - - GTACGCCTGC AGGAATCGCC CCATCATCGT CACAAAGGTC TTGTTGCTGG TG -#AAGGTCAG 24840 - - CTGCAACCCG CGGTGCTCCT CGTTCAGCCA GGTCTTGCAT ACGGCCGCCA GA -#GCTTCCAC 24900 - - TTGGTCAGGC AGTAGTTTGA AGTTCGCCTT TAGATCGTTA TCCACGTGGT AC -#TTGTCCAT 24960 - - CAGCGCGCGC GCAGCCTCCA TGCCCTTCTC CCACGCAGAC ACGATCGGCA CA -#CTCAGCGG 25020 - - GTTCATCACC GTAATTTCAC TTTCCGCTTC GCTGGGCTCT TCCTCTTCCT CT -#TGCGTCCG 25080 - - CATACCACGC GCCACTGGGT CGTCTTCATT CAGCCGCCGC ACTGTGCGCT TA -#CCTCCTTT 25140 - - GCCATGCTTG ATTAGCACCG GTGGGTTGCT GAAACCCACC ATTTGTAGCG CC -#ACATCTTC 25200 - - TCTTTCTTCC TCGCTGTCCA CGATTACCTC TGGTGATGGC GGGCGCTCGG GC -#TTGGGAGA 25260 - - AGGGCGCTTC TTTTTCTTCT TGGGCGCAAT GGCCAAATCC GCCGCCGAGG TC -#GATGGCCG 25320 - - CGGGCTGGGT GTGCGCGGCA CCAGCGCGTC TTGTGATGAG TCTTCCTCGT CC -#TCGGACTC 25380 - - GATACGCCGC CTCATCCGCT TTTTTGGGGG CGCCCGGGGA GGCGGCGGCG AC -#GGGGACGG 25440 - - GGACGACACG TCCTCCATGG TTGGGGGACG TCGCGCCGCA CCGCGTCCGC GC -#TCGGGGGT 25500 - - GGTTTCGCGC TGCTCCTCTT CCCGACTGGC CATTTCCTTC TCCTATAGGC AG -#AAAAAGAT 25560 - - CATGGAGTCA GTCGAGAAGA AGGACAGCCT AACCGCCCCC TCTGAGTTCG CC -#ACCACCGC 25620 - - CTCCACCGAT GCCGCCAACG CGCCTACCAC CTTCCCCGTC GAGGCACCCC CG -#CTTGAGGA 25680 - - GGAGGAAGTG ATTATCGAGC AGGACCCAGG TTTTGTAAGC GAAGACGACG AG -#GACCGCTC 25740 - - AGTACCAACA GAGGATAAAA AGCAAGACCA GGACAACGCA GAGGCAAACG AG -#GAACAAGT 25800 - - CGGGCGGGGG GACGAAAGGC ATGGCGACTA CCTAGATGTG GGAGACGACG TG -#CTGTTGAA 25860 - - GCATCTGCAG CGCCAGTGCG CCATTATCTG CGACGCGTTG CAAGAGCGCA GC -#GATGTGCC 25920 - - CCTCGCCATA GCGGATGTCA GCCTTGCCTA CGAACGCCAC CTATTCTCAC CG -#CGCGTACC 25980 - - CCCCAAACGC CAAGAAAACG GCACATGCGA GCCCAACCCG CGCCTCAACT TC -#TACCCCGT 26040 - - ATTTGCCGTG CCAGAGGTGC TTGCCACCTA TCACATCTTT TTCCAAAACT GC -#AAGATACC 26100 - - CCTATCCTGC CGTGCCAACC GCAGCCGAGC GGACAAGCAG CTGGCCTTGC GG -#CAGGGCGC 26160 - - TGTCATACCT GATATCGCCT CGCTCAACGA AGTGCCAAAA ATCTTTGAGG GT -#CTTGGACG 26220 - - CGACGAGAAG CGCGCGGCAA ACGCTCTGCA ACAGGAAAAC AGCGAAAATG AA -#AGTCACTC 26280 - - TGGAGTGTTG GTGGAACTCG AGGGTGACAA CGCGCGCCTA GCCGTACTAA AA -#CGCAGCAT 26340 - - CGAGGTCACC CACTTTGCCT ACCCGGCACT TAACCTACCC CCCAAGGTCA TG -#AGCACAGT 26400 - - CATGAGTGAG CTGATCGTGC GCCGTGCGCA GCCCCTGGAG AGGGATGCAA AT -#TTGCAAGA 26460 - - ACAAACAGAG GAGGGCCTAC CCGCAGTTGG CGACGAGCAG CTAGCGCGCT GG -#CTTCAAAC 26520 - - GCGCGAGCCT GCCGACTTGG AGGAGCGACG CAAACTAATG ATGGCCGCAG TG -#CTCGTTAC 26580 - - CGTGGAGCTT GAGTGCATGC AGCGGTTCTT TGCTGACCCG GAGATGCAGC GC -#AAGCTAGA 26640 - - GGAAACATTG CACTACACCT TTCGACAGGG CTACGTACGC CAGGCCTGCA AG -#ATCTCCAA 26700 - - CGTGGAGCTC TGCAACCTGG TCTCCTACCT TGGAATTTTG CACGAAAACC GC -#CTTGGGCA 26760 - - AAACGTGCTT CATTCCACGC TCAAGGGCGA GGCGCGCCGC GACTACGTCC GC -#GACTGCGT 26820 - - TTACTTATTT CTATGCTACA CCTGGCAGAC GGCCATGGGC GTTTGGCAGC AG -#TGCTTGGA 26880 - - GGAGTGCAAC CTCAAGGAGC TGCAGAAACT GCTAAAGCAA AACTTGAAGG AC -#CTATGGAC 26940 - - GGCCTTCAAC GAGCGCTCCG TGGCCGCGCA CCTGGCGGAC ATCATTTTCC CC -#GAACGCCT 27000 - - GCTTAAAACC CTGCAACAGG GTCTGCCAGA CTTCACCAGT CAAAGCATGT TG -#CAGAACTT 27060 - - TAGGAACTTT ATCCTAGAGC GCTCAGGAAT CTTGCCCGCC ACCTGCTGTG CA -#CTTCCTAG 27120 - - CGACTTTGTG CCCATTAAGT ACCGCGAATG CCCTCCGCCG CTTTGGGGCC AC -#TGCTACCT 27180 - - TCTGCAGCTA GCCAACTACC TTGCCTACCA CTCTGACATA ATGGAAGACG TG -#AGCGGTGA 27240 - - CGGTCTACTG GAGTGTCACT GTCGCTGCAA CCTATGCACC CCGCACCGCT CC -#CTGGTTTG 27300 - - CAATTCGCAG CTGCTTAACG AAAGTCAAAT TATCGGTACC TTTGAGCTGC AG -#GGTCCCTC 27360 - - GCCTGACGAA AAGTCCGCGG CTCCGGGGTT GAAACTCACT CCGGGGCTGT GG -#ACGTCGGC 27420 - - TTACCTTCGC AAATTTGTAC CTGAGGACTA CCACGCCCAC GAGATTAGGT TC -#TACGAAGA 27480 - - CCAATCCCGC CCGCCAAATG CGGAGCTTAC CGCCTGCGTC ATTACCCAGG GC -#CACATTCT 27540 - - TGGCCAATTG CAAGCCATCA ACAAAGCCCG CCAAGAGTTT CTGCTACGAA AG -#GGACGGGG 27600 - - GGTTTACTTG GACCCCCAGT CCGGCGAGGA GCTCAACCCA ATCCCCCCGC CG -#CCGCAGCC 27660 - - CTATCAGCAG CAGCCGCGGG CCCTTGCTTC CCAGGATGGC ACCCAAAAAG AA -#GCTGCAGC 27720 - - TGCCGCCGCC ACCCACGGAC GAGGAGGAAT ACTGGGACAG TCAGGCAGAG GA -#GGTTTTGG 27780 - - ACGAGGAGGA GGAGGACATG ATGGAAGACT GGGAGAGCCT AGACGAGGAA GC -#TTCCGAGG 27840 - - TCGAAGAGGT GTCAGACGAA ACACCGTCAC CCTCGGTCGC ATTCCCCTCG CC -#GGCGCCCC 27900 - - AGAAATCGGC AACCGGTTCC AGCATGGCTA CAACCTCCGC TCCTCAGGCG CC -#GCCGGCAC 27960 - - TGCCCGTTCG CCGACCCAAC CGTAGATGGG ACACCACTGG AACCAGGGCC GG -#TAAGTCCA 28020 - - AGCAGCCGCC GCCGTTAGCC CAAGAGCAAC AACAGCGCCA AGGCTACCGC TC -#ATGGCGCG 28080 - - GGCACAAGAA CGCCATAGTT GCTTGCTTGC AAGACTGTGG GGGCAACATC TC -#CTTCGCCC 28140 - - GCCGCTTTCT TCTCTACCAT CACGGCGTGG CCTTCCCCCG TAACATCCTG CA -#TTACTACC 28200 - - GTCATCTCTA CAGCCCATAC TGCACCGGCG GCAGCGGCAG CGGCAGCAAC AG -#CAGCGGCC 28260 - - ACACAGAAGC AAAGGCGACC GGATAGCAAG ACTCTGACAA AGCCCAAGAA AT -#CCACAGCG 28320 - - GCGGCAGCAG CAGGAGGAGG AGCGCTGCGT CTGGCGCCCA ACGAACCCGT AT -#CGACCCGC 28380 - - GAGCTTAGAA ACAGGATTTT TCCCACTCTG TATGCTATAT TTCAACAGAG CA -#GGGGCCAA 28440 - - GAACAAGAGC TGAAAATAAA AAACAGGTCT CTGCGATCCC TCACCCGCAG CT -#GCCTGTAT 28500 - - CACAAAAGCG AAGATCAGCT TCGGCGCACG CTGGAAGACG CGGAGGCTCT CT -#TCAGTAAA 28560 - - TACTGCGCGC TGACTCTTAA GGACTAGTTT CGCGCCCTTT CTCAAATTTA AG -#CGCGAAAA 28620 - - CTACGTCATC TCCAGCGGCC ACACCCGGCG CCAGCACCTG TCGTCAGCGC CA -#TTATGAGC 28680 - - AAGGAAATTC CCACGCCCTA CATGTGGAGT TACCAGCCAC AAATGGGACT TG -#CGGCTGGA 28740 - - GCTGCCCAAG ACTACTCAAC CCGAATAAAC TACATGAGCG CGGGACCCCA CA -#TGATATCC 28800 - - CGGGTCAACG GAATCCGCGC CCACCGAAAC CGAATTCTCT TGGAACAGGC GG -#CTATTACC 28860 - - ACCACACCTC GTAATAACCT TAATCCCCGT AGTTGGCCCG CTGCCCTGGT GT -#ACCAGGAA 28920 - - AGTCCCGCTC CCACCACTGT GGTACTTCCC AGAGACGCCC AGGCCGAAGT TC -#AGATGACT 28980 - - AACTCAGGGG CGCAGCTTGC GGGCGGCTTT CGTCACAGGG TGCGGTCGCC CG -#GGCAGGGT 29040 - - ATAACTCACC TGACAATCAG AGGGCGAGGT ATTCAGCTCA ACGACGAGTC GG -#TGAGCTCC 29100 - - TCGCTTGGTC TCCGTCCGGA CGGGACATTT CAGATCGGCG GCGCCGGCCG TC -#CTTCATTC 29160 - - ACGCCTCGTC AGGCAATCCT AACTCTGCAG ACCTCGTCCT CTGAGCCGCG CT -#CTGGAGGC 29220 - - ATTGGAACTC TGCAATTTAT TGAGGAGTTT GTGCCATCGG TCTACTTTAA CC -#CCTTCTCG 29280 - - GGACCTCCCG GCCACTATCC GGATCAATTT ATTCCTAACT TTGACGCGGT AA -#AGGACTCG 29340 - - GCGGACGGCT ACGACTGAAT GTTAATTAAG TTCCTGTCCA TCCGCACCCA CT -#ATCTTCAT 29400 - - GTTGTTGCAG ATGAAGCGCG CAAGACCGTC TGAAGATACC TTCAACCCCG TG -#TATCCATA 29460 - - TGACACGGAA ACCGGTCCTC CAACTGTGCC TTTTCTTACT CCTCCCTTTG TA -#TCCCCCAA 29520 - - TGGGTTTCAA GAGAGTCCCC CTGGGGTACT CTCTTTGCGC CTATCCGAAC CT -#CTAGTTAC 29580 - - CTCCAATGGC ATGCTTGCGC TCAAAATGGG CAACGGCCTC TCTCTGGACG AG -#GCCGGCAA 29640 - - CCTTACCTCC CAAAATGTAA CCACTGTGAG CCCACCTCTC AAAAAAACCA AG -#TCAAACAT 29700 - - AAACCTGGAA ATATCTGCAC CCCTCACAGT TACCTCAGAA GCCCTAACTG TG -#GCTGCCGC 29760 - - CGCACCTCTA ATGGTCGCGG GCAACACACT CACCATGCAA TCACAGGCCC CG -#CTAACCGT 29820 - - GCACGACTCC AAACTTAGCA TTGCCACCCA AGGACCCCTC ACAGTGTCAG AA -#GGAAAGCT 29880 - - AGCCCTGCAA ACATCAGGCC CCCTCACCAC CACCGATAGC AGTACCCTTA CT -#ATCACTGC 29940 - - CTCACCCCCT CTAACTACTG CCACTGGTAG CTTGGGCATT GACTTGAAAG AG -#CCCATTTA 30000 - - TACACAAAAT GGAAAACTAG GACTAAAGTA CGGGGCTCCT TTGCATGTAA CA -#GACGACCT 30060 - - AAACACTTTG ACCGTAGCAA CTGGTCCAGG TGTGACTATT AATAATACTT CC -#TTGCAAAC 30120 - - TAAAGTTACT GGAGCCTTGG GTTTTGATTC ACAAGGCAAT ATGCAACTTA AT -#GTAGCAGG 30180 - - AGGACTAAGG ATTGATTCTC AAAACAGACG CCTTATACTT GATGTTAGTT AT -#CCGTTTGA 30240 - - TGCTCAAAAC CAACTAAATC TAAGACTAGG ACAGGGCCCT CTTTTTATAA AC -#TCAGCCCA 30300 - - CAACTTGGAT ATTAACTACA ACAAAGGCCT TTACTTGTTT ACAGCTTCAA AC -#AATTCCAA 30360 - - AAAGCTTGAG GTTAACCTAA GCACTGCCAA GGGGTTGATG TTTGACGCTA CA -#GCCATAGC 30420 - - CATTAATGCA GGAGATGGGC TTGAATTTGG TTCACCTAAT GCACCAAACA CA -#AATCCCCT 30480 - - CAAAACAAAA ATTGGCCATG GCCTAGAATT TGATTCAAAC AAGGCTATGG TT -#CCTAAACT 30540 - - AGGAACTGGC CTTAGTTTTG ACAGCACAGG TGCCATTACA GTAGGAAACA AA -#AATAATGA 30600 - - TAAGCTAACT TTGTGGACCA CACCAGCTCC ATCTCCTAAC TGTAGACTAA AT -#GCAGAGAA 30660 - - AGATGCTAAA CTCACTTTGG TCTTAACAAA ATGTGGCAGT CAAATACTTG CT -#ACAGTTTC 30720 - - AGTTTTGGCT GTTAAAGGCA GTTTGGCTCC AATATCTGGA ACAGTTCAAA GT -#GCTCATCT 30780 - - TATTATAAGA TTTGACGAAA ATGGAGTGCT ACTAAACAAT TCCTTCCTGG AC -#CCAGAATA 30840 - - TTGGAACTTT AGAAATGGAG ATCTTACTGA AGGCACAGCC TATACAAACG CT -#GTTGGATT 30900 - - TATGCCTAAC CTATCAGCTT ATCCAAAATC TCACGGTAAA ACTGCCAAAA GT -#AACATTGT 30960 - - CAGTCAAGTT TACTTAAACG GAGACAAAAC TAAACCTGTA ACACTAACCA TT -#ACACTAAA 31020 - - CGGTACACAG GAAACAGGAG ACACAACTCC AAGTGCATAC TCTATGTCAT TT -#TCATGGGA 31080 - - CTGGTCTGGC CACAACTACA TTAATGAAAT ATTTGCCACA TCCTCTTACA CT -#TTTTCATA 31140 - - CATTGCCCAA GAATAAAGAA TCGTTTGTGT TATGTTTCAA CGTGTTTATT TT -#TCAATTGC 31200 - - AGAAAATTTC AAGTCATTTT TCATTCAGTA GTATAGCCCC ACCACCACAT AG -#CTTATACA 31260 - - GATCACCGTA CCTTAATCAA ACTCACAGAA CCCTAGTATT CAACCTGCCA CC -#TCCCTCCC 31320 - - AACACACAGA GTACACAGTC CTTTCTCCCC GGCTGGCCTT AAAAAGCATC AT -#ATCATGGG 31380 - - TAACAGACAT ATTCTTAGGT GTTATATTCC ACACGGTTTC CTGTCGAGCC AA -#ACGCTCAT 31440 - - CAGTGATATT AATAAACTCC CCGGGCAGCT CACTTAAGTT CATGTCGCTG TC -#CAGCTGCT 31500 - - GAGCCACAGG CTGCTGTCCA ACTTGCGGTT GCTTAACGGG CGGCGAAGGA GA -#AGTCCACG 31560 - - CCTACATGGG GGTAGAGTCA TAATCGTGCA TCAGGATAGG GCGGTGGTGC TG -#CAGCAGCG 31620 - - CGCGAATAAA CTGCTGCCGC CGCCGCTCCG TCCTGCAGGA ATACAACATG GC -#AGTGGTCT 31680 - - CCTCAGCGAT GATTCGCACC GCCCGCAGCA TAAGGCGCCT TGTCCTCCGG GC -#ACAGCAGC 31740 - - GCACCCTGAT CTCACTTAAA TCAGCACAGT AACTGCAGCA CAGCACCACA AT -#ATTGTTCA 31800 - - AAATCCCACA GTGCAAGGCG CTGTATCCAA AGCTCATGGC GGGGACCACA GA -#ACCCACGT 31860 - - GGCCATCATA CCACAAGCGC AGGTAGATTA AGTGGCGACC CCTCATAAAC AC -#GCTGGACA 31920 - - TAAACATTAC CTCTTTTGGC ATGTTGTAAT TCACCACCTC CCGGTACCAT AT -#AAACCTCT 31980 - - GATTAAACAT GGCGCCATCC ACCACCATCC TAAACCAGCT GGCCAAAACC TG -#CCCGCCGG 32040 - - CTATACACTG CAGGGAACCG GGACTGGAAC AATGACAGTG GAGAGCCCAG GA -#CTCGTAAC 32100 - - CATGGATCAT CATGCTCGTC ATGATATCAA TGTTGGCACA ACACAGGCAC AC -#GTGCATAC 32160 - - ACTTCCTCAG GATTACAAGC TCCTCCCGCG TTAGAACCAT ATCCCAGGGA AC -#AACCCATT 32220 - - CCTGAATCAG CGTAAATCCC ACACTGCAGG GAAGACCTCG CACGTAACTC AC -#GTTGTGCA 32280 - - TTGTCAAAGT GTTACATTCG GGCAGCAGCG GATGATCCTC CAGTATGGTA GC -#GCGGGTTT 32340 - - CTGTCTCAAA AGGAGGTAGA CGATCCCTAC TGTACGGAGT GCGCCGAGAC AA -#CCGAGATC 32400 - - GTGTTGGTCG TAGTGTCATG CCAAATGGAA CGCCGGACGT AGTCATATTT CC -#TGAAGCAA 32460 - - AACCAGGTGC GGGCGTGACA AACAGATCTG CGTCTCCGGT CTCGCCGCTT AG -#ATCGCTCT 32520 - - GTGTAGTAGT TGTAGTATAT CCACTCTCTC AAAGCATCCA GGCGCCCCCT GG -#CTTCGGGT 32580 - - TCTATGTAAA CTCCTTCATG CGCCGCTGCC CTGATAACAT CCACCACCGC AG -#AATAAGCC 32640 - - ACACCCAGCC AACCTACACA TTCGTTCTGC GAGTCACACA CGGGAGGAGC GG -#GAAGAGCT 32700 - - GGAAGAACCA TGTTTTTTTT TTTATTCCAA AAGATTATCC AAAACCTCAA AA -#TGAAGATC 32760 - - TATTAAGTGA ACGCGCTCCC CTCCGGTGGC GTGGTCAAAC TCTACAGCCA AA -#GAACAGAT 32820 - - AATGGCATTT GTAAGATGTT GCACAATGGC TTCCAAAAGG CAAACGGCCC TC -#ACGTCCAA 32880 - - GTGGACGTAA AGGCTAAACC CTTCAGGGTG AATCTCCTCT ATAAACATTC CA -#GCACCTTC 32940 - - AACCATGCCC AAATAATTCT CATCTCGCCA CCTTCTCAAT ATATCTCTAA GC -#AAATCCCG 33000 - - AATATTAAGT CCGGCCATTG TAAAAATCTG CTCCAGAGCG CCCTCCACCT TC -#AGCCTCAA 33060 - - GCAGCGAATC ATGATTGCAA AAATTCAGGT TCCTCACAGA CCTGTATAAG AT -#TCAAAAGC 33120 - - GGAACATTAA CAAAAATACC GCGATCCCGT AGGTCCCTTC GCAGGGCCAG CT -#GAACATAA 33180 - - TCGTGCAGGT CTGCACGGAC CAGCGCGGCC ACTTCCCCGC CAGGAACCTT GA -#CAAAAGAA 33240 - - CCCACACTGA TTATGACACG CATACTCGGA GCTATGCTAA CCAGCGTAGC CC -#CGATGTAA 33300 - - GCTTTGTTGC ATGGGCGGCG ATATAAAATG CAAGGTGCTG CTCAAAAAAT CA -#GGCAAAGC 33360 - - CTCGCGCAAA AAAGAAAGCA CATCGTAGTC ATGCTCATGC AGATAAAGGC AG -#GTAAGCTC 33420 - - CGGAACCACC ACAGAAAAAG ACACCATTTT TCTCTCAAAC ATGTCTGCGG GT -#TTCTGCAT 33480 - - AAACACAAAA TAAAATAACA AAAAAACATT TAAACATTAG AAGCCTGTCT TA -#CAACAGGA 33540 - - AAAACAACCC TTATAAGCAT AAGACGGACT ACGGCCATGC CGGCGTGACC GT -#AAAAAAAC 33600 - - TGGTCACCGT GATTAAAAAG CACCACCGAC AGCTCCTCGG TCATGTCCGG AG -#TCATAATG 33660 - - TAAGACTCGG TAAACACATC AGGTTGATTC ATCGGTCAGT GCTAAAAAGC GA -#CCGAAATA 33720 - - GCCCGGGGGA ATACATACCC GCAGGCGTAG AGACAACATT ACAGCCCCCA TA -#GGAGGTAT 33780 - - AACAAAATTA ATAGGAGAGA AAAACACATA AACACCTGAA AAACCCTCCT GC -#CTAGGCAA 33840 - - AATAGCACCC TCCCGCTCCA GAACAACATA CAGCGCTTCA CAGCGGCAGC CT -#AACAGTCA 33900 - - GCCTTACCAG TAAAAAAGAA AACCTATTAA AAAAACACCA CTCGACACGG CA -#CCAGCTCA 33960 - - ATCAGTCACA GTGTAAAAAA GGGCCAAGTG CAGAGCGAGT ATATATAGGA CT -#AAAAAATG 34020 - - ACGTAACGGT TAAAGTCCAC AAAAAACACC CAGAAAACCG CACGCGAACC TA -#CGCCCAGA 34080 - - AACGAAAGCC AAAAAACCCA CAACTTCCTC AAATCGTCAC TTCCGTTTTC CC -#ACGTTACG 34140 - - TAACTTCCCA TTTTAAGAAA ACTACAATTC CCAACACATA CAAGTTACTC CG -#CCCTAAAA 34200 - - CCTACGTCAC CCGCCCCGTT CCCACGCCCC GCGCCACGTC ACAAACTCCA CC -#CCCTCATT 34260 - - ATCATATTGG CTTCAATCCA AAATAAGGTA TATTATTGAT GAT - # 34303 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:5: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 380 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:5: - - CCAGGCTTTA CACTTTATGC TTCCGGCTCG TATGTTGTGT GGAATTGTGA GC -#GGATAACA 60 - - ATTTCACACA GGAAACAGCT ATGACCATGA TTACGCCAAG CGCGCAATTA AC -#CCTCACTA 120 - - AAGGGAACAA AAGCTGGGTA CCGGGCCCCC CCTCGAGGTC GACGGTATCG AT -#AAGCTTAC 180 - - GCGTGGCCTA GGCGGCCGAA TTCCTGCAGC CCGGGGGATC CACTAGTTCT AG -#AGCGGCCG 240 - - CCACCGCGGC GCCTTAATTA ATACGTAAGC TCCAATTCGC CCTATAGTGA GT -#CGTATTAC 300 - - GCGCGCTCAC TGGCCGTCGT TTTACAACGT CGTGACTGGG AAAACCCTGG CG -#TTACCCAA 360 - - CTTAATCGCC TTGCAGCACA - # - # - #380 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:6: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 21 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:6: - - TGCCGCAGCA CCGGATGCAT C - # - # - #21 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:7: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 27 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:7: - - GCGTCCGGAG GCTGCCATGC GGCAGGG - # - # 27 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:8: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 1481 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:8: - - GGCTGCCATG CGGCAGGGAT ACGGCGCTAA CGATGCATCT CAACAATTGT TG -#TGTAGGTA 60 - - CTCCGCCGCC GAGGGACCTG AGCGAGTCCG CATCGACCGG ATCGGAAAAC CT -#CTCGAGAA 120 - - AGGCGTCTAA CCAGTCACAG TCGCAAGGTA GGCTGAGCAC CGTGGCGGGC GG -#CAGCGGGC 180 - - GGCGGTCGGG GTTGTTTCTG GCGGAGGTGC TGCTGATGAT GTAATTAAAG TA -#GGCGGTCT 240 - - TGAGACGGCG GATGGTCGAC AGAAGCACCA TGTCCTTGGG TCCGGCCTGC TG -#AATGCGCA 300 - - GGCGGTCGGC CATGCCCCAG GCTTCGTTTT GACATCGGCG CAGGTCTTTG TA -#GTAGTCTT 360 - - GCATGAGCCT TTCTACCGGC ACTTCTTCTT CTCCTTCCTC TTGTCCTGCA TC -#TCTTGCAT 420 - - CTATCGCTGC GGCGGCGGCG GAGTTTGGCC GTAGGTGGCG CCCTCTTCCT CC -#CATGCGTG 480 - - TGACCCCGAA GCCCCTCATC GGCTGAAGCA GGGCTAGGTC GGCGACAACG CG -#CTCGGCTA 540 - - ATATGGCCTG CTGCACCTGC GTGAGGGTAG ACTGGAAGTC ATCCATGTCC AC -#AAAGCGGT 600 - - GGTATGCGCC CGTGTTGATG GTGTAAGTGC AGTTGGCCAT AACGGACCAG TT -#AACGGTCT 660 - - GGTGACCCGG CTGCGAGAGC TCGGTGTACC TGAGACGCGA GTAAGCCCTC GA -#GTCAAATA 720 - - CGTAGTCGTT GCAAGTCCGC ACCAGGTACT GGTATCCCAC CAAAAAGTGC GG -#CGGCGGCT 780 - - GGCGGTAGAG GGGCCAGCGT AGGGTGGCCG GGGCTCCGGG GGCGAGATCT TC -#CAACATAA 840 - - GGCGATGATA TCCGTAGATG TACCTGGACA TCCAGGTGAT GCCGGCGGCG GT -#GGTGGAGG 900 - - CGCGCGGAAA GTCGCGGACG CGGTTCCAGA TGTTGCGCAG CGGCAAAAAG TG -#CTCCATGG 960 - - TCGGGACGCT CTGGCCGGTC AGGCGCGCGC AATCGTTGAC GCTCTACCGT GC -#AAAAGGAG 1020 - - AGCCTGTAAG CGGGCACTCT TCCGTGGTCT GGTGGATAAA TTCGCAAGGG TA -#TCATGGCG 1080 - - GACGACCGGG GTTCGAGCCC CGTATCCGGC CGTCCGCCGT GATCCATGCG GT -#TACCGCCC 1140 - - GCGTGTCGAA CCCAGGTGTG CGACGTCAGA CAACGGGGGA GTGCTCCTTT TG -#GCTTCCTT 1200 - - CCAGGCGCGG CGGCTGCTGC GCTAGCTTTT TTGGCCACTG GCCGCGCGCA GC -#GTAAGCGG 1260 - - TTAGGCTGGA AAGCGAAAGC ATTAAGTGGC TCGCTCCCTG TAGCCGGAGG GT -#TATTTTCC 1320 - - AAGGGTTGAG TCGCGGGACC CCCGGTTCGA GTCTCGGACC GGCCGGACTG CG -#GCGAACGG 1380 - - GGGTTTGCCT CCCCGTCATG CAAGACCCCG CTTGCAAATT CCTCCGGAAA CA -#GGGACGAG 1440 - - CCCCTTTTTT GCTTTTCCCA GATGCATCCG GTGCTGCGGC A - # - # 1481 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:9: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 3364 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:9: - - GAATTCCCCA TCCTGGTCTA TAGAGAGAGT TCCAGAACAG CCAGGGCTAC AG -#ATAAACCC 60 - - ATCTGGAAAA ACAAAGTTGA ATGACCCAAG AGGGGTTCTC AGAGGGTGGC GT -#GTGCTCCC 120 - - TGGCAAGCCT ATGACATGGC CGGGGCCTGC CTCTCTCTGC CTCTGACCCT CA -#GTGGCTCC 180 - - CATGAACTCC TTGCCCAATG GCATCTTTTT CCTGCGCTCC TTGGGTTATT CC -#AGTCTCCC 240 - - CTCAGCATTC CTTCCTCAGG GCCTCGCTCT TCTCTCTGCT CCCTCCTTGC AC -#AGCTGGCT 300 - - CTGTCCACCT CAGATGTCAC AGTGCTCTCT CAGAGGAGGA AGGCACCATG TA -#CCCTCTGT 360 - - TTCCCAGGTA AGGGTTCAAT TTTTAAAAAT GGTTTTTTGT TTGTTTGTTT GT -#TTGTTTGT 420 - - TTGTTTGTTT TTCAAGACAG GGCTCCTCTG TGTAGTCCTA ACTGTCTTGA AA -#CTCCCTCT 480 - - GTAGACCAGG TCGACCTCGA ACTCTTGAAA CCTGCCACGG ACCACCCAGT CA -#GGTATGGA 540 - - GGTCCCTGGA ATGAGCGTCC TCGAAGCTAG GTGGGTAAGG GTTCGGCGGT GA -#CAAACAGA 600 - - AACAAACACA GAGGCAGTTT GAATCTGAGT GTATTTTGCA GCTCTCAAGC AG -#GGGATTTT 660 - - ATACATAAAA AAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAACC AAACATTACA TCTCTTAGAA AC -#TATATCCA 720 - - ATGAAACAAT CACAGATACC AACCAAAACC ATTGGGCAGA GTAAAGCACA AA -#AATCATCC 780 - - AAGCATTACA ACTCTGAAAC CATGTATTCA GTGAATCACA AACAGAACAG GT -#AACATCAT 840 - - TATTAATATA AATCACCAAA ATATAACAAT TCTAAAAGGA TGTATCCAGT GG -#GGGCTGTC 900 - - GTCCAAGGCT AGTGGCAGAT TTCCAGGAGC AGGTTAGTAA ATCTTAACCA CT -#GAACTAAC 960 - - TCTCCAGCCC CATGGTCAAT TATTATTTAG CATCTAGTGC CTAATTTTTT TT -#TATAAATC 1020 - - TTCACTATGT AATTTAAAAC TATTTTAATT CTTCCTAATT AAGGCTTTCT TT -#ACCATATA 1080 - - CCAAAATTCA CCTCCAATGA CACACGCGTA GCCATATGAA ATTTTATTGT TG -#GGAAAATT 1140 - - TGTACCTATC ATAATAGTTT TGTAAATGAT TTAAAAAGCA AAGTGTTAGC CG -#GGCGTGGT 1200 - - GGCACACGCC TTTAATCCCT GCACTCGGGA GGCAGGGGCA GGAGGATTTC TG -#AGTTTGAG 1260 - - GCCAGCCTGG TCTACAGAGT GAGTTCCAGG ACAGCCAGGG CTACACAGAG AA -#ACCCTGTC 1320 - - TCGAACCCCC CACCCCCCAA AAAAAGCAAA GTGTTGGTTT CCTTGGGGAT AA -#AGTCATGT 1380 - - TAGTGGCCCA TCTCTAGGCC CATCTCACCC ATTATTCTCG CTTAAGATCT TG -#GCCTAGGC 1440 - - TACCAGGAAC ATGTAAATAA GAAAAGGAAT AAGAGAAAAC AAAACAGAGA GA -#TTGCCATG 1500 - - AGAACTACGG CTCAATATTT TTTCTCTCCG GCGAAGAGTT CCACAACCAT CT -#CCAGGAGG 1560 - - CCTCCACGTT TTGAGGTCAA TGGCCTCAGT CTGTGGAACT TGTCACACAG AT -#CTTACTGG 1620 - - AGGTGGTGTG GCAGAAACCC ATTCCTTTTA GTGTCTTGGG CTAAAAGTAA AA -#GGCCCAGA 1680 - - GGAGGCCTTT GCTCATCTGA CCATGCTGAC AAGGAACACG GGTGCCAGGA CA -#GAGGCTGG 1740 - - ACCCCAGGAA CACCTTAAAC ACTTCTTCCC TTCTCCGCCC CCTAGAGCAG GC -#TCCCCTCA 1800 - - CCAGCCTGGG CAGAAATGGG GGAAGATGGA GTGAAGCCAT ACTGGCTACT CC -#AGAATCAA 1860 - - CAGAGGGAGC CGGGGGCAAT ACTGGAGAAG CTGGTCTCCC CCCAGGGGCA AT -#CCTGGCAC 1920 - - CTCCCAGGCA GAAGAGGAAA CTTCCACAGT GCATCTCACT TCCATGAATC CC -#CTCCTCGG 1980 - - ACTCTGAGGT CCTTGGTCAC AGCTGAGGTG CAAAAGGCTC CTGTCATATT GT -#GTCCTGCT 2040 - - CTGGTCTGCC TTCCACAGCT TGGGGGCCAC CTAGCCCACC TCTCCCTAGG GA -#TGAGAGCA 2100 - - GCCACTACGG GTCTAGGCTG CCCATGTAAG GAGGCAAGGC CTGGGGACAC CC -#GAGATGCC 2160 - - TGGTTATAAT TAACCCAGAC ATGTGGCTGC CCCCCCCCCC CCAACACCTG CT -#GCCTGAGC 2220 - - CTCACCCCCA CCCCGGTGCC TGGGTCTTAG GCTCTGTACA CCATGGAGGA GA -#AGCTCGCT 2280 - - CTAAAAATAA CCCTGTCCCT GGTGGATCCA GGGTGAGGGG CAGGCTGAGG GC -#GGCCACTT 2340 - - CCCTCAGCCG CAGGTTTGTT TTCCCAAGAA TGGTTTTTCT GCTTCTGTAG CT -#TTTCCTGT 2400 - - CAATTCTGCC ATGGTGGAGC AGCCTGCACT GGGCTTCTGG GAGAAACCAA AC -#CGGGTTCT 2460 - - AACCTTTCAG CTACAGTTAT TGCCTTTCCT GTAGATGGGC GACTACAGCC CC -#ACCCCCAC 2520 - - CCCCGTCTCC TGTATCCTTC CTGGGCCTGG GGATCCTAGG CTTTCACTGG AA -#ATTTCCCC 2580 - - CCAGGTGCTG TAGGCTAGAG TCACGGCTCC CAAGAACAGT GCTTGCCTGG CA -#TGCATGGT 2640 - - TCTGAACCTC CAACTGCAAA AAATGACACA TACCTTGACC CTTGGAAGGC TG -#AGGCAGGG 2700 - - GGATTGCCAT GAGTGCAAAG CCAGACTGGG TGGCATAGTT AGACCCTGTC TC -#AAAAAACC 2760 - - AAAAACAATT AAATAACTAA AGTCAGGCAA GTAATCCTAC TCGGGAGACT GA -#GGCAGAGG 2820 - - GATTGTTACA TGTCTGAGGC CAGCCTGGAC TACATAGGGT TTCAGGCTAG CC -#CTGTCTAC 2880 - - AGAGTAAGGC CCTATTTCAA AAACACAAAC AAAATGGTTC TCCCAGCTGC TA -#ATGCTCAC 2940 - - CAGGCAATGA AGCCTGGTGA GCATTAGCAA TGAAGGCAAT GAAGGAGGGT GC -#TGGCTACA 3000 - - ATCAAGGCTG TGGGGGACTG AGGGCAGGCT GTAACAGGCT TGGGGGCCAG GG -#CTTATACG 3060 - - TGCCTGGGAC TCCCAAAGTA TTACTGTTCC ATGTTCCCGG CGAAGGGCCA GC -#TGTCCCCC 3120 - - GCCAGCTAGA CTCAGCACTT AGTTTAGGAA CCAGTGAGCA AGTCAGCCCT TG -#GGGCAGCC 3180 - - CATACAAGGC CATGGGGCTG GGCAAGCTGC ACGCCTGGGT CCGGGGTGGG CA -#CGGTGCCC 3240 - - GGGCAACGAG CTGAAAGCTC ATCTGCTCTC AGGGGCCCCT CCCTGGGGAC AG -#CCCCTCCT 3300 - - GGCTAGTCAC ACCCTGTAGG CTCCTCTATA TAACCCAGGG GCACAGGGGC TG -#CCCCCGGG 3360 - - TCAC - # - # - # 3364 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:10: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 174 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:10: - - GGTACCACTA CGGGTCTAGG CTGCCCATGT AAGGAGGCAA GGCCTGGGGA CA -#CCCGAGAT 60 - - GCCTGGTTAT AATTAACCCC AACACCTGCT GCCCCCCCCC CCCCAACACC TG -#CTGCCTGA 120 - - GCCTGAGCGG TTACCCCACC CCGGTGCCTG GGTCTTAGGC TCTGTACACC AT - #GG 174 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:11: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 699 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: double (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:11: - - AGATCTTCCT AGAAATTCGC TGTCTGCGAG GGCCGGCTGT TGGGGTGAGT AC -#TCCCTCTC 60 - - AAAAGCGGGC ATGACTTCTG CGCTAAGATT GTCAGTTTCC AAAAACGAGG AG -#GATTTGAT 120 - - ATTCACCTGG CCCGCGGTGA TGCCTTTGAG GGTGGCCGCG TCCATCTGGT CA -#GAAAAGAC 180 - - AATCTTTTTG TTGTCAAGCT TGAGGTGTGG CAGGCTTGAG ATCGATCTGG CC -#ATACACTT 240 - - GAGTGACAAT GACATCCACT TTGCCTTTCT CTCCACAGGT GTCCACTCCC AG -#GTCCAACC 300 - - GCGGATCTCC CGGGACCATG CCCAAGAAGA AGAGGAAGGT GTCCAATTTA CT -#GACCGTAC 360 - - ACCAAAATTT GCCTGCATTA CCGGTCGATG CAACGAGTGA TGAGGTTCGC AA -#GAACCTGA 420 - - TGGACATGTT CAGGGATCGC CAGGCGTTTT CTGAGCATAC CTGGAAAATG CT -#TCTGTCCG 480 - - TTTGCCGGTC GTGGGCGGCA TGGTGCAAGT TGAATAACCG GAAATGGTTT CC -#CGCAGAAC 540 - - CTGAAGATGT TCGCGATTAT CTTCTATATC TTCAGGCGCG CGGTCTGGCA GT -#AAAAACTA 600 - - TCCAGCAACA TTTGGGCCAG CTAAACATGC TTCATCGTCG GTCCGGGCTG CC -#ACGACCAA 660 - - GTGACAGCAA TGCTGTTTCA CTGGTTATGC GGCGGATCC - # - # 699 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:12: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 68 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:12: - - GAAGATCTAT AACTTCGTAT AATGTATGCT ATACGAAGTT ATTACCGAAG AA -#ATGGCTCG 60 - - AGATCTTC - # - #- # 68 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:13: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 68 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:13: - - GAAGATCTCG AGCCATTTCT TCGGTAATAA CTTCGTATAG CATACATTAT AC -#GAAGTTAT 60 - - AGATCTTC - # - #- # 68 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:14: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 50 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:14: - - CCACATGTAT AACTTCGTAT AGCATACATT ATACGAAGTT ATACATGTGG - # 50 - - - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:15: - - (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 50 base - #pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single (D) TOPOLOGY: linear - - (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid (A) DESCRIPTION: /desc - #= "DNA" - - (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:15: - - CCACATGTAT AACTTCGTAT AATGTATGCT ATACGAAGTT ATACATGTGG - # 50__________________________________________________________________________
Claims
  • 1. A recombinant adenovirus comprising the adenovirus E2b region having a deletion, wherein said adenovirus self-propagates in a packaging cell line and said E2b region comprises the DNA polymerase gene and the adenovirus preterminal protein gene.
  • 2. The recombinant adenovirus of claim 1, wherein said deletion is within the adenovirus DNA polymerase gene.
  • 3. The recombinant adenovirus of claim 1, wherein said deletion is within the adenovirus preterminal protein gene.
  • 4. The recombinant adenovirus of claim 1, wherein said deletion is within the adenovirus DNA polymerase and preterminal protein genes.
  • 5. A mammalian cell line stably and constitutively expressing the adenovirus E1 gene products and the adenovirus DNA polymerase.
  • 6. The cell line of claim 5, wherein said cell line comprises a recombinant adenovirus comprising a deletion within the E2b region and said recombinant adenovirus self-propagates in said cell line.
  • 7. The cell of claim 5, wherein the genome of said cell line contains a nucleotide sequence encoding adenovirus DNA polymerase operably linked to a heterologous promoter.
  • 8. The cell line of claim 5 further constitutively expressing the adenovirus preterminal protein gene product.
  • 9. The cell line of claim 6, wherein said deletion within said E2b region comprises a deletion within the adenoviral DNA polymerase gene.
  • 10. The cell line of claim 7, wherein said cell line is selected from the group consisting of the B-6, B-9, C-1, C-4, C-7, C-13, and C-14 cell lines.
  • 11. The cell line of claim 8, wherein said cell line comprises a recombinant adenovirus comprising a deletion within the E2b region and said recombinant adenovirus self-propagates in said cell line.
  • 12. The cell line of claim 8, wherein the genome of said cell line contains a nucleotide sequence encoding adenovirus preterminal protein operably linked to a heterologous promoter.
  • 13. The cell line of claim 11, wherein said deletion within said E2b region comprises a deletion within the adenoviral preterminal protein gene.
  • 14. The cell line of claim 13, wherein said deletion within said E2b region comprises a deletion within the adenoviral DNA polymerase and preterminal protein genes.
  • 15. A mammalian cell line stably and constitutively expressing the adenovirus E1 gene products and the adenovirus DNA polymerase, said cell line further constitutively expressing the adenovirus preterminal protein gene product, wherein the genome of said cell line contains a nucleotide sequence encoding adenovirus preterminal protein operably linked to a heterologous promoter, and wherein said cell line is selected from the group consisting of the C-1, C-4, C-7, C-13, and C-14 cell lines.
  • 16. A method of producing infectious recombinant adenovirus particles containing an adenoviral genome containing a deletion within the E2b region, comprising
  • a) providing:
  • i) a mammalian cell line stably and constitutively expressing the adenovirus E1 gene products and the adenovirus DNA polymerase;
  • ii) a recombinant adenovirus comprising a deletion within the E2b region, wherein said recombinant adenovirus self-propagates in said cell line;
  • b) introducing said recombinant adenovirus into said cell line under conditions such that said recombinant adenovirus is propagated to form infectious recombinant adenovirus particles; and
  • c) recovering said infectious recombinant adenovirus particles.
  • 17. The method of claim 16, further comprising d) purifying said recovered infectious recombinant adenovirus particles.
  • 18. The method of claim 16, wherein said mammalian cell line further constitutively expresses the adenovirus preterminal protein.
  • 19. A recombinant plasmid which replicates in a bacterial host, said recombinant plasmid comprising adenoviral E2b sequences, said E2b sequences containing a deletion within the polymerase gene, said deletion resulting in reduced polymerase activity.
  • 20. The recombinant plasmid of claim 19, wherein said deletion comprises a deletion of nucleotides 8772 to 9385 in SEQ ID NO:4.
  • 21. The recombinant plasmid of claim 20, wherein said plasmid has the designation p.DELTA.pol.
  • 22. The recombinant plasmid of claim 20, wherein said plasmid has the designation pBHG11.DELTA.pol.
  • 23. A recombinant plasmid which replicates in a bacterial host, said recombinant plasmid comprising adenoviral E2b sequences, said E2b sequences containing a deletion within the preterminal protein gene, said deletion resulting in the inability to express functional preterminal protein without disruption of the VA RNA genes.
  • 24. The recombinant plasmid of claim 23, wherein said deletion within said preterminal protein gene comprises a deletion of nucleotides 10,705 to 11,134 in SEQ ID NO:4.
  • 25. The recombinant plasmid of claim 23 further comprising a deletion within the polymerase gene, said deletion resulting in reduced polymerase activity.
  • 26. The recombinant plasmid of claim 24, wherein said plasmid has the designation p.DELTA.pTP.
  • 27. The recombinant plasmid of claim 24, wherein said plasmid has the designation pBHG11.DELTA.pTP.
  • 28. The recombinant plasmid of claim 25, wherein said deletion within said polymerase and said preterminal protein genes comprises a deletion of nucleotides 8,773 to 9586 and 11,067 to 12,513 in SEQ ID NO:4.
  • 29. The recombinant plasmid of claim 28, wherein said plasmid has the designation pAXB.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13.
  • 30. The recombinant plasmid of claim 28, wherein said plasmid has the designation pBHG11.DELTA.pol.DELTA.pTPVARNA+t13.
Parent Case Info

This is a Continuation of application Ser. No. 08/940,443 filed on Sep. 30, 1997, abandoned, which is a Division application of of application Ser. No. 08/735,609 filed on Oct. 23, 1996, abandoned.

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Divisions (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 735609 Oct 1996
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 940443 Sep 1997