Selected Grantee Publications
- Clear All
- 2 results found
- Swine Models
- Immunology
- CRISPR
Extended Survival of 9- and 10-Gene-Edited Pig Heart Xenografts With Ischemia Minimization and CD154 Costimulation Blockade-Based Immunosuppression
Chaban et al., The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation. 2024.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39097214
Heart transplantations are severely constrained from the shortage of available organs derived from human donors. Xenotransplantation of hearts from gene-edited (GE) pigs is a promising way to address this problem. Researchers evaluated GE pig hearts with varying knockouts and human transgene insertions. Human transgenes are introduced to mitigate important physiological incompatibilities between pig cells and human blood. Using a baboon heterotopic cardiac transplantation model, one female and seven male specific-pathogen-free baboons received either a 3-GE, 9-GE, or 10-GE pig heart with an immunosuppression regimen targeting CD40/CD154. Early cardiac xenograft failure with complement activation and multifocal infarcts were observed with 3-GE pig hearts, whereas 9- and 10-GE pig hearts demonstrated successful graft function and prolonged survival. These findings show that one or more transgenes of the 9- and 10-GE pig hearts with CD154 blockade provide graft protection in this preclinical model. Supported by ORIP (U42OD011140) and NIAID.
Fetal Bone Engraftment Reconstitutes the Immune System in Pigs With Severe Combined Immunodeficiency
Monarch et al., Lab Animal. 2024.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39289566/
A valuable preclinical model for studying immune-related pathologies is the severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) pig through modification of recombination activating gene 2 (RAG2) and interleukin-2 receptor-γ (IL2RG). RAG2/IL2RG double knockout SCID pigs are hard to maintain for breeding and long-term studies because their life span is 8 weeks or less. The researchers investigated fetal allograft transplantation derived from immunocompetent pigs as a strategy for reconstituting the immune system of SCID pigs and promoting survival. Following fetal allograft, SCID pigs demonstrated increased levels of lymphocytes. SCID pigs that received the fetal allograft demonstrated improved body condition and extended life span compared with nonrecipient SCID littermates. This study demonstrates the potential use of fetal allograft transplantation to extend the life span of SCID pigs to breeding age to reduce the resources used to maintain this model for biomedical research. Supported by ORIP (U42OD011140, R21OD027062).