Selected Grantee Publications
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- 3 results found
- nci
- Vaccines/Therapeutics
- CRISPR
Small-Diameter Artery Grafts Engineered from Pluripotent Stem Cells Maintain 100% Patency in an Allogeneic Rhesus Macaque Model
Zhang et al., Cell Reports Medicine. 2025.
https://www.cell.com/cell-reports-medicine/fulltext/S2666-3791(25)00075-8
Globally, the leading cause of death is occlusive arterial disease, but surgical revascularization improves patient prognosis and reduces mortality. Vascular grafts often are needed in coronary bypass surgery for surgical revascularization. However, the clinically approved option for small-diameter revascularization is autologous vascular grafts, which require invasive harvesting methods, and many patients lack suitable vessels. Researchers developed a novel method for graft development using arterial endothelial cells (AECs), derived from pluripotent stem cells (PSCs), on expanded polytetrafluoroethylene using specific adhesion molecules. This study used a 6- to 13-year-old male rhesus macaque arterial interposition grafting model. The major histocompatibility complex mismatched wild-type (MHC-WT) AEC grafts were successful when implanted in rhesus macaques and attracted host cells to the engraftment, leading to 100% patency for 6 months. The results highlight a novel strategy for generating artery grafts from PSC-derived MHC-WT AECs that overcomes current challenges in graft development and may have future clinical applications. Supported by ORIP (P51OD011106, S10OD023526), NCI, and NHLBI.
In Vivo Expansion of Gene-Targeted Hepatocytes Through Transient Inhibition of an Essential Gene
De Giorgi et al., Science Translational Medicine. 2025.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39937884
This study explores Repair Drive, a platform technology that selectively expands homology-directed repair for treating liver diseases in male and female mice. Through transient conditioning of the liver by knocking down an essential gene—fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase—and delivering an untraceable version of that essential gene with a therapeutic transgene, Repair Drive significantly increases the percentage of gene-targeted hepatocytes (liver cells) up to 25% without inducing toxicity or tumorigenesis after a 1-year follow-up. This also resulted in a fivefold increase in expression of human factor IX, a therapeutic transgene. Repair Drive offers a promising platform for precise, safe, and durable correction of liver-related genetic disorders and may expand the applicability of somatic cell genome editing in a broad range of liver diseases in humans. Supported by ORIP (U42OD035581, U42OD026645), NCI, NHLBI, and NIDDK.
Murine MHC-Deficient Nonobese Diabetic Mice Carrying Human HLA-DQ8 Develop Severe Myocarditis and Myositis in Response to Anti-PD-1 Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Cancer Therapy
Racine et al., Journal of Immunology. 2024.
Myocarditis has emerged as a relatively rare but often lethal autoimmune complication of checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) cancer therapy, and significant mortality is associated with this phenomenon. Investigators developed a new mouse model system that spontaneously develops myocarditis. These mice are highly susceptible to myocarditis and acute heart failure following anti-PD-1 ICI-induced treatment. Additionally, the treatment accelerates skeletal muscle myositis. The team performed characterization of cardiac and skeletal muscle T cells using histology, flow cytometry, adoptive transfers, and RNA sequencing analyses. This study sheds light on underlying immunological mechanisms in ICI myocarditis and provides the basis for further detailed analyses of diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Supported by ORIP (U54OD020351, U54OD030187), NCI, NIA, NIDDK, and NIGMS.