<p>Therapeutic correction of hemophilia A using 2D endothelial cells and multicellular 3D organoids derived from CRISPR/Cas9-engineered patient iPSCs</p>
- Authors
- Park, Chul-Yong; Lee, Gyunggyu; Kim, Gyeongmin; Woo, Dong-Hun; Han, Choongseong; Park, Han-Jin; Kim, Dong-Wook; Kim, Jong-Hoon; Son, Jeong Sang; Park, Ji Young; Kim, Hyo Jin; Chi, Kyun Yoo; Kim, Sang Kyum
- Issue Date
- 4월-2022
- Publisher
- ELSEVIER SCI LTD
- Keywords
- Hemophilia A; Endothelial cells; Induced pluripotent stem cells; Genome-editing
- Citation
- BIOMATERIALS, v.283
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- BIOMATERIALS
- Volume
- 283
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/141857
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2022.121429
- ISSN
- 0142-9612
- Abstract
- The bleeding disorder hemophilia A (HA) is caused by a single-gene (F8) defect and its clinical symptom can be substantially improved by a small increase in the plasma coagulation factor VIII (FVIII) level. In this study, we used F8-defective human induced pluripotent stem cells from an HA patient (F8d-HA hiPSCs) and F8-corrected (F8c) HA hiPSCs produced by CRISPR/Cas9 genome engineering of F8d-HA hiPSCs. We obtained a highly enriched population of CD157(+) cells from CRISPR/Cas9-edited F8c-HA hiPSCs. These cells exhibited multiple cellular and functional phenotypes of endothelial cells (ECs) with significant levels of FVIII activity, which was not observed in F8d-HA hiPSC-ECs. After transplantation, the engineered F8c-HA hiPSC-ECs dramatically changed bleeding episodes in HA animals and restored plasma FVIII activity. Notably, grafting a high dose of ECs substantially reduced the bleeding time during multiple consecutive bleeding challenges in HA mice, demonstrating a robust hemostatic effect (90% survival). Furthermore, the engrafted ECs survived more than 3 months in HA mice and reversed bleeding phenotypes against lethal wounding challenges. We also produced F8c-HA hiPSC-derived 3D liver organoids by assembling three different cell types in microwell devices and confirmed its therapeutic effect in HA animals. Our data demonstrate that the combination of genome-engineering and iPSC technologies represents a novel modality that allows autologous cell-mediated gene therapy for treating HA.
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Collections - Graduate School > Department of Biotechnology > 1. Journal Articles
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