Sayandeep Saha,W. John Haynes,Natalia M. Del Rio,Elizabeth Young,Jue Zhang,Jiwon Seo,Liupei Huang,Alexis M. Holm,Wesley Blashka,Lydia Murphy,Merrick J. Scholz,Abigale Henrichs,Jayalaxmi Suresh Babu,John Steill,Ron Stewart,Timothy J. Kamp,Matthew E. Brown
Hypoimmune gene edited human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) are a promising platform for developing reparative cellular therapies that evade immune rejection. Existing first-generation hypoimmune strategies have used CRISPR/Cas9 editing to modulate genes associated with adaptive (e.g., T cell) immune responses, but have largely not addressed the innate immune cells (e.g., monocytes, neutrophils) that mediate inflammation and rejection processes occurring early after graft transplantation. We identified the adhesion molecule ICAM-1 as a novel hypoimmune target that plays multiple critical roles in both adaptive and innate immune responses post-transplantation. In a series of studies, we found that ICAM-1 blocking or knock-out (KO) in hPSC-derived cardiovascular therapies imparted significantly diminished binding of multiple immune cell types. ICAM-1 KO resulted in diminished T cell proliferation responses