Human hypoimmune primary pancreatic islets avoid rejection and autoimmunity and alleviate diabetes in allogeneic humanized mice

Author:

Hu Xiaomeng1ORCID,Gattis Corie1,Olroyd Ari G.1ORCID,Friera Annabelle M.1ORCID,White Kathy1ORCID,Young Chi1ORCID,Basco Ron1ORCID,Lamba Meghan1ORCID,Wells Frank1ORCID,Ankala Ramya1,Dowdle William E.1ORCID,Lin August1,Egenberger Kyla1,Rukstalis J. Michael1ORCID,Millman Jeffrey R.1ORCID,Connolly Andrew J.2,Deuse Tobias3ORCID,Schrepfer Sonja1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sana Biotechnology Inc., 1 Tower Place, South San Francisco, CA 94080, USA.

2. Department of Pathology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA.

3. Department of Surgery, Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Transplant and Stem Cell Immunobiology (TSI) Lab, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA.

Abstract

Transplantation of allogeneic pancreatic donor islets has successfully been performed in selected patients with difficult-to-control insulin-dependent diabetes and impaired awareness of hypoglycemia (IAH). However, the required systemic immunosuppression associated with this procedure prevents this cell replacement therapy from more widespread adoption in larger patient populations. We report the editing of primary human islet cells to the hypoimmune HLA class I– and class II–negative and CD47-overexpressing phenotype and their reaggregation into human HIP pseudoislets (p-islets). Human HIP p-islets were shown to survive, engraft, and ameliorate diabetes in immunocompetent, allogeneic, diabetic humanized mice. HIP p-islet cells were further shown to avoid autoimmune killing in autologous, diabetic humanized autoimmune mice. The survival and endocrine function of HIP p-islet cells were not impaired by contamination of unedited or partially edited cells within the p-islets. HIP p-islet cells were eliminated quickly and reliably in this model using a CD47-targeting antibody, thus providing a safety strategy in case HIP cells exert toxicity in a future clinical setting. Transplantation of human HIP p-islets for which no immunosuppression is required has the potential to lead to wider adoption of this therapy and help more diabetes patients with IAH and history of severe hypoglycemic events to achieve insulin independence.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

General Medicine

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