解剖
细胞生物学
肌营养不良
生物
病理
医学
遗传学
作者
Anna Kowala,James Boot,Jinhong Meng,Charles A. Mein,Olivier Pourquié,John T. Connelly,Jennifer E. Morgan,Yung‐Yao Lin
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.xcrm.2025.102019
摘要
Highlights•A clinically relevant transplantation strategy without modulation of host muscles•Engineered human myogenic cells in hydrogels are engraftable and safe•Long-term engraftment with innervation and vascularization in dystrophic mice•Human PAX7+ cells populate the satellite cell nicheSummaryTransplantation of human myogenic progenitor cells (MPCs) is a promising therapeutic strategy for treating muscle-wasting diseases, e.g., Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). To increase engraftment efficiency of donor stem cells, modulation of host muscles is required, significantly limiting their clinical translation. Here, we develop a clinically relevant transplantation strategy synergizing hydrogel-mediated delivery and engineered human MPCs generated from CRISPR-corrected DMD patient-derived pluripotent stem cells. We demonstrate that donor-derived human myofibers produce full-length dystrophin at 4 weeks and 5–6 months (long-term) after transplantation in the unmodulated muscles of the dystrophin-deficient mouse model of DMD. Remarkably, human myofibers are innervated by mouse motor neurons forming neuromuscular junctions and supported by vascularization after long-term engraftment in dystrophic mice. PAX7+ cells of human origin populate the satellite cell niche. There was no evidence of tumorigenesis in mice engrafted with hydrogel-encapsulated human MPCs. Our results provide a proof of concept in developing hydrogel-based cell therapy for muscle-wasting diseases.Graphical abstract
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