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Delivery of Human iPSC‐Derived RPE Cells in Healthy Minipig Retina Results in Interaction Between Photoreceptors and Transplanted Cells
Author(s) -
Macečková Brymová Anna,
RodriguezJimenez Francisco Javier,
Konrad Annika,
Nemesh Yaroslav,
Thottappali Muhammed Arshad,
ArteroCastro Ana,
Nyshchuk Ruslan,
Kolesnikova Anastasiia,
Müller Brigitte,
Studenovska Hana,
Juhasova Jana,
Juhas Stefan,
Valekova Ivona,
Lukovic Dunja,
Aleman Claudia,
Ardan Taras,
Drutovič Saskia,
Motlik Jan,
Ellederova Zdenka,
Straňák Zbinek,
Veith Miroslav,
Lytvynchuk Lyubomyr,
Sharma Ruchi,
Bharti Kapil,
Petrovski Goran,
Jendelova Pavla,
Stieger Knut,
Erceg Slaven
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
advanced science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.388
H-Index - 100
ISSN - 2198-3844
DOI - 10.1002/advs.202412301
Subject(s) - induced pluripotent stem cell , retina , retinal , retinal pigment epithelium , gliosis , retinal degeneration , microbiology and biotechnology , macular degeneration , transplantation , biology , embryonic stem cell , medicine , anatomy , ophthalmology , neuroscience , surgery , genetics , gene
Abstract In late stages of inherited and acquired retinal diseases such as Stargardt disease (STGD) or dry age‐related macular degeneration (AMD), loss of retinal pigment epithelia (RPE) cells and subsequently photoreceptors in the macular area result in a dramatic decline of central visual function. Repopulating this area with functional RPE cells may prevent or decline the progression of photoreceptor loss. In the present study, the viability, survival, and integration of human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)‐derived RPE cells (hiPSC‐RPE) is assessed generated using clinical‐grade protocol and cultured on a clinically relevant scaffold (poly‐L‐lactide‐ co ‐D, L‐lactide, PDLLA) after subretinal implantation in immunosuppressed minipigs for up to 6 weeks. It is shown that transplanted hiPSC‐RPE cells maintain the RPE cell features such as cell polarity, hexagonal shape, and cell–cell contacts, and interact closely with photoreceptor outer segments without signs of gliosis or neuroinflammation throughout the entire period of examination. In addition, an efficient immunosuppressing strategy with a continuous supply of tacrolimus is applied. Continuous verification and improvement of existing protocols are crucial for its translation to the clinic. The results support the use of hiPSC‐RPE on PDLLA scaffold as a cell replacement therapeutic approach for RPE degenerative diseases.

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