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Bioreactor-based mass production of human iPSC-derived macrophages enables immunotherapies against bacterial airway infections

Author

Listed:
  • Mania Ackermann

    (Hannover Medical School
    Hannover Medical School)

  • Henning Kempf

    (Hannover Medical School
    Novo Nordisk A/S)

  • Miriam Hetzel

    (Hannover Medical School
    Hannover Medical School)

  • Christina Hesse

    (REBIRTH Cluster-of Excellence
    German Center for Lung Research)

  • Anna Rafiei Hashtchin

    (Hannover Medical School
    Hannover Medical School)

  • Kerstin Brinkert

    (Hannover Medical School)

  • Juliane Wilhelmine Schott

    (Hannover Medical School)

  • Kathrin Haake

    (Hannover Medical School
    Hannover Medical School)

  • Mark Philipp Kühnel

    (German Center for Lung Research
    Hannover Medical School)

  • Silke Glage

    (Hannover Medical School)

  • Constanca Figueiredo

    (Hannover Medical School)

  • Danny Jonigk

    (German Center for Lung Research
    Hannover Medical School)

  • Katherina Sewald

    (REBIRTH Cluster-of Excellence
    German Center for Lung Research)

  • Axel Schambach

    (Hannover Medical School
    Boston Children’s Hospital)

  • Sabine Wronski

    (REBIRTH Cluster-of Excellence
    German Center for Lung Research)

  • Thomas Moritz

    (Hannover Medical School
    Hannover Medical School)

  • Ulrich Martin

    (Hannover Medical School
    German Center for Lung Research)

  • Robert Zweigerdt

    (Hannover Medical School)

  • Antje Munder

    (German Center for Lung Research
    Hannover Medical School)

  • Nico Lachmann

    (Hannover Medical School
    Hannover Medical School)

Abstract

The increasing number of severe infections with multi-drug-resistant pathogens worldwide highlights the need for alternative treatment options. Given the pivotal role of phagocytes and especially alveolar macrophages in pulmonary immunity, we introduce a new, cell-based treatment strategy to target bacterial airway infections. Here we show that the mass production of therapeutic phagocytes from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) in industry-compatible, stirred-tank bioreactors is feasible. Bioreactor-derived iPSC-macrophages (iPSC-Mac) represent a highly pure population of CD45+CD11b+CD14+CD163+ cells, and share important phenotypic, functional and transcriptional hallmarks with professional phagocytes, however with a distinct transcriptome signature similar to primitive macrophages. Most importantly, bioreactor-derived iPSC-Mac rescue mice from Pseudomonas aeruginosa-mediated acute infections of the lower respiratory tract within 4-8 h post intra-pulmonary transplantation and reduce bacterial load. Generation of specific immune-cells from iPSC-sources in scalable stirred-tank bioreactors can extend the field of immunotherapy towards bacterial infections, and may allow for further innovative cell-based treatment strategies.

Suggested Citation

  • Mania Ackermann & Henning Kempf & Miriam Hetzel & Christina Hesse & Anna Rafiei Hashtchin & Kerstin Brinkert & Juliane Wilhelmine Schott & Kathrin Haake & Mark Philipp Kühnel & Silke Glage & Constanca, 2018. "Bioreactor-based mass production of human iPSC-derived macrophages enables immunotherapies against bacterial airway infections," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 9(1), pages 1-13, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:9:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-018-07570-7
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-07570-7
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