(73b) Temporal ID2 transcription Factor Expression Improves Hpsc-Derived Natural Killer Cell Differentiation | AIChE

(73b) Temporal ID2 transcription Factor Expression Improves Hpsc-Derived Natural Killer Cell Differentiation

Authors 

Jung, J. - Presenter, Iowa State University
Bao, X., Purdue University
Chang, Y., Purdue University
Natural killer (NK) cells are one type of innate lymphoid cells, and NK cell-based immunotherapy serves as a potentially curative therapy for cancers. However, the lack of reliable resources for large amount of NK cells required for clinical infusion has limited the broader application of NK cells in targeted immunotherapy. Substantial effort has thus been made to generate NK-like cells from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs), but detailed molecular mechanisms regulating NK cell differentiation remain elusive, preventing us from developing robust strategies for NK cell production. Here, we genetically engineered hPSCs with inducible overexpression of transcription factors NFIL3, ID2, or SPI1 via CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene knockin and investigated their temporal roles during NK cell differentiation. Our results demonstrated ID2 overexpression significantly promoted NK cell generation compared with NFIL3 and SPI1 under a chemically-defined, feeder-free culture condition. The resulting ID2 hPSC-derived NK cells exhibited various mature NK-specific markers and displayed effective tumor-killing activities, comparable to NK cells derived from wildtype hPSCs. Collectively, our study provides a new platform for efficient NK cells production, severing as a realistic off-the-shelf cell source for targeted cancer immunotherapy.

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