Transfusion of red blood cells and platelets is one of the most common life-saving procedures used in the clinic. Blood transfusions are needed to replace blood lost through traumatic injury and surgery. Transfusions are also used for the treatment of burn victims, recipients of organ transplants, and patients with leukemia, cancer, sickle cell diseases, thalassemia and thrombocytopenia. With new advances in medical treatment and an aging population, the demand for blood products continues to increase.1 Currently, all blood components utilized for transfusion therapy are obtained through voluntary donation, which creates periodic shortages and concerns about disease transfer.
Stem cells are a logical alternative source for blood cells. Studies pioneered by Luc Douay’s group demonstrated the feasibility of ex vivo production of red blood cells (RBC) from CD34 hematopoietic stem cells/progenitors isolated from cord blood, bone marrow or peripheral blood.2 However, somatic hematopoietic stem cells are difficult to expand, which limits the possibility of using these cells for high scale industrial production of major blood components. Human embryonic stem cells (ESC) are pluripotent stem cells (PSC) capable of unlimited proliferation while maintaining the ability to form all the cells of the body, including blood cells.3,4 Human ESC can be grown in unlimited numbers, thus their derivatives can also be produced in unlimited numbers. In 2006, Yamanaka’s group demonstrated that mouse skin fibroblasts could be reprogrammed to a pluripotent ESC-like state via ectopic expression of four factors.5 Soon after, induced PSC were obtained from human skin fibroblasts.6,7 Like human ESC, human induced PSC proliferate indefinitely and can be efficiently differentiated into blood cells.7–9 Since induced PSC can be generated from any individual without the ethical controversy associated with obtaining human ESC, they can be used to generate blood cells with phenotypic characteristics matching those of any living individual. Because human induced PSC were initially obtained using lentiviral vectors and reprogramming factors, some of which are known oncogenes, proviral integration was the most significant concern regarding translation of the use of these cells into the clinic. However this obstacle has been overcome in a short period and technologies allowing for the generation of transgene-free human induced PSC have already been developed.8
Recently, several groups have demonstrated the feasibility of RBC production from human ESC.10,11 The work by Lapillonne et al., published in this issue of the journal, shows that RBC can be produced from induced PSC on a large scale.12 By differentiating induced PSC and human ESC, the authors were able to obtain up to 3.5×10 RBC from 10 PSC. As one pack of RBC concentrate contains approximately 2×10 cells, only 10 PSC would be required to produce one unit of cells for transfusion. Given the huge expansion potential of PSC, these achievements bring the possibility of manufacturing blood cells closer to reality. However, in spite of these technological advances, the high costs associated with culturing and differentiating cells in vitro remain major challenges to the industrial production of RBC. Nevertheless, manufacturing RBC has several important advantages for clinical use. First, the continuity of blood supplies could be improved significantly; RBC of any blood group could be produced demand, and an unlimited number of universal type (O Rh negative) RBC could be available for use in patients with acute hemorrhage with an unknown blood group. Manufactured blood products would also virtually eliminate the risk of viral, prion (the cause of fatal spongiform encephalitis), and bacterial transmission. RBC could be obtained without the presence of contaminating plasma, granulocytes and lymphocytes, significantly reducing the incidence of non-hemolytic transfusion reactions and graft-versus-host disease in immunocompromised patients. Younger RBC (neocytes) could also be produced, reducing the number of transfusions required for patients with chronic anemias, and therefore reducing haemosiderosis due to iron overload and its sequelae: diabetes, cardiac failure and death. Finally, genetically modified ESC or induced PSC with a rare blood group phenotype could be produced to generate RBC that fit specific clinical needs.
When patients lose blood they also need platelet transfusions. Platelets are extremely fragile and currently there is no clinically applicable method for their long-term storage. A total shelf-life of only 5 days translates into 3 days of potential use for hospitals after testing and shipping, so most blood banks have constant platelet shortages. Alloimmunization and development of refractoriness to platelet transfusions remain significant clinical problems, especially for patients with severe thrombocytopenia and bone marrow failure. The use of human PSC to produce platelets has the potential to reduce alloimmunization significantly by providing platelet products free of leukocytes and by manufacturing HLA-matched platelets on demand. Although the feasibility of megakaryocyte and platelet production from human ESC has been demonstrated,13,14 the differentiation systems currently used require xenogenic feeder cells and are not robust enough to enable industrial production.
Granulocyte transfusions are used to treat severe neutropenia in patients undergoing myelotoxic therapies. Granulocytes have a very short shelf-life (24 hours) and have to be HLA-matched to prevent alloimmunization. As an alternative approach, myeloid progenitors with the potential to differentiate into mature myelomonocytic cells can be generated from stem cells and used to improve immune function in patients with bone marrow failure. Recent studies demonstrated that LinCD34CD43CD45 multipotent myeloid progenitors could be generated from human ESC and induced PSC, expanded with granulocyte-monocyte colony-stimulating factor, and differentiated, with high efficiency, into almost all types of mature myelomonocytic cells, including neutrophils, eosinophils, dendritic cells, Langerhans’ cells, macrophages, and osteoclasts.15 The methodology described already enables the production of more than 10 CD34CD45 highly proliferative myeloid progenitors from 10 human PSC. Although the potential of human PSC-derived myeloid progenitors to restore myeloid cell production in vivo remains to be evaluated in animal models, these cells can already be used to screen the myelotoxicity of chemotherapeutic drugs. Despite the relative ease with which human PSC can be differentiated into erythromyeloid cells, generation of human PSC-derived lymphoid cells remains a significant challenge. Kaufman’s group demonstrated successful differentiation of human ESC into natural killer cells.16 T cells were obtained from human ESC using DLL1-expressing OP9 stromal cells or by transplanting differentiating human ESC together with human thymic tissue into immunocompromised mice.17,18 While the potential of human ESC to generate B cells has been shown,19,20 significant improvements in differentiation conditions are needed to achieve efficient production of B cells from human PSC.
Advances in the identification of reprogramming factors, the generation of human induced PSC, and their differentiation to blood cells provide a unique opportunity for the development of novel technologies for manufacturing patient-customized blood products. Current studies clearly demonstrate the feasibility of massive ex vivo production of erythromyeloid cells from human PSC. The next key steps toward clinical translation of human PSC-based therapies for blood diseases include development of completely defined, animal product-free conditions for the PSC differentiation; bioreactor based-technology for further scaling up of cell production; and evaluation of the therapeutic potential and safety of human PSC-derived blood cells in animal models.
Footnotes
- Igor Slukvin is Associate Professor at the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA. His research focuses on hematopoietic and endothelial development from pluripotent stem cells.
- Financial and other disclosures provided by the author using the ICMJE (www.icmje.org) Uniform Format for Disclosure of Competing Interests are available with the full text of this paper at www.haematologica.org.
- ( Related Original Article on page 1651)
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