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In vivo Reprogramming

In vivo reprogramming is a therapeutic approach to regenerative medicine aimed at delivering a cell-based therapy to an organ or tissue in need of functional restoration without the use of a cellular agent. Building on principles of cellular reprogramming, epitomized by Yamanaka’s Nobel-winning discovery of ‘Induction of Pluripotent Stem Cells from Adult Human Fibroblasts by Defined Factors’ in 2007, in vivo reprogramming employs transdifferentiation, or direct conversion of a source cell type into a target cell type without an intermediate pluripotent or stem cell stage, to affect the conversion of cells directly in the human body.

The rationale for in vivo reprogramming arises from the bottlenecks associated with the development of ex vivo cell therapies – manufacturability, scalability and the risk of immune rejection. Despite progression toward allogeneic development, the need to replicate the cell’s in vivo microenvironment in in vitro conditions and process variation between cell type, indication or disease area will remain a challenge.

In vivo reprogramming leverages the plasticity of cells and methods for the induction of cellular identity genes, such optimal combination of transcription factors, to achieve cellular reprogramming directly in situ, whilst harnessing the innate microenvironment to maintain functional maturity. The method has the potential to circumvent the need for ex vivo cell manufacture and the risk of immune rejection. Research into in vivo reprogramming methodologies includes the in situ generation or rejuvenation of cardiomyocytes, pancreatic β cells and neurons for regenerative medicine, as well as muscle regeneration and rejuvenation/anti-aging studies via partial reprogramming using the OKSM factors.

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In vivo Reprogramming

Here we discuss advances in in vivo reprogramming techniques, such as the MOGRIFY® platform, which enable the prediction of key regulatory factors or small molecules required to drive cell reprogramming of any mature cell type to any other cell type, sourcing the optimal cell conversions in situ.

Presentation
Translating Cellular Reprogramming into Efficacious and Scalable Cell Therapies for Immuno-Oncology
2021   |   Alessandra De Riva
Adoptive cell therapy has arisen as a novel treatment for B cell malignancies, however, its clinical and commercial success still presents considerable challenges in accessibility for patients and questions regarding ...
Peer-Reviewed Paper
Exploiting Epigenetics to Systematically Optimise Culture Conditions for Cellular Therapies
2021   |   Joachim Luginbühl, Rodrigo Santos
One of the main challenges of cell therapies is the maintenance and/or expansion of the required therapeutic phenotype in vitro. Moreover, to meet both the traceability and safety requirements for a clinical-...
Application Note
Defining Cell Culture Conditions to Drive Cell Identity and Scalability in Cell Therapy
2021   |   Aida Moreno-Moral, David Anderson
Pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) represent a valuable resource for the generation of cell types for treating these diseases. These include cardiomyocytes, pancreatic beta cells, and hepatocytes, which have therapeutic po...
Webinar
Webinar: The Epigenetics Approach to Driving Cell Identity and Scalability in Cell Therapy
2021   |   Zoe Hewitt, Owen Rackham, Rodrigo Santos
In the delivery of scalable cell therapies, there is a fundamental need to derive viable cells in vitro. In addition to developing cell cultures that mimic in vivo conditions for the maintenance of t...
Commentary
A new technology for direct cell reprogramming
2019   |   Julian Gough
Japanese scientist Shinya Yamanaka changed the course of cell therapy in 2007 when he showed that mature human cells could be induced into an embryonic-like state. The discovery of induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells...
Commentary
Cell Conversion Shortcuts Mapped with Predictive System
2016   |   Julian Gough
In the cell-fate conversion landscape, the road less traveled is transdifferentiation, even though it is the straighter path between one cell type and another. The more circuitous route, up to pluripotency and then do...