Abstract

Introduction: Heart transplantation is the only curative option available for patients with advanced heart failure. However, donor organ shortage and graft rejection remain critical challenges in heart transplantation. Blastocyst complementation using pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) can be used to generate organs such as the pancreas and kidneys in animal models with abnormalities in essential developmental genes. Nonetheless, whether functional adult hearts can be generated with blastocyst complementation remains unclear, and it is unknown if parenchyma, blood vessels, and stroma can be generated concomitantly from PSCs using blastocyst complementation to avoid graft rejection. Methods: We generated functional hearts in acardiac Mesp1 and Mesp2 double-knockout (Mesp1/2-DKO) mice via blastocyst complementation using mouse and rat PSCs. Results: The generated adult murine hearts were structurally and functionally normal and restored embryonic lethality in Mesp1/2-DKO mice. All four cardiovascular lineages, including cardiomyocytes, vascular endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, and cardiac fibroblasts, were virtually entirely derived from exogenous PSCs in the myocardium. Exogenous rat PSCs also generated rat-derived xenogeneic hearts in Mesp1/2-DKO mice via interspecies blastocyst complementation. Conclusions: Blastocyst complementation is a viable technique for generating hearts derived from PSCs and may represent significant progress toward generating rejection-free hearts.

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