Engineering synthetic signaling receptors to enable erythropoietin-free erythropoiesis

Abstract Blood transfusion plays a vital role in modern medicine, but frequent shortages occur. Ex vivo manufacturing of red blood cells (RBCs) from universal donor cells offers a potential solution, yet the high cost of recombinant cytokines remains a barrier. Erythropoietin (EPO) signaling is cruc...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aadit P. Shah, Kiran R. Majeti, Freja K. Ekman, Sridhar Selvaraj, Devesh Sharma, Roshani Sinha, Eric Soupene, Prathamesh Chati, Sofia E. Luna, Carsten T. Charlesworth, Travis McCreary, Benjamin J. Lesch, Tammy Tran, Simon N. Chu, Matthew H. Porteus, M. Kyle Cromer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-01-01
Series:Nature Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56239-5
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832571552541966336
author Aadit P. Shah
Kiran R. Majeti
Freja K. Ekman
Sridhar Selvaraj
Devesh Sharma
Roshani Sinha
Eric Soupene
Prathamesh Chati
Sofia E. Luna
Carsten T. Charlesworth
Travis McCreary
Benjamin J. Lesch
Tammy Tran
Simon N. Chu
Matthew H. Porteus
M. Kyle Cromer
author_facet Aadit P. Shah
Kiran R. Majeti
Freja K. Ekman
Sridhar Selvaraj
Devesh Sharma
Roshani Sinha
Eric Soupene
Prathamesh Chati
Sofia E. Luna
Carsten T. Charlesworth
Travis McCreary
Benjamin J. Lesch
Tammy Tran
Simon N. Chu
Matthew H. Porteus
M. Kyle Cromer
author_sort Aadit P. Shah
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Blood transfusion plays a vital role in modern medicine, but frequent shortages occur. Ex vivo manufacturing of red blood cells (RBCs) from universal donor cells offers a potential solution, yet the high cost of recombinant cytokines remains a barrier. Erythropoietin (EPO) signaling is crucial for RBC development, and EPO is among the most expensive media components. To address this challenge, we develop highly optimized small molecule-inducible synthetic EPO receptors (synEPORs) using design-build-test cycles and genome editing. By integrating synEPOR at the endogenous EPOR locus in O-negative induced pluripotent stem cells, we achieve equivalent erythroid differentiation, transcriptomic changes, and hemoglobin production using small molecules compared to EPO-supplemented cultures. This approach dramatically reduces culture media costs. Our strategy not only addresses RBC production challenges but also demonstrates how protein and genome engineering can introduce precisely regulated cellular behaviors, potentially improving scalable manufacturing of a wide range of clinically relevant cell types.
format Article
id doaj-art-e697085028b54932a61c99c01da9de10
institution Kabale University
issn 2041-1723
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Nature Portfolio
record_format Article
series Nature Communications
spelling doaj-art-e697085028b54932a61c99c01da9de102025-02-02T12:31:15ZengNature PortfolioNature Communications2041-17232025-01-0116111510.1038/s41467-025-56239-5Engineering synthetic signaling receptors to enable erythropoietin-free erythropoiesisAadit P. Shah0Kiran R. Majeti1Freja K. Ekman2Sridhar Selvaraj3Devesh Sharma4Roshani Sinha5Eric Soupene6Prathamesh Chati7Sofia E. Luna8Carsten T. Charlesworth9Travis McCreary10Benjamin J. Lesch11Tammy Tran12Simon N. Chu13Matthew H. Porteus14M. Kyle Cromer15School of Medicine, Stanford UniversityDepartment of Pediatrics, Stanford UniversitySchool of Medicine, Stanford UniversityDepartment of Pediatrics, Stanford UniversityDepartment of Surgery, University of California, San FranciscoDepartment of Surgery, University of California, San FranciscoBenioff Children’s Hospital Oakland, University of California, San FranciscoDepartment of Biological & Medical Informatics, University of California, San FranciscoSchool of Medicine, Stanford UniversityDepartment of Genetics, Stanford UniversityDepartment of Surgery, University of California, San FranciscoDepartment of Surgery, University of California, San FranciscoDepartment of Surgery, University of California, San FranciscoDepartment of Surgery, University of California, San FranciscoDepartment of Pediatrics, Stanford UniversityDepartment of Surgery, University of California, San FranciscoAbstract Blood transfusion plays a vital role in modern medicine, but frequent shortages occur. Ex vivo manufacturing of red blood cells (RBCs) from universal donor cells offers a potential solution, yet the high cost of recombinant cytokines remains a barrier. Erythropoietin (EPO) signaling is crucial for RBC development, and EPO is among the most expensive media components. To address this challenge, we develop highly optimized small molecule-inducible synthetic EPO receptors (synEPORs) using design-build-test cycles and genome editing. By integrating synEPOR at the endogenous EPOR locus in O-negative induced pluripotent stem cells, we achieve equivalent erythroid differentiation, transcriptomic changes, and hemoglobin production using small molecules compared to EPO-supplemented cultures. This approach dramatically reduces culture media costs. Our strategy not only addresses RBC production challenges but also demonstrates how protein and genome engineering can introduce precisely regulated cellular behaviors, potentially improving scalable manufacturing of a wide range of clinically relevant cell types.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56239-5
spellingShingle Aadit P. Shah
Kiran R. Majeti
Freja K. Ekman
Sridhar Selvaraj
Devesh Sharma
Roshani Sinha
Eric Soupene
Prathamesh Chati
Sofia E. Luna
Carsten T. Charlesworth
Travis McCreary
Benjamin J. Lesch
Tammy Tran
Simon N. Chu
Matthew H. Porteus
M. Kyle Cromer
Engineering synthetic signaling receptors to enable erythropoietin-free erythropoiesis
Nature Communications
title Engineering synthetic signaling receptors to enable erythropoietin-free erythropoiesis
title_full Engineering synthetic signaling receptors to enable erythropoietin-free erythropoiesis
title_fullStr Engineering synthetic signaling receptors to enable erythropoietin-free erythropoiesis
title_full_unstemmed Engineering synthetic signaling receptors to enable erythropoietin-free erythropoiesis
title_short Engineering synthetic signaling receptors to enable erythropoietin-free erythropoiesis
title_sort engineering synthetic signaling receptors to enable erythropoietin free erythropoiesis
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56239-5
work_keys_str_mv AT aaditpshah engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT kiranrmajeti engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT frejakekman engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT sridharselvaraj engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT deveshsharma engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT roshanisinha engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT ericsoupene engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT prathameshchati engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT sofiaeluna engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT carstentcharlesworth engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT travismccreary engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT benjaminjlesch engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT tammytran engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT simonnchu engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT matthewhporteus engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis
AT mkylecromer engineeringsyntheticsignalingreceptorstoenableerythropoietinfreeerythropoiesis