On April 8, 2026, a landmark study in Nature from Zhejiang University School of Medicine introduced a novel strategy: engineered immunosuppressive dendritic cells to protect against cardiac remodelling.
This work introduces the world’s first engineered immunosuppressive and fibrosis-targeting dendritic cells (iCDC), enabling precise immune regulation at disease sites. The approach successfully reverses pathological cardiac remodeling and improves heart failure outcomes, with validation from mice to non-human primates. It opens a new therapeutic avenue beyond conventional heart failure treatments.

Breaking the Limits of Conventional Heart Failure Therapy
Heart failure remains a leading global health challenge, largely driven by chronic inflammation-induced fibrosis and adverse cardiac remodeling following myocardial injury. Current therapies fail to effectively halt this pathological progression at its root, and systemic anti-inflammatory approaches often come with limited efficacy and safety concerns.
Precision-Engineered iCDC: Targeting Fibrosis and Immune Dysregulation
To address this unmet need, the researchers developed iCDC, a next-generation dendritic cell therapy that combines:
- Fibrosis targeting via fibroblast activation protein (FAP)
- Stable immunosuppression through co-expression of CTLA-4-Ig, PD-L1, and IL-10
This dual design enables iCDC to selectively home to injured cardiac tissue while maintaining a tolerogenic immune phenotype within the inflammatory microenvironment.
Robust Efficacy from Mice to Non-Human Primates
The study demonstrated that iCDC therapy:
✔ Accumulates efficiently in infarct and border zones
✔ Reduces inflammation and cardiac fibrosis
✔ Promotes angiogenesis and cardiomyocyte survival
✔ Improves cardiac function and prolongs survival
Importantly, these therapeutic benefits were validated not only in multiple mouse models (ischemia-reperfusion, myocardial infarction, pressure overload) but also in non-human primates, with no observable systemic toxicity.

Mechanistic Insights: Reprogramming the Cardiac Immune Microenvironment
Mechanistic studies revealed that iCDC acts through both direct and indirect pathways:
Suppressing activation of immune and stromal cells
Inducing expansion of regulatory T cells with tissue-resident phenotypes
This dual action reshapes the local immune-stromal network, reducing pro-inflammatory signals while enhancing tissue repair programs—effectively halting pathological remodeling at its source.
Enabling the Breakthrough: High-Efficiency Lentiviral Production
A critical step in generating iCDC is the efficient delivery of genetic constructs encoding FAP-scFv and immunosuppressive factors.
In this study, researchers utilized Yeasen Hieff Trans™ Polyethylenimine Linear (PEI) MW40000 for transient co-transfection in HEK293FT cells, enabling high-titer lentiviral production essential for engineering functional iCDC cells.
Reliable transfection performance is key to ensuring consistency and scalability in advanced cell therapy development.
Supporting Advanced Cell & Gene Therapy Workflows
Yeasen provides a comprehensive portfolio of transfection solutions to support diverse research and therapeutic applications:
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