Gene-Edited Pig Kidney Successfully Transplanted into Human, Unlocking New Insights into Rejection Reversal

November 14, 2025
Gene-Edited Pig Kidney Successfully Transplanted into Human, Unlocking New Insights into Rejection Reversal
  • Collaborators from NYU Langone Health and Revivicor, funded by NIH and others, published these findings in Nature on November 13, 2025, signaling progress toward trials.

  • Researchers transplanted a gene-edited pig kidney into a brain-dead human recipient with a beating heart to monitor immune responses over 61 days, enabling detailed tissue, blood, and fluid analysis not feasible in living patients or primates.

  • New NYU Langone Health study reveals immune mechanisms behind pig-to-human kidney rejection and demonstrates how to reverse rejection in a brain-dead donor model, informing future clinical trials.

  • The work shows a sequence of immune events, with early humoral and innate responses and later T-cell–driven rejection, guiding targeted immunomodulation strategies.

  • Rejection was reversed using FDA-approved drugs that tempered both antibody and T-cell responses, with no lasting kidney damage after intervention.

  • Early-warning biomarkers were identified that could predict rejection up to five days before clinical signs, enabling proactive management.

  • Two Nature papers delineate immune waves: innate response around day 21, macrophage-driven activity around day 33, and T-cell–driven rejection around day 45, with biomarkers offering early warning signals.

  • Multi-omics integration highlighted potential therapeutic targets and pathways, including SPP1/Osteopontin and CXCL9+ macrophages, to guide immunomodulation and biomarker discovery.

  • Clinical translation hinges on validating findings across more decedents and live patients, with ongoing exploration of targeted therapies based on identified antibodies and T cells.

  • Early humoral and innate responses dominate the first weeks, with plasmablasts, NK cells, and dendritic cells rising between days 10 and 28, followed by clonal expansion of IgG/IgA-producing B cells leading to antibody-mediated rejection by day 33.

  • Complement activation involving both human and pig components was observed, and blocking post-abMR complement helped attenuate human complement activity, suggesting a therapeutic leverage to extend graft survival.

  • Multi-omics analysis tracked about 5,100 expressed genes and immune cell types day by day, providing granular snapshots of rejection and systemic biomarkers.

Summary based on 3 sources


Get a daily email with more Science stories

More Stories