| Literature DB >> 33437574 |
Rodrigo Curvello1, Genevieve Kerr2, Diana J Micati2, Wing Hei Chan2, Vikram S Raghuwanshi1, Joseph Rosenbluh3, Helen E Abud2, Gil Garnier1.
Abstract
Organoids are three-dimensional self-renewing and organizing clusters of cells that recapitulate the behavior and functionality of developed organs. Referred to as "organs in a dish," organoids are invaluable biological models for disease modeling or drug screening. Currently, organoid culture commonly relies on an expensive and undefined tumor-derived reconstituted basal membrane which hinders its application in high-throughput screening, regenerative medicine, and diagnostics. Here, we introduce a novel engineered plant-based nanocellulose hydrogel is introduced as a well-defined and low-cost matrix that supports organoid growth. Gels containing 0.1% nanocellulose fibers (99.9% water) are ionically crosslinked and present mechanical properties similar to the standard animal-based matrix. The regulation of the osmotic pressure is performed by a salt-free strategy, offering conditions for cell survival and proliferation. Cellulose nanofibers are functionalized with fibronectin-derived adhesive sites to provide the required microenvironment for small intestinal organoid growth and budding. Comparative transcriptomic profiling reveals a good correlation with transcriptome-wide gene expression pattern between organoids cultured in both materials, while differences are observed in stem cells-specific marker genes. These hydrogels are tunable and can be combined with laminin-1 and supplemented with insulin-like growth factor (IGF-1) to optimize the culture conditions. Nanocellulose hydrogel emerges as a promising matrix for the growth of organoids.Entities:
Keywords: hydrogels; nanocellulose; organoids; rheology; transcriptomic profile
Year: 2020 PMID: 33437574 PMCID: PMC7788499 DOI: 10.1002/advs.202002135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Sci (Weinh) ISSN: 2198-3844 Impact factor: 16.806