Aggregating in vitro-grown adipocytes to produce macroscale cell-cultured fat tissue with tunable lipid compositions for food applications

Abstract

We present a method of producing bulk cell-cultured fat tissue for food applications. Mass transport limitations (nutrients, oxygen, waste diffusion) of macroscale 3D tissue culture are circumvented by initially culturing murine or porcine adipocytes in 2D, after which bulk fat tissue is produced by mechanically harvesting and aggregating the lipid-filled adipocytes into 3D constructs using alginate or transglutaminase binders. The 3D fat tissues were visually similar to fat tissue harvested from animals, with matching textures based on uniaxial compression tests. The mechanical properties of cultured fat tissues were based on binder choice and concentration, and changes in the fatty acid compositions of cellular triacylglyceride and phospholipids were observed after lipid supplementation (soybean oil) during in vitro culture. This approach of aggregating individual adipocytes into a bulk 3D tissue provides a scalable and versatile strategy to produce cultured fat tissue for food-related applications, thereby addressing a key obstacle in cultivated meat production.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Apr 04, 2023
Source ID
10.7554/elife.82120

Entities

People

  • Brigid M Barrick
  • Chunmei Li
  • David L. Kaplan
  • Emily T Lew
  • Glenn Leung
  • Hailey Dicindio
  • Jaymie A Pietropinto
  • John S.K. Yuen
  • Kevin Lin Zhang
  • Michael K. Saad
  • Miriam Rittenberg
  • Ning Xiang
  • Sabrina W. Zhang

Organizations

  • ARPA-E
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • National Institutes of Health
  • Tufts University

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Agricultural and Food sciences
  • Biology

Readers

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