Engineered whole cut meat-like tissue by the assembly of cell fibers using tendon-gel integrated bioprinting

Dong‐Hee Kang(The University of Osaka), Fiona Louis(The University of Osaka), Hao Liu(The University of Osaka), Hiroshi Shimoda(Hirosaki University), Yasutaka Nishiyama(Food Research Institute), Hajime Nozawa(Kirin (Japan)), Makoto Kakitani(Kirin (Japan)), Daisuke Takagi(Ricoh (Japan)), Daijiro Kasa(Ricoh (Japan)), Eiji Nagamori(Osaka Institute of Technology), Shinji Irie(The University of Osaka), Shiro Kitano(The University of Osaka), Michiya Matsusaki(The University of Osaka)
Nature Communications
August 24, 2021
Cited by 294Open Access
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Abstract

With the current interest in cultured meat, mammalian cell-based meat has mostly been unstructured. There is thus still a high demand for artificial steak-like meat. We demonstrate in vitro construction of engineered steak-like tissue assembled of three types of bovine cell fibers (muscle, fat, and vessel). Because actual meat is an aligned assembly of the fibers connected to the tendon for the actions of contraction and relaxation, tendon-gel integrated bioprinting was developed to construct tendon-like gels. In this study, a total of 72 fibers comprising 42 muscles, 28 adipose tissues, and 2 blood capillaries were constructed by tendon-gel integrated bioprinting and manually assembled to fabricate steak-like meat with a diameter of 5 mm and a length of 10 mm inspired by a meat cut. The developed tendon-gel integrated bioprinting here could be a promising technology for the fabrication of the desired types of steak-like cultured meats.


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