Production of cultured meat from pig muscle stem cells

Haozhe Zhu, Zhongyuan Wu, Xi Ding, Mark J Post, Renpeng Guo, Jie Wang, Junjun Wu, Wenlai Tang*, Shijie Ding*, Guanghong Zhou*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Cultured meat is meat for consumption produced in a more sustainable way. It involves cell harvesting and expansion, differentiation into myotubes, construction into muscle fibres and meat structuring. We isolated 5.3 × 104 porcine muscle stem cells from 1 g of neonatal pig muscle tissue. According to calculations, we need to expand muscle stem cells 106-107 times to produce 100 g or 1 kg of cultured meat. However, the cells gradually lost the ability to express stemness and mature muscle cell markers (PAX7, MyHC). To tackle this critical issue and maintain cell function during cell expansion, we found that long-term culture with (100 μM) l-Ascorbic acid 2-phosphate (Asc-2P) accelerated cell proliferation while preserving the muscle cell differentiation. We further optimized a scalable PDMS mold. Porcine muscle stem cells formed structurally-organized myotubes similar to muscle fibres in the mold. Asc-2P enhanced porcine muscle cells grown as 3D tissue networks that can produce a relatively large 3D tissue networks as cultured meat building blocks, which showed improved texture and amino acid content. These results established a realistic workflow for the production of cultured meat that mimics the pork meat structurally and is potentially scalable for industry.

Original languageEnglish
Article number121650
Number of pages13
JournalBiomaterials
Volume287
Early online date18 Jul 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2022

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