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Engineers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology collaborated with scientists at the Manchester Cancer Institute in the United Kingdom to develop a new method that uses healthy or cancerous pancreatic cells to grow tiny pancreatic replicas
Using a special gel that mimics the extracellular environment around the pancreas, researchers were able to cultivate pancreatic "organoids", allowing them to study important interactions between pancreatic tumors and their environment
"Repeatability is a major issue," said Linda Griffith, professor of the School of Teaching Innovation Engineering and professor of bioengineering and mechanical engineering
The researchers also showed that their new gel can be used to cultivate other types of tissues, including intestinal and endometrial tissue
Griffith and Claus Jorgensen (Claus Jorgensen) are the team leaders of the Cancer Research UK Manchester Institute (Cancer Research UK Manchester Institute), they are published in the "Nature Materials" (Nature Materials) magazine Senior author of this paper
Mimic microenvironment
Traditionally, laboratories use commercially available tissue-derived gels to grow organic substances in laboratory petri dishes
The gel they developed is based on polyethylene glycol (PEG), a polymer often used in medical applications because it does not interact with living cells
One of the key features is the presence of peptide ligand molecules, which interact with integrins on the cell surface
In this new study, Griffith and Jorgensen want to see if this gel can also be used to support the growth of normal pancreatic organs and pancreatic tumors
Griffith’s laboratory developed a protocol to produce the new gel, which was then tested in collaboration with Jorgensen’s laboratory, which studies the biology of pancreatic cancer
Jorgensen said the other methods they tried were too complicated or did not reproduce the microenvironment seen in living tissue
Organoids from patients
The researchers also showed that they can use the gel to grow organoids from patients' pancreatic cancer cells
"The findings described in this paper will help further address important questions about the response to new drug treatments," Professor of Fertility Medicine, University of Edinburgh's MRC Centre for reproductive Health Deputy Director Hilary Critchley (Hilary Critchley) said she was not involved in the study
Griffith also plans to use the gel to grow and study tissues in patients with endometriosis
One of the advantages of this new type of gel is that it is completely artificially synthesized and can be easily prepared in the laboratory by mixing specific precursors (including polyethylene glycol and some peptides)
A microenvironment-inspired synthetic three-dimensional model for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma organoids
https://zenodo.