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Tissue extracellular matrix hydrogels as alternatives to Matrigel for culturing gastrointestinal organoids

Authors
Kim, SuranMin, SungjinChoi, Yi SunJo, Sung-HyunJung, Jae HunHan, KyusunKim, JinAn, SoohwanJi, Yong WooKim, Yun-GonCho, Seung-Woo
Issue Date
Mar-2022
Publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
Citation
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, v.13, no.1
Journal Title
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume
13
Number
1
URI
http://scholarworks.bwise.kr/ssu/handle/2018.sw.ssu/42283
DOI
10.1038/s41467-022-29279-4
ISSN
2041-1723
Abstract
The culture of gastrointestinal organoids relies on Matrigel that has several drawbacks for clinical application. Here, the authors report the feasibility of gastrointestinal tissue-mimetic matrices as effective alternatives to Matrigel for organoid culture and transplantation. Matrigel, a mouse tumor extracellular matrix protein mixture, is an indispensable component of most organoid tissue culture. However, it has limited the utility of organoids for drug development and regenerative medicine due to its tumor-derived origin, batch-to-batch variation, high cost, and safety issues. Here, we demonstrate that gastrointestinal tissue-derived extracellular matrix hydrogels are suitable substitutes for Matrigel in gastrointestinal organoid culture. We found that the development and function of gastric or intestinal organoids grown in tissue extracellular matrix hydrogels are comparable or often superior to those in Matrigel. In addition, gastrointestinal extracellular matrix hydrogels enabled long-term subculture and transplantation of organoids by providing gastrointestinal tissue-mimetic microenvironments. Tissue-specific and age-related extracellular matrix profiles that affect organoid development were also elucidated through proteomic analysis. Together, our results suggest that extracellular matrix hydrogels derived from decellularized gastrointestinal tissues are effective alternatives to the current gold standard, Matrigel, and produce organoids suitable for gastrointestinal disease modeling, drug development, and tissue regeneration.
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