Engineered Vibrio natriegens lysate can replace multiple components of cell culture media
Dolgin, J.; Vaid, A.; Hendrixson, D.; Cai, Y.; Cheung, L. K. Y.; Xu, L.; Kaplan, D. L.; Nair, N. U.
Show abstract
Reducing the cost and environmental impact of cell culture media is an important goal for cultivated meat, the process of generating meat in vitro using proliferating animal cells. While prior approaches have demonstrated the use of microbial lysates to replace expensive animal-based fetal bovine serum (FBS) in media, these formulations still rely on large quantities of growth factors such as fibroblast-like growth factor 2 (FGF2). Here, we demonstrate the use of FGF2-expressing Vibrio natriegens to create whole-cell lysates that replace both FBS and FGF2 in cell culture media for cultivated meat applications. This medium, named "VN40FGF", supports rapid proliferation of immortalized bovine muscle satellite cells (iBSCs) in the absence of supplemented FGF2. Cells grown in VN40FGF maintain phenotype and differentiation capacity. We also demonstrate that engineered V. natriegens can grow in spent cell culture media, further improving sustainability and economics, and reducing potential eutrophication concerns associated with waste disposal. Our approach combines multiple strategies for reducing the total number of media inputs, demonstrating opportunities for more economical and sustainable cell culture, especially for cultivated meats.
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