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research article

Synthetic dynamic hydrogels promote degradation-independent in vitro organogenesis

Chrisnandy, Antonius  
•
Blondel, Delphine  
•
Rezakhani, Saba  
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2022
Nature Materials

Epithelial organoids are most efficiently grown from mouse-tumour-derived, reconstituted extracellular matrix hydrogels, whose poorly defined composition, batch-to-batch variability and immunogenicity limit clinical applications. Efforts to replace such ill-defined matrices for organoid culture have largely focused on non-adaptable hydrogels composed of covalently crosslinked hydrophilic macromolecules. However, the excessive forces caused by tissue expansion in such elastic gels severely restrict organoid growth and morphogenesis. Chemical or enzymatic degradation schemes can partially alleviate this problem, but due to their irreversibility, long-term applicability is limited. Here we report a family of synthetic hydrogels that promote extensive organoid morphogenesis through dynamic rearrangements mediated by reversible hydrogen bonding. These tunable matrices are stress relaxing and thus promote efficient crypt budding in intestinal stem-cell epithelia through increased symmetry breaking and Paneth cell formation dependent on yes-associated protein 1. As such, these well-defined gels provide promising versatile matrices for fostering elaborate in vitro morphogenesis.

The influence of stress relaxation of the extracellular matrix on the formation of intestinal organoids was investigated. It was shown that a stress-relaxing synthetic matrix promotes crypt budding through increased symmetry breaking and niche cell formation.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41563-021-01136-7
Web of Science ID

WOS:000718731300001

Author(s)
Chrisnandy, Antonius  
Blondel, Delphine  
Rezakhani, Saba  
Broguiere, Nicolas  
Lutolf, Matthias P.  
Date Issued

2022

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO

Published in
Nature Materials
Volume

21

Start page

479

End page

487

Subjects

Chemistry, Physical

•

Materials Science, Multidisciplinary

•

Physics, Applied

•

Physics, Condensed Matter

•

Chemistry

•

Materials Science

•

Physics

•

intestinal stem-cell

•

self-organization

•

networks

•

culture

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPLUT  
Available on Infoscience
December 4, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/183557
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