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research article

High-throughput automated organoid culture via stem-cell aggregation in microcavity arrays

Brandenberg, Nathalie  
•
Hoehnel, Sylke
•
Kuttler, Fabien  
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June 8, 2020
Nature Biomedical Engineering

Stem-cell-derived epithelial organoids are routinely used for the biological and biomedical modelling of tissues. However, the complexity, lack of standardization and quality control of stem cell culture in solid extracellular matrices hampers the routine use of the organoids at the industrial scale. Here, we report the fabrication of microengineered cell culture devices and scalable and automated methods for suspension culture and real-time analysis of thousands of individual gastrointestinal organoids trapped in microcavity arrays within a polymer-hydrogel substrate. The absence of a solid matrix substantially reduces organoid heterogeneity, which we show for mouse and human gastrointestinal organoids. We use the devices to screen for anticancer drug candidates with patient-derived colorectal cancer organoids, and apply high-content image-based phenotypic analyses to reveal insights into mechanisms of drug action. The scalable organoid-culture technology should facilitate the use of organoids in drug development and diagnostics.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41551-020-0565-2
Web of Science ID

WOS:000539396400001

Author(s)
Brandenberg, Nathalie  
Hoehnel, Sylke
Kuttler, Fabien  
Homicsko, Krisztian
Ceroni, Camilla  
Ringel, Till
Gjorevski, Nikolce
Schwank, Gerald
Coukos, George
Turcatti, Gerardo  
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Date Issued

2020-06-08

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP

Published in
Nature Biomedical Engineering
Volume

4

Start page

863

End page

874

Subjects

Engineering, Biomedical

•

Engineering

•

in-vitro

•

model

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
PTCB  
UPLUT  
ISIC-GE  
Available on Infoscience
June 24, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/169563
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