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‘It is a highly scalable platform that bypasses the scaffolding stage’

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Previously used in developmental biology and medical research, organoids are stem cell-derived three-dimensional tissue structures.

When used in cell-cultured seafood products these tiny, self-organized 3D tissue cultures can grow as three-dimensional structures in the same manner they would grow in a living animal. By creating the ‘ideal environment’ for the organoids to grow, Forsea Foods – a start-up focusing on seafood development – is able to get the fish cells to ‘spontaneously’ form their natural composition of native fat and muscle.

The approach, developed by Forsea co-founder Dr Iftach Nachman, is distinct from how most other cellular agriculture innovators grow animal cells in bioreactors. Generally, once a cell line has been selected, these cells divide rapidly to create large quantities of cells, a process known as proliferation, before they are moved to a new environment and triggered to differentiate into a mature cell type such as fat or muscle via changes in scaffolding, medium composition, or both.

Forsea Foods’ technology offers two distinct advantages. You don’t need as much growth medium and you don’t need scaffolding for the different cells to interact in a 3D environment.

“While cell cultivation largely focuses on a system of directed differentiation, where cells are signaled to differentiate into a specific cell type and are then combined on a scaffold, our system grows the aggregate of the various cells already at the initial stage of the process. The cells organize themselves autonomously into their innate, purposed structure, just as in nature,”explained Nachman, a principal investigator at Tel Aviv University.

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