In vitro
Insect Fat Cultivation for Cellular Agriculture
Applications
Posted on 2022-08-17 - 21:20
Cell-cultured fat could provide important elements of
flavor, nutrition,
and texture to enhance the quality and therefore expand consumer adoption
of alternative meat products. In contrast to cells from livestock
animals, insect cells have been proposed as a relatively low-cost
and scalable platform for tissue engineering and muscle cell-derived
cultured meat production. Furthermore, insect fat cells have long
been cultured and characterized for basic biology and recombinant
protein production but not for food production. To develop a food-relevant
approach to insect fat cell cultivation and tissue engineering, Manduca sexta cells were cultured and induced to
accumulate lipids in 2D and 3D formats within decellularized mycelium
scaffolding. The resultant in vitro fat tissues were characterized
and compared to in vivo fat tissue data by imaging, lipidomics, and
texture analyses. The cells exhibited robust lipid accumulation when
treated with a 0.1 mM soybean oil emulsion and had “healthier”
fat profiles, as measured by the ratio of unsaturated to saturated
fatty acids. Mycelium scaffolding provided a simple, food-grade approach
to support the 3D cell cultures and lipid accumulation. This approach
provides a low-cost, scalable, and nutritious method for cultured
fat production.
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Letcher, Sophia
M.; Rubio, Natalie R.; Ashizawa, Reina N.; Saad, Michael K.; Rittenberg, Miriam L.; McCreary, Aidan; et al. (2022). In vitro
Insect Fat Cultivation for Cellular Agriculture
Applications. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsbiomaterials.2c00093