Periodic Reporting for period 1 - MiniOrgans (An automated platform for the large-scale production of miniaturized neuromuscular organoids)
Période du rapport: 2023-07-01 au 2024-12-31
Over the past decade, significant progress has been made in stem cell and organoid research, leading to breakthroughs in disease modeling, drug discovery, and regenerative medicine. However, the field still faces critical challenges that limit the full exploitation of organoid technologies. Reproducibility and scalability remain major bottlenecks in the widespread adoption of organoids for industrial and clinical applications. The traditional manual generation of organoids is labor-intensive, time-consuming, and costly, which hinders their use in high-throughput drug screening and precision medicine. Therefore, the development of cost-effective, standardized, and automated methods for organoid production and cryopreservation is essential to bridge the gap between research and industry applications.
The objective of this project was to develop a large-scale, automated, and robust production platform for multi-organoid models derived from healthy and diseased induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines. The project focused on neuromuscular disease models, leveraging cutting-edge biomanufacturing and automation technologies to enable efficient and reproducible generation of organoids. Furthermore, we aimed to establish a proof-of-concept miniaturized organoid system for high-throughput drug screening, providing a powerful tool for pharmaceutical research.
The expected impact of this project includes:
Improved standardization and reproducibility of organoid production, making them more accessible for research and industry applications.
Reduction in animal testing, as reliable human-derived organoid models can better recapitulate disease conditions.
Acceleration of drug discovery and development through high-throughput screening approaches, enhancing the identification of promising therapeutic compounds.
Advancement toward personalized medicine, enabling patient-specific disease modeling and tailored therapeutic interventions.