Raising the Steaks in Japan: First 3D-Bioprinted Structured Wagyu Beef-Like Meat Unveiled
Researchers at Osaka
University use 3D-bioprinting to create structured cultured meat like the
complex texture of Wagyu beef, which may provide an environmentally friendly and
sustainable method for producing cultured meat alternatives
From:
Osaka University
Osaka, Japan – August 24, 2021 --
Scientists from Osaka University used stem cells isolated from Wagyu cows to
3D-print a meat alternative containing muscle, fat, and blood vessels arranged
to closely resemble conventional steaks. This work may help usher in a more
sustainable future with widely available cultured meat. Wagyu can be literally
translated into “Japanese cow,” and is famous around the globe for its high content
of intramuscular fat, known as marbling or sashi. This marbling
provides the beef its rich flavors and distinctive texture. However, the way
cattle are raised today is often considered to be unsustainable in light of its
outsized contribution to climate emissions. Currently, the available “cultured
meat” alternatives only consist primarily of poorly organized muscle fiber
cells that fail to reproduce the complex structure of real beef steaks.
Now, a team of scientists led by Osaka
University have used 3D-Printing to create synthetic meat that looks more like
the real thing. “Using the histological structure of Wagyu beef as a blueprint,
we have developed a 3D-printing method that can produce tailor-made complex
structures, like muscle fibers, fat, and blood vessels,” lead author Dong-Hee
Kang says. To overcome this challenge, the team started with two types of stem
cells, called bovine satellite cells and adipose-derived stem cells. Under the
right laboratory conditions, these “multipotent” cells can be coaxed to
differentiate into every type of cell needed to produce the cultured meat.
Individual fibers including muscle, fat,
or blood vessels were fabricated from these cells using bioprinting. The fibers
were then arranged in 3D, following the histological structure, to reproduce
the structure of the real Wagyu meat, which was finally sliced perpendicularly,
in a similar way to the traditional Japanese candy Kintaro-ame.
This process made the reconstruction of the complex meat tissue structure
possible in a customizable manner. “By improving this technology, it will be
possible to not only reproduce complex meat structures, such as the
beautiful sashi of Wagyu beef, but to also make subtle
adjustments to the fat and muscle components,” senior author Michiya Matsusaki
says. That is, customers would be able to order cultured meat with their
desired amount of fat, based on taste and health considerations.
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/926245
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