Cell-Based_Meat_CEP_Oct2019
Cell-Based_Meat_CEP_Oct2019
C
ell-based meat (also referred to as clean or cultured 77% of habitable land on Earth is used to raise and feed
meat) is genuine meat cultivated directly from animal livestock, this land use accounts for only 17% of the global
stem cells rather than by raising and slaughtering caloric supply (4). Industrial animal agriculture is the lead-
animals (Figure 1). The meat is created through a bioprocess ing cause of global deforestation and biodiversity loss (5),
in which stem cells are extracted, isolated, and proliferated and it is a major contributor to foodborne illness and zoo-
in bioreactors at high densities and/or in large volumes. notic disease outbreaks (6). The volumes of antibiotics used
These stem cells are subsequently differentiated, either in to produce livestock and farmed fish is at least equivalent to
the presence or absence of scaffolding materials, into the that used in humans, and antibiotic use is expected to rise,
principal cellular components of meat, including skeletal making industrial animal agriculture a significant contributor
muscle, adipocytes, and fibroblasts of the connective tissues. to antibiotic resistance (7).
The final product mirrors the structure, composition, and The public awakening to the urgency of climate change
nutritional value of conventionally derived meat. and the negative externalities associated with industrial
Advances in regenerative medicine and bioprocess
engineering have made the creation of palatable prototypes
relatively straightforward. However, scaling up the process
while lowering costs will require innovations in cell line
development, cell-culture-medium optimization, bioreactor
and bioprocess engineering, and scaffold biomaterials.
A growing problem
The United Nations estimates that by the year 2050 there
will be 9.7 billion humans on Earth. As this number grows,
the socioeconomic status of residents in developing coun-
tries will continue to increase, and global demand for meat is
expected to double (1). This appetite for meat from industri-
alized animal agriculture is not without consequence.
Animal agriculture accounts for 14.5% of global green-
p Figure 1. This meatball is formed from cell-based meat that was grown
house gas emissions (2) and is projected to account for 81%
in a bioreactor from bovine stem cells, eliminating the need for livestock
of the remaining carbon budget under the Paris Agreement and the associated ethical and environmental challenges. Photo courtesy of
by 2050 if current rates of production continue (3). While Memphis Meats.
animal agriculture, including animal welfare, has made con- Cell line development
sumers more accepting of alternative meat products, such as As starting material for cell-based meat, cells that can
plant-based and cell-based meat (8). self-renew and differentiate into the cellular components of
meat are isolated and selected. Companies in the cell-based
A potential solution meat space work with embryonic, induced pluripotent,
Growing crops to feed animals to produce meat is a mesenchymal, and adult stem cells such as myosatellite
vastly inefficient process, as most calories are expended for cells. The starting cell type ultimately influences many of
metabolism rather than creating edible meat. In 2013, Mark the downstream variables of the bioprocess, such as timeline
Post revealed the first cell-based hamburger, demonstrating and differentiation strategy. Cell selection should be weighed
that the animal could be cut out of the equation altogether. alongside cost models and design requirements for the
Since then, more than three dozen cell-based meat compa- intended products.
nies have formed across the world, aimed at dramatically Considerable work has been done using these cell types
reducing negative externalities of meat production while from bovine and porcine species, but substantially less work
taking a bite out of the more than $1 trillion global market. has been performed on the range of other species humans
Preliminary projections estimate large gains in land use consume, especially sea creatures. Publicly available bio
and energy efficiency and reductions in eutrophication (i.e., repositories of cell lines from commonly consumed species
nutrient runoff from fertilizers and manure that cause algal are needed to accelerate research and generate -omics data
blooms and water dead zones) (9), as well as curtailment of sets to facilitate development.
livestock-related biodiversity loss and zoonotic disease. At A variety of cell line engineering strategies can improve
scale, preventive controls and monitoring methods adapted upon or optimize the bioprocess. However, future regula-
from existing biopharmaceutical bioprocesses enable tory standards may dictate the extent to which engineering
antibiotic-free cultivation, lowering global antibiotic use appears in final products. For example, strategies might
while simultaneously reducing the incidence of foodborne include the creation of immortalized cell lines and cells that
illness. These benefits make cell-based meat a potential solu- have high tolerance to shear stress, resistance to toxic metab-
tion to many pressing problems. olite buildup such as ammonia and lactic acid, suitability for
suspension growth, and low growth factor concentrations.
Critical technology areas Engineered biosensors can assist in signaling hypoxic condi-
To commercialize cell-based meat, four critical technol- tions, mechanical stress, or amino acid and glucose starva-
ogy areas require further innovation: cell line development, tion (11). Other strategies may be able to remodel metabolic
cell culture media, bioreactors and bioprocessing, and scaf- or differentiation pathways, making them more efficient or
fold biomaterials (Figure 2) (10). favorable to low-cost cell-culture-medium ingredients, rather
than expensive growth factors.
Cell Line Development Cell Culture Media Researchers may pursue cell lines that inherently exhibit
many of these properties, such as insect cell lines that are
adaptable to suspension growth, tolerate nutrient starva-
tion, and readily immortalize in vitro, or fish cells that
can be grown at room temperature (12, 13). Companies
and researchers with experience in strain optimization or
high-throughput genome editing are needed to support
these efforts.
volume vessel in the proliferation stage to directly inoculate engineering, considerations of the porosity of the scaffold,
a final, large-volume maturation bioreactor (Figure 3). mechanical properties, and biocompatibility are paramount;
Perfusion bioreactors, such as hollow-fiber bioreactors, in creating cell-based meat, the use of cost-effective edible
can achieve higher cell densities in lower volumes and or biodegradable materials is just as important. However,
operate continually over months, making them an attractive cell-based meat does not require the same microscale preci-
conduit between proliferation seed-train stages. Additionally, sion as functional tissue. It merely needs to represent tissue
larger-volume reactors can be directly inoculated using high- structure sufficiently to replicate the appropriate texture
density cryobanking at greater than 108 cells/mL, lowering and mouthfeel.
the time to achieve desired cell densities or numbers in Further exploration of plant- or fungal-derived polymers
seed trains (22). as scaffolds is needed. These organisms may be engineered
Innovations such as cell-laden core-shell hydrogels to express key cell adhesion domains used by vertebrates to
can achieve remarkably high densities of 5×108 cells/mL, boost biocompatibility (24). Alternatively, a polymer-based
permitting cellular proliferation in 3D microenvironments scaffold could be enzymatically modified or embedded with
shielded from shear stress (23). Creative approaches that growth factors to temper the dynamic cellular behavior fol-
entail thinking beyond what has worked for cell therapy may lowing seeding. Chemical modifications can create a tunable
prove to be a valuable strategy for those moving into the scaffold that is responsive to simple external stimuli such as
cell-based meat space. light or temperature (25). These or other forward-thinking
While cell therapy and cell-based meat both share the strategies related to preferred materials and how they may be
cell itself as the end product, the final stages of cell-based sourced via existing or new supply chains can help encour-
meat — differentiation and harvesting — will likely look age the development of cell-based meat.
quite different. Although unstructured meat products could Methods pioneered by tissue engineers can be adopted
themselves be composed of pressed cells, cells as additives, for the assembly of cell-based meat scaffolding but will
or even cells on edible microcarriers, structured products need to be expanded upon. For example, extrusion and
will require the use of a scaffold. Computational fluid stereolithographic bioprinting are promising candidates, but
dynamics (CFD) models are needed to understand how these processes must be able to be run economically at large
fluids in a perfusion bioreactor with embedded scaffold- scales in parallel. Use of electrospinning and decellulariza-
ing behave. Online sensors can be used to adjust flowrates tion techniques can be informative from an R&D perspec-
as the scaffold becomes cell-laden to protect the cells and tive, but may be difficult to implement at scale. Databases
scaffold itself from fluctuating shear forces. Bioreactor and with information on plant, fungal, and microbial biopolymer
bioprocess engineers are needed to create new bioreactor mechanical properties, biocompatibility, anisotropy, viscos-
models that can support this culture strategy while integrat- ity, and other parameters can inform the selection of the
ing straightforward harvesting and sterilization processes. most promising candidate methods and materials.
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