Fundamental Research (Nov 2024)

Droplet-engineered organoids recapitulate parental tissue transcriptome with inter-organoid homogeneity and inter-tumor cell heterogeneity

  • Haoran Zhao,
  • Yifan Cheng,
  • Jiawei Li,
  • Jiaqi Zhou,
  • Haowei Yang,
  • Feng Yu,
  • Feihong Yu,
  • Davit Khutsishvili,
  • Zitian Wang,
  • Shengwei Jiang,
  • Kaixin Tan,
  • Yi Kuang,
  • Xinhui Xing,
  • Shaohua Ma

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 6
pp. 1506 – 1514

Abstract

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Organoids are expected to function as effective human organ models for precision cancer studies and drug development. Currently, primary tissue-derived organoids, termed non-engineered organoids (NEOs), are produced by manual pipetting or liquid handling that compromises organoid-organoid homogeneity and organoid-tissue consistency. Droplet-based microfluidics enables automated organoid production with high organoid-organoid homogeneity, organoid-tissue consistency, and a significantly improved production spectrum. It takes advantage of droplet-encapsulation of defined populations of cells and droplet-rendered microstructures that guide cell self-organization. Herein, we studied the droplet-engineered organoids (DEOs), derived from mouse liver tissues and human liver tumors, by using transcriptional analysis and cellular deconvolution on bulk RNA-seq data. The characteristics of DEOs are compared with the parental liver tissues (or tumors) and NEOs. The DEOs are proven higher reproducibility and consistency with the parental tissues, have a high production spectrum and shortened modeling time, and possess inter-organoid homogeneity and inter-tumor cell heterogeneity.

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