Scientific Reports (Apr 2023)

Drug cytotoxicity screening using human intestinal organoids propagated with extensive cost-reduction strategies

  • Yu Takahashi,
  • Yu Inoue,
  • Shintaro Sato,
  • Takayoshi Okabe,
  • Hirotatsu Kojima,
  • Hiroshi Kiyono,
  • Makoto Shimizu,
  • Yoshio Yamauchi,
  • Ryuichiro Sato

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-32438-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Organoids are regarded as physiologically relevant cell models and useful for compound screening for drug development; however, their applications are currently limited because of the high cost of their culture. We previously succeeded in reducing the cost of human intestinal organoid culture using conditioned medium (CM) of L cells co-expressing Wnt3a, R-spondin1, and Noggin. Here, we further reduced the cost by replacing recombinant hepatocyte growth factor with CM. Moreover, we showed that embedding organoids in collagen gel, a more inexpensive matrix than Matrigel, maintains organoid proliferation and marker gene expression similarly when using Matrigel. The combination of these replacements also enabled the organoid-oriented monolayer cell culture. Furthermore, screening thousands of compounds using organoids expanded with the refined method identified several compounds with more selective cytotoxicity against organoid-derived cells than Caco-2 cells. The mechanism of action of one of these compounds, YC-1, was further elucidated. We showed that YC-1 induces apoptosis through the mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase pathway, the mechanism of which was distinct from cell death caused by other hit compounds. Our cost-cutting methodology enables large-scale intestinal organoid culture and subsequent compound screening, which could expand the application of intestinal organoids in various research fields.