Digitalized Human Organoid for Wireless Phenotyping

Radio frequency identification (RFID) is a cost-effective and durable method to trace and track individual objects in multiple contexts by wirelessly providing digital signals; RFID is thus widely used in many fields. Here, we implement this concept to biological tissues by producing a compact RFID...

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Veröffentlicht in:iScience 2018-06, Vol.4, p.294-301
Hauptverfasser: Kimura, Masaki, Azuma, Momoko, Zhang, Ran-Ran, Thompson, Wendy, Mayhew, Christopher N., Takebe, Takanori
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Radio frequency identification (RFID) is a cost-effective and durable method to trace and track individual objects in multiple contexts by wirelessly providing digital signals; RFID is thus widely used in many fields. Here, we implement this concept to biological tissues by producing a compact RFID chip-incorporated organoid (RiO). The 0.4 mm RFID chips are reproducibly integrated inside the self-assembling organoids from 10 different induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines from healthy and diseased donors. We use the digitalized RiO to conduct a phenotypic screen on a pool of RiO, followed by detection of each specific donor in situ. Our proof-of-principle experiments demonstrated that a severely steatotic phenotype could be identified by RFID chip reading and was specific to a genetic disorder of steatohepatitis. Given evolving advancements surrounding RFID technology, the digitalization principle outlined here will expand organoid medicine potential toward drug development, precision medicine, and transplant applications. [Display omitted] •Generation of radio frequency identification (RFID) tag integrated human organoids•Self-assembly culture enables RFID-integrated organoids with intact functions•Microscopic phenotypic assay coupled with donor identification by RFID•Proof-of-principle of organoid digitalization with RFID for steatosis screening Cell Biology; Stem Cells Research; Bioengineering
ISSN:2589-0042
2589-0042
DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2018.05.007