4.8 Article

Programmed synthesis of three-dimensional tissues

Journal

NATURE METHODS
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages 975-981

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/NMETH.3553

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program [W81XWH-10-1-1023, W81XWH-13-1-0221]
  2. US National Institutes of Health common fund [DP2 HD080351-01]
  3. Sidney Kimmel Foundation
  4. US National Science Foundation [MCB-1330864]
  5. University of California, San Francisco
  6. Center for Systems and Synthetic Biology (National Institute of General Medical Sciences Systems Biology Center) [P50 GM081879]
  7. US Department of Defense through the National Defense Science and Engineering program
  8. Direct For Biological Sciences
  9. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience [1330864] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Reconstituting tissues from their cellular building blocks facilitates the modeling of morphogenesis, homeostasis and disease in vitro. Here we describe DNA-programmed assembly of cells (DPAC), a method to reconstitute the multicellular organization of organoid-like tissues having programmed size, shape, composition and spatial heterogeneity. DPAC uses dissociated cells that are chemically functionalized with degradable oligonucleotide 'Velcro', allowing rapid, specific and reversible cell adhesion to other surfaces coated with complementary DNA sequences. DNA-patterned substrates function as removable and adhesive templates, and layer-by-layer DNA-programmed assembly builds arrays of tissues into the third dimension above the template. DNase releases completed arrays of organoid-like microtissues from the template concomitant with full embedding in a variety of extracellular matrix (ECM) gels. DPAC positions subpopulations of cells with single-cell spatial resolution and generates cultures several centimeters long. We used DPAC to explore the impact of ECM composition, heterotypic cell-cell interactions and patterns of signaling heterogeneity on collective cell behaviors.

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