Self-assembly of hybrid 3D cultures by integrating living and synthetic cells.
Self-assembly is a fundamental property of living matter that drives the three-dimensional organization of cell collectives such as tissues and organs.
APA
Piernitzki N, Gao N, et al. (2025). Self-assembly of hybrid 3D cultures by integrating living and synthetic cells.. Nature communications, 16(1), 11073. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-66789-3
MLA
Piernitzki N, et al.. "Self-assembly of hybrid 3D cultures by integrating living and synthetic cells.." Nature communications, vol. 16, no. 1, 2025, pp. 11073.
PMID
41372132
Abstract
Self-assembly is a fundamental property of living matter that drives the three-dimensional organization of cell collectives such as tissues and organs. Here, the co-assembly of synthetic and natural cells is leveraged to create hybrid living 3D cancer cultures. We screen a range of synthetic cell models for their ability to form augmented tumoroids with artificial but controllable micro-environments, and show that the balance of inter- and extracellular adhesion and synthetic cell surface tension are key material properties driving integrated co-assembly. We demonstrate that synthetic cells based on droplet-supported lipid bilayers can establish artificial tumor immune microenvironments (ART-TIMEs), mimicking immunogenic signals within tumoroids and eliminating the need to integrate complex living immune cells. Using the ART-TIME approach, we identify a AhR-ARNT-mediated co-signaling mechanism between PD-1 and CD2 as a driver in immune evasion of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. Our study advances the field of hybrid organoid engineering, offers opportunities for the construction and modelling of artificial tumour environments, and marks a step towards the design of functional living/non-living cytomimetic materials.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Tumor Microenvironment; Cell Line, Tumor; Organoids; Artificial Cells; Cell Culture Techniques, Three Dimensional; Lipid Bilayers; Pancreatic Neoplasms; Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal; Signal Transduction