Abstract
AbstractThree-dimensional tissue-engineered models are poised to facilitate understanding of skeletal muscle pathophysiology and identify novel therapeutic agents to improve muscle health. Adopting these culture models within the broader biology community is a challenge as many models involve complex methodologies and significant investments of time and resources to optimize manufacturing protocols. To alleviate this barrier, we developed a protocol with commercially available reagents to cryopreserve myoblasts in a 96-well compatible format that allows tissues to be transferred to users without expertise in 2D or 3D skeletal muscle cell culture. We validate that myoblasts encapsulated in a hydrogel and cryopreserved in paper-based scaffolds maintain cell viability, differentiation, and function via acetylcholine-induced transient calcium responses. Furthermore, we demonstrate successful shipping of myoblasts cryopreserved in paper-based scaffolds to intra-provincial and international collaborators who successfully thawed, cultured, and used the 3D muscle tissues. Finally, we confirm the application of our method to study muscle endogenous repair by seeding freshly isolated skeletal muscle stem cells to cryopreserved then differentiated and injured tissues, demonstrating expected responses to a known stimulator of muscle stem cell self-renewal, p38α/β MAPKi. Altogether, our 3D myoblast cryopreservation protocol offers broadened access of a complex skeletal muscle tissue model to the research community.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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