- The tissue produces stomach acid and digestive enzymes just like real cells
- The research could help scientists to better understand stomach diseases
- And important stomach drugs can now be studied in greater detail than before
Scientists have grown a working stomach ‘mini-organ’ in a lab in a move that will allow experts to understand human digestion in new ways.
The breakthrough could help researchers more accurately explore how certain diseases and drugs affect the human stomach.
The scientists used stem cells to craft the organs in an ongoing attempt to better understand how a baby’s stomach develops in the womb.
New stem cell research could help scientists to better understand stomach diseases, including gastric cancer, the third leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Pictured is a piece of the human stomach created by the lab, as seen under a microscope
This tissue was able to produce stomach acid and digestive enzymes just like real stomach cells.
Prior to this latest breakthrough, the team had grown cells from a different section of the stomach known as the ‘antrum’, which produces many of the stomach’s hormones.
‘Now that we can grow both antral-and fundic-type human gastric mini-organs, it’s possible to study how these human gastric tissues interact physiologically, respond differently to infection, injury and react to pharmacologic treatments,’ says co-author Dr Jim Wells, a director of the Pluripotent Stem Cell Facility at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.
‘Diseases of the stomach impact millions of people in the United States, and gastric cancer is the third leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide.’
Wells and his team have worked for years to successfully grow stomach tissue outside of the human body.