Stem cell-burger unveiled

Nieuws | de redactie
5 augustus 2013 | On Monday Professor Mark Post (Maastricht University) presents his €300.000 worth hamburger made from meat that was grown in a lab. Two years of ‘training’ the muscle cells did the trick.

The project of producing edible meat from stem cells was launched in October 2011 by Mark Post, Professor of Vascular Physiology and Tissue Engineering at Maastricht University. Less than two years later the first burger made of  cultured meat is presented.

The cooking, slicing and munching of the world’s first cultivated burger in London can be followed live.

Millions of muscle cells

The project is a continuation of a 2004 study funded by the Dutch government to the amount of 2 million euros and implemented by a consortium of three universities (Univeristy of Amsterdam, Utrecht University, Eindhoven University of Technology) and an industry representative (Meester Stegeman BV).

Mark Post (then at Eindhoven University of Technology) and his research team developed a method to ’train’ the muscle cells (in terms of size, not number) through electrical stimulation. The study was finalized in 2009 with tangible results: the researchers were able to cultivate 8×22 mm pieces of meat of 0.5 mm thickness from the muscle stem cells of mice, consisting of millions of cells.

The crucial steps

According to the researchers, there are several crucial steps in the development of ‘cultured meat’:

  • The first step is to extract muscle stem cells from animals, usually cows, pigs or chickens. This project uses stem cells obtained from little pieces of fresh cow muscle for instance obtained through biopsy.
  • The cells must then multiply, which requires a growth medium. This project experiments with commercially available media, supplemented with calf serum. In the next stage, researchers at the University of Amsterdam work with synthetic mediums or simple and efficient nutrient sources such as algae extracts.
  • The isolated stem cells must then develop into muscle cells. Because the stem cells are designated muscle precursor cells this process largely happens automatically.
  • As with natural muscle cells, the cultivated muscle cells ‘bulk up’ into solid muscle fibres or bundles. To do so, they are affixed to a soluble polymeric sugar scaffold and trained by building tension between two anchor points in the bioreactor. This also largely occurs spontaneously.
  • As soon as the muscle cells grow in size, it is important that the tissue is continuously supplied with nutrients. For the small, newly formed muscle strands, regularly changing the culture medium suffices. Creating larger slices of meat, however, requires the creation of soluble polymer (sugar chain) duct systems through which a medium can flow, similar to the way blood flows through our veins.
  • To make the tissue edible, taste and texture must be just right. This should be achieved by recreating the natural consistency of meat (in terms of protein composition, fat tissue, etc). If this does not produce the desired result, accepted food technology methods are used to improve the taste and texture of the meat.
  • At the end of this process, the final result is edible muscle tissue that can be ground to create minced meat and, ultimately, a tasty hamburger.

Next: cultivating fat tissue

Researchers are currently working on enhancing production using existing techniques. Two new projects will soon be launched to cultivate fat tissue and enhance the expression of myoglobin in meat (the oxygen-binding protein found in muscle tissue).

The ‘in vitro meat project’ team consists of professor Mark Post and two technicians. The project is fully financed by private funds to realize the first lab-grown hamburger. 


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