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  3. Muscles made from cow cells could make lab-grown burgers better

Muscles made from cow cells could make lab-grown burgers better

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    Pro
    wrote on last edited by
    #1
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    On track to produce better lab-grown burgers

    The cultivation of thick muscle fibres from bovine cells in the lab has long been a challenge for scientists. Researchers from ETH Zurich have now successfully tackled this issue – with the goal of one day producing edible meat.

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    ETH Zurich (ethz.ch)

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    • P Pro
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      On track to produce better lab-grown burgers

      The cultivation of thick muscle fibres from bovine cells in the lab has long been a challenge for scientists. Researchers from ETH Zurich have now successfully tackled this issue – with the goal of one day producing edible meat.

      favicon

      ETH Zurich (ethz.ch)

      originaluciferO This user is from outside of this forum
      originaluciferO This user is from outside of this forum
      originalucifer
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      haha wtf were they using instead?!?!

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      • originaluciferO originalucifer

        haha wtf were they using instead?!?!

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        acockworkorange@mander.xyz
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        Fetuses, of course.

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        • P Pro
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          On track to produce better lab-grown burgers

          The cultivation of thick muscle fibres from bovine cells in the lab has long been a challenge for scientists. Researchers from ETH Zurich have now successfully tackled this issue – with the goal of one day producing edible meat.

          favicon

          ETH Zurich (ethz.ch)

          B This user is from outside of this forum
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          bronzebeard@lemmy.zip
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          Muscles made from cow cells could make lab-grown burgers*

          Fixed the title.

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            Beacon
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            They’ve been using cow muscle cells, but just as unassociated cells or very thin fibers. Now they’re making the muscle cells turn into actual muscle tissue. It’s the difference between a smooth ground beef vs. a steak

            N 1 Reply Last reply
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            • B Beacon

              They’ve been using cow muscle cells, but just as unassociated cells or very thin fibers. Now they’re making the muscle cells turn into actual muscle tissue. It’s the difference between a smooth ground beef vs. a steak

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              not_mikey@lemmy.dbzer0.com
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              This still seems far from a steak, what they’ve made seems more akin to coarser ground meat whereas the single cell stuff they make in bioreactors is more of a paste that theyll add some sort of filler to to give it structure. Still an upgrade but it remains to be seen whether it will scale.

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                noodle07@lemmy.world
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                My butt cells, but the fat content was too high

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                  On track to produce better lab-grown burgers

                  The cultivation of thick muscle fibres from bovine cells in the lab has long been a challenge for scientists. Researchers from ETH Zurich have now successfully tackled this issue – with the goal of one day producing edible meat.

                  favicon

                  ETH Zurich (ethz.ch)

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                  Lemminary
                  wrote on last edited by lemminary@lemmy.world
                  #8

                  The title is still off.

                  The breakthrough is about using a “three-molecule cocktail” to grow functional cow muscle with thick fibers whereas previous methods could only grow thin fibers. The lab can grow meat that more closely resemble regular beef because the cells differentiate better, producing other necessary proteins that allows it to contract using those fibers for support.

                  Crazy that this finding comes from basic research into muscle diseases in rats.

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