Cultivating fat without FBS

Fat is an essential component of the taste, aroma and mouthfeel of meat—which is why we have been focused on adding cultivated fat to our burgers since 2018. We’ve observed that adding even a small amount of cultivated fat can make a big difference to consumers’ sensory experience. On our mission to reshape the global food system, we remain committed to reducing our dependence on animals in the process of cultivating this key ingredient. 

We are pleased to share our latest publication on cultivating fat without FBS, ‘A simplified and defined serum-free medium for cultivating fat across species’. 

Fetal bovine serum (FBS) was used in our field as a supplement for cell feed (also known as cell culture media) due to its richness in nutrients and growth factors. However, it is neither ethical nor sustainable to use this animal component, and our founders committed to removing FBS from our process in 2016. Last year, we shared a peer-reviewed paper on muscle differentiation in serum-free media. Now, we are pleased to also share our complementary paper on cultivating fat without FBS

In this open-access, peer-reviewed paper, we share the recipe to cultivate fully mature beef fat without FBS in a simple, one-step protocol which we have been using since 2020. This is demonstrated for cow cells, but can also be applied to other species including sheep and pigs.

We’re very proud to share these results from our world-class team of scientists, as it is crucial for our industry to be able to cultivate meat without animal components,” shared Maarten Bosch, CEO of Mosa Meat today. “Being able to cultivate fat without FBS is key to our continued scale up towards industrial production volumes.”

In the paper, we cultivate fat cells in a range of different cell feed types. Our results show superior fat cultivation (adipogenesis) with our in-house developed, serum-free cell feed. Both the percentage of positive cells and total lipid area is significantly higher.

 

“Our in-house developed media is able to overcome differences in species differentiation that were always observed with traditionally-used protocol containing serum,” shares Rada Mitic, first author and PhD candidate at Mosa Meat.

 

It has previously been notoriously difficult to differentiate precursor cells for beef fat, and this paper finally demonstrates a robust adipogenic protocol for cow cells without any animal components,” shared Dr. Laura Jackisch, corresponding author on the publication and Head of Fat Tissue Engineering at Mosa Meat.

The Mosa Approach includes full maturing (or differentiating) our cells using animal-free cell feed, and sharing this knowledge with others to advance the field. We are committed to continuing to share our progress in developing robust, scalable, animal-free systems for cultivating meat with the broader cellular agriculture community.

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Cultivating Meat: The Mosa Approach