3D bio-printing model tissues for targeted discovery in the agri-tech sector

Lead Research Organisation: Imperial College London
Department Name: Chemistry

Abstract

Engineering Multiscale Biohybrid Tissues as Insect Gut Permeability Models: Increased agricultural output will be essential for ensuring global food security in the 21st century. Agrochemicals such as insecticides are a major tool that helps achieve this aim by minimising the loss of crops to various pests. The design of next generation agrochemicals that can selectively function against specific pests whilst minimising effects in pollinators and other beneficial species is therefore of significant interest. One of the main roadblocks limiting the development of such molecules and formulations is the lack of easily accessible model systems that mimic a key permeability barrier: the insect gut. We propose to combine model membrane engineering, 3D bioprinting and rapid prototyping to build a series of permeability models that vary in complexity, from simple lipid bilayers assembled in user-defined configurations to the construction of 3D bioprinted architectures containing insect gut cell lines. This will allow us to decouple insecticide - membrane interactions from higher order effects, such as the role of gut morphology, before finally introducing protein-based active transport processes. By testing the permeation behaviour of insecticides and formulation adjuvants across these model systems, we will gain an improved understanding of the key transport properties and mechanisms of different compound classes, providing new insights into next generation insecticide development and formulation design.

Planned Impact

Addressing UK skills demand: The most important impact of the CDT will be to train a new generation of Chemical Biology PhD graduates (~80) to be future leaders of enterprise, molecular technology innovation and translation for academia and industry. They will be able to embrace the life science's industrialisation thereby filling a vital skills gap in UK industry. These students will be able to bridge the divide between academia/industry and development/application across the physical/mathematical sciences and life sciences, as well as the human-machine interfaces. The technology programme of the CDT will empower our students as serial inventors, not reliant on commercial solutions.
CDT Network-Communication & Engagement: The CDT will shape the landscape by bringing together >160 research groups with leading players from industry, government, tech accelerators, SMEs and CDT affiliates. The CDT is pioneering new collaboration models, from co-located prototyping warehouses through to hackathons-these will redefine industry-academic collaborations and drive technology transfer.
UK plc: The technologies generated by the CDT will produce IP with potential for direct commercial exploitation and will also provide valuable information for healthcare and industry. They will redefine the state of the art with respect to the ability to make, measure, model and manipulate molecular interactions in biological systems across multiple length scales. Coupled with industry 4.0 approaches this will reduce the massive, spiralling cost of product development pipelines. These advances will help establish the molecular engineering rules underlying challenging scientific problems in the life sciences that are currently intractable. The technology advances and the corresponding insight in biology generated will be exploitable in industrial and medical applications, resulting in enhanced capabilities for end-users in biological research, biomarker discovery, diagnostics and drug discovery.
These advances will make a significant contribution to innovation in UK industry, with a 5-10 year timeframe for commercial realisation. e.g. These tools will facilitate the identification of illness in its early stages, minimising permanent damage (10 yrs) and reducing associated healthcare costs. In the context of drug discovery, the ability to fuse the power of AI with molecular technologies that provide insight into the molecular mechanisms of disease, target and biomarker validation and testing for side effects of candidates will radically transform productivity (5-10 yrs). Developments in automation and rapid prototyping will reduce the barrier to entry for new start-ups and turn biology into an information technology driven by data, computation and high-throughput robotics. Technologies such as integrated single cell analysis and label free molecular tracking will be exploitable for clinical diagnostics and drug discovery on shorter time scales (ca.3-5 yrs).
Entrepreneurship & Exploitation: Embedded within the CDT, the DISRUPT tech-accelerator programme will drive and support the creation of a new wave of student-led spin-out vehicles based on student-owned IP.
Wider Community: The outreach, responsible research and communication skill-set of our graduates will strengthen end-user engagement outside their PhD research fields and with the general public. Many technologies developed in the CDT will address societal challenges, and thus will generate significant public interest. Through new initiatives such as the Makerspace the CDT will spearhead new citizen science approaches where the public engage directly in CDT led research by taking part in e.g hackathons. Students will also engage with a wide spectrum of stakeholders, including policy makers, regulatory bodies and end-users. e.g. the Molecular Quarter will ensure the CDT can promote new regulatory frameworks that will promote quick customer and patient access to CDT led breakthroughs.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/S023518/1 01/10/2019 31/03/2028
2594911 Studentship EP/S023518/1 18/10/2021 17/10/2025 Yu CHENG