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Electronic Mesh Speeds Maturation of Lab-Grown Islet Cells in Peer-Reviewed Study

Researchers report circadian-like electrical pulses coordinated alpha–beta cell function in pancreatic organoids.

Overview

  • Scientists at the University of Pennsylvania and Harvard embedded an ultrathin, flexible mesh into developing islet organoids to both record and deliver electrical signals.
  • A 24-hour rhythmic stimulation pattern accelerated single-cell maturation and synchronized activity of alpha and beta cells, improving hormone-secretion behavior.
  • The Science paper details weeks-to-months monitoring at single-cell resolution, showing bidirectional interfacing that reveals and guides islet electrical development.
  • The team outlines two potential clinical routes: electrically training cells before transplantation or co-implanting the mesh for ongoing in-body monitoring and stimulation, with future automation envisioned.
  • Researchers emphasize the work is preclinical and note key hurdles ahead, including immune protection for transplanted cells and validation of long-term safety and effectiveness.