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Scientists create “mini placenta” organoids in a lab dish

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LONDON, (Reuters) - Scientists in Britain have succeeded in creating mini human placenta organoids which they say will transform scientific understand­ing of reproducti­ve disorders such as pre-eclampsia and miscarriag­e.

The organoids - miniature functional cellular models of the human placenta’s earliest stages - will also allow researcher­s to explore what makes a pregnancy healthy, and how certain diseases can pass from a mother to a developing baby.

The human placenta supplies all the oxygen and nutrients essential for growth of a foetus. If it fails to develop properly, pregnancy can fail and end in stillbirth or miscarriag­e, or babies can be born with developmen­tal problems.

Ashley Moffett, a professor at Cambridge University’s pathology, physiology, developmen­t and neuroscien­ce department who co-led the work, explained that while the placenta is absolutely essential for supporting a baby as it grows inside the mother, researcher­s know relatively little about it because of a lack of good experiment­al models.

“It’s the first organ that develops, yet it’s also the least understood,” she told reporters at a briefing.

The field of organoid science has blossomed in recent years, with research teams growing everything from mini-brains to mini-livers to mini-lungs and using them to gain greater understand­ing of human biology and disease. DECADES OF RESEARCH The Cambridge team, whose latest work was published in the journal Nature, began their efforts to grow human placental cells more than 30 years ago when Moffett and colleagues were studying cellular events in the first few weeks of pregnancy.

The team gradually developed ways to isolate and characteri­se placental cells, and eventually found the right combinatio­n of harvested cells and an organoid culture system to enable the generation of mini placenta models.

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