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      Application of Tissue-Specific Extracellular Matrix in Tissue Engineering: Focus on Male Fertility Preservation

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          Three-dimensional cell culture systems and their applications in drug discovery and cell-based biosensors.

          Three-dimensional (3D) cell culture systems have gained increasing interest in drug discovery and tissue engineering due to their evident advantages in providing more physiologically relevant information and more predictive data for in vivo tests. In this review, we discuss the characteristics of 3D cell culture systems in comparison to the two-dimensional (2D) monolayer culture, focusing on cell growth conditions, cell proliferation, population, and gene and protein expression profiles. The innovations and development in 3D culture systems for drug discovery over the past 5 years are also reviewed in the article, emphasizing the cellular response to different classes of anticancer drugs, focusing particularly on similarities and differences between 3D and 2D models across the field. The progression and advancement in the application of 3D cell cultures in cell-based biosensors is another focal point of this review.
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            In vitro production of functional sperm in cultured neonatal mouse testes.

            Spermatogenesis is one of the most complex and longest processes of sequential cell proliferation and differentiation in the body, taking more than a month from spermatogonial stem cells, through meiosis, to sperm formation. The whole process, therefore, has never been reproduced in vitro in mammals, nor in any other species with a very few exceptions in some particular types of fish. Here we show that neonatal mouse testes which contain only gonocytes or primitive spermatogonia as germ cells can produce spermatids and sperm in vitro with serum-free culture media. Spermatogenesis was maintained over 2 months in tissue fragments positioned at the gas-liquid interphase. The obtained spermatids and sperm resulted in healthy and reproductively competent offspring through microinsemination. In addition, neonatal testis tissues were cryopreserved and, after thawing, showed complete spermatogenesis in vitro. Our organ culture method could be applicable through further refinements to a variety of mammalian species, which will serve as a platform for future clinical application as well as mechanistic understanding of spermatogenesis.
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              Alginate-based composite materials for wound dressing application:A mini review

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Reproductive Sciences
                Reprod. Sci.
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1933-7191
                1933-7205
                November 2022
                January 14 2022
                November 2022
                : 29
                : 11
                : 3091-3099
                Article
                10.1007/s43032-021-00823-9
                349daf56-4609-4270-8576-179c79f9715d
                © 2022

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

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