Cultivated meat is gaining attention as a sustainable source of animal protein, yet its research and development are constrained by limited access to serum-free media and scaffolding biomaterials. Milk whey, a nutrient-rich dairy by-product, exhibits biochemical and functional similarities to blood serum. This review examines the potential of whey as both a serum substitute and a scaffold material for muscle cell cultivation in cultivated meat and other cell-based production systems.

From dairy by-product to cell feed: milk whey for serum-free media and scaffold development in cell-based food production [Recensione] / T.S. Sundaram, C.G.. - In: NPJ SCIENCE OF FOOD. - ISSN 2396-8370. - (2026). [Epub ahead of print] [10.1038/s41538-026-00913-5]

From dairy by-product to cell feed: milk whey for serum-free media and scaffold development in cell-based food production

T.S. Sundaram
Primo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;
C. Giromini
Secondo
Writing – Review & Editing
;
R. Rebucci
Penultimo
Writing – Review & Editing
;
F. Cheli
Ultimo
Supervision
2026

Abstract

Cultivated meat is gaining attention as a sustainable source of animal protein, yet its research and development are constrained by limited access to serum-free media and scaffolding biomaterials. Milk whey, a nutrient-rich dairy by-product, exhibits biochemical and functional similarities to blood serum. This review examines the potential of whey as both a serum substitute and a scaffold material for muscle cell cultivation in cultivated meat and other cell-based production systems.
Cultivated meat; alternative protein; whey; serum-free media; muscle cells
Settore AGRI-09/B - Nutrizione e alimentazione animale
2026
3-giu-2026
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41538-026-00913-5
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1252378
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