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Creators/Authors contains: "Kemp, Melissa L"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2026
  2. Abstract Human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) hold great promise for reducing the mortality of cardiovascular disease by cellular replacement of infarcted cardiomyocytes (CMs). CM differentiation via iPSCs is a lengthy multiweek process and is highly subject to batch‐to‐batch variability, presenting challenges in current cell manufacturing contexts. Real‐time, label‐free control quality attributes (CQAs) are required to ensure efficient iPSC‐derived CM manufacturing. In this work, we report that live oxygen consumption rate measurements are highly predictive CQAs of CM differentiation outcome as early as the first 72 h of the differentiation protocol with an accuracy of 93%. Oxygen probes are already incorporated in commercial bioreactors, thus methods presented in this work are easily translatable to the manufacturing setting. Detecting deviations in the CM differentiation trajectory early in the protocol will save time and money for both manufacturers and patients, bringing iPSC‐derived CM one step closer to clinical use. 
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  3. The ability to engineer complex multicellular systems has enormous potential to inform our understanding of biological processes and disease and alter the drug development process. Engineering living systems to emulate natural processes or to incorporate new functions relies on a detailed understanding of the biochemical, mechanical, and other cues between cells and between cells and their environment that result in the coordinated action of multicellular systems. On April 3–6, 2022, experts in the field met at the Keystone symposium “Engineering Multicellular Living Systems” to discuss recent advances in understanding how cells cooperate within a multicellular system, as well as recent efforts to engineer systems like organ-on-a-chip models, biological robots, and organoids. Given the similarities and common themes, this meeting was held in conjunction with the symposium “Organoids as Tools for Fundamental Discovery and Translation”. 
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  4. null (Ed.)