What are the Differences Between Organoids and Spheroids?

What are the Differences Between Organoids and Spheroids?

In general, there are two major differences:

  1. Nature of the driving force for development: Whereas internal developmental processes drive organoid formation, spheroids develop primarily via cell-to-cell adhesion.
  2. Length of time 3D cultures can be maintained: Long-term, in vitro expansion of cells in culture needs an immature stem cell population to replenish dying cells. Organoids are derived from, and maintain, a population of stem cells during in vitro culture, guaranteeing their long-term viability. This is achieved by optimising culture growth conditions, such as providing a basement membrane matrix (i.e. Matrigel®) and adding a selection of agonists (e.g. Wnt and tyrosine kinase receptor) and inhibitors (e.g. bone morphogenetic protein/transforming growth factor-β).

Importantly, when organoids are passaged they retain the genetic features of the original organ over several generations. In contrast, the long-term culture of tissue-derived spheroids is challenging, possibly due to inherent technical difficulties in extracting and maintaining viable cells.

Organoids and spheroids can be generated from a variety of healthy as well as diseased cell types and tissues, such as patient tumours. Tumour-derived organoids and spheroids have been generated and extensively investigated for their use in drug discovery. However, there are some key differences in establishing the two from patient-derived tumours.

MBL International supports advances in cell culture by offering Afamin/Wnt3a Condition Medium, recombinant Afamin/Wnt3a and FGF-Max. Find out more:


Information provided by MBL.

Caltag Medsystems is the distributor of MBL products in the UK and Ireland. If you have any questions about these products, please contact us.

What are the Differences Between Organoids and Spheroids?
Tagged on:             

Contact us