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1.
Human red cells were equilibrated for 30 min at 20 °C in buffered saline containing 2 m glycerol and then frozen to ?196 °C at 0.27, 1.7, 59, 180, 480, 600, and 1300 °C/ min and warmed at 0.47, 1, 26, 160, and 550 °C/min. Cells frozen at 600 and 1300 °C/min responded in the classical fashion for cells containing intracellular ice; i.e., survivals were low when warming was slow (<10%), but increased progressively with increasing warming rate. The sensitivity to slow warming presumably reflects the recrystallization of intracellular ice. Cells frozen at 59 and 180 °C/ min yielded high survivals at all warming rates. This response is also consistent with the findings for other cells cooled just slowly enough to preclude intracellular ice. Cells frozen very slowly at 0.27 and 1.7 °C/ min, however, responded differently; survivals were considerably higher when warming was slow (0.47 or 1 °C/min) than when it was 26, 160, or 550 °C/min. This response is analogous to that observed recently by others in mouse embryos and in higher plant tissue-culture cells and to that observed for many years in higher plants. It also confirms previous observations of Meryman in human red cells. It may reflect osmotic shock from rapid dilution but, if so, the basis of the osmotic shock is uncertain.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of thawing velocities ranging from 10°C/min to 1.800°C/min on the motility and acrosomal integrity of boar spermatozoa frozen at 1°C/min (suboptimal), 5°C/min, and 30°C/min (optimal) rate was studied with the sperm suspended for freezing in diluent containing 2, 4, or 6% of glycerol (v/v). The influence of thawing on sperm survival depends on the rate at which the sperm had been frozen. In semen frozen at a suboptimal rate of 1°C/min, the percentage of motile sperm (FMP) initially fell to 3.5–4.0% when the thawing rose to 200°C/ min, but, with further increases in thawing rate, increased and reached peak values (10.3–11.0% FMP) after thawing at 1,800°C/min. The percentage of sperm with normal apical ridge (NAR) also increased moderately with thawing rate, but the degree of improvement decreased as the glycerol level was increased. In semen frozen at 1°C/min, acrosomal integrity (NAR) was best maintained in 2% glycerol, reaching 22.9% NAR after thawing at 1,800°C/min. In semen frozen at the optimal rate of 30°C/min, the increases in thawing rates above 200°C/min substantially improved motility. Motility was generally higher in semen protected by 4 or 6% glycerol, with the peak values of 44 or 46% FMP, respectively, after thawing at 1,200°C/min. The proportion of sperm with NAR also increased with thawing rate, but as in the case of suboptimally frozen sperm it was influenced negatively by the glycerol concentration. The peak value 53% NAR was recorded in semen protected by 2% glycerol, frozen at 30°C/min, and thawed at 1,200°C/min. In view of the inverse relationship between FMP and NAR, selection of optimal conditions from among the interacting variables, freezing rate, glycerol concentration, and thawing rate requires compromising between maximal FMP and maximal NAR. Accordingly, we have adopted as optimal a protocol with a thawing rate of 1,200°C/min, a freezing rate of 30°C/min and concentrations of 3% glycerol. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of varying the concentration of glycerol from 0 to 16% on the survival of ram spermatozoa frozen at increasing rates of cooling (1–100 °C/min) or by direct plunging of spermatozoa in 0.5-ml straws in liquid nitrogen was studied after thawing at a constant rate (in water at 39 °C for 30 sec). For each glycerol concentration, the ram spermatozoa tolerated a range of cooling velocities and the best survival rates (percentage motility and rating) were obtained when the glycerol concentration was 4 or 6% and when the rate of freezing ranged from 10 to 100 °C/min. No spermatozoa survived in any glycerol concentration following freezing in straws plunged into liquid nitrogen. In general, the range of cooling rates shifts to lower values as the glycerol concentration increases for optimum cryosurvival. However, the toxic effect of increasing the concentration of glycerol over 8% contributes greatly to the gradual decrease in cryosurvival of spermatozoa at these particular concentrations.  相似文献   

4.
J K Sherman  K C Liu 《Cryobiology》1973,10(2):104-118
One phase of a study on cryosurvival and cryoprotection of mammalian cells, in terms of ultrastructural alteration of rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) within rat pancreatic acinar cells, is presented. Small (2–3 mm) squares of tissue, 0.7–0.9 mm in thickness, were compared as unfrozen controls, with (w) and without (wo) glycerol pretreatment (15% vv in mammalian Ringer's solution) at 0 °C and 22 °C (to regulate glycerol permeability); as well as parallel frozen-thawed samples, after combinations of slow (3.8 °C/min) freezing (SF) and rapid (38 °C/sec) freezing (RF) with either slow (1.5 °C/min) thawing (ST) or rapid (8 °C/sec) thawing (RT). Regimens compared were SFRT, SFST, RFRT, and RFST, all w and wo glycerol pretreatment at 0 °C and 22 °C. Tissue from each treatment was prepared for electron microscopic observations. The results on rates of freezing and thawing and relative cryoprotection of intracellular and extracellular glycerol under conditions described are intended to serve as a correlative basis for subsequent parallel studies on function (protein synthesis) and ultrastructure of the frozen state. They now indicate the following: (1) Cryoinjury of RER, which occurred during all treatments compared, was manifested in irregularity, dilatation, vesiculation, and altered matrix density of cisternae, and ribosomal derangement or disjunction. Least injury was shown by some disorientation and dilatation with increasing degrees of damage involving accentuation of these and other alterations. Such ultrastructural alterations to RER are not unique to cryoinjury, since they have been induced by treatments and agents other than freeze-thawing in experimental pathology. (2) Cryoinjury is unique, however, in that it can be regulated to demonstrate a spectrum of degrees of injury to cells and their organelles, immediately after cryoexposure. Controlled cryoinjury is suggested as a research tool for studies on injury, in general, on an ultrastructural-functional level. (3) Glycerol is injurious or toxic during pretreatment. Toxicity, which resembles cryoinjury, is greater during 22 ° C (intracellular) than 0 °C (extracellular) glycerol pretreatment, especially with respect to dilatation of cisternae. (4) Extra-cellular glycerol is cryoprotective during both slow and rapid freezing followed by either slow or rapid thawing, while little or no cryoprotection is afforded when glycerol is located simultaneously in the intracellular and extracellular location. (5) Rate of freezing is more important than rate of thawing as a factor in cryosurvival. Rapid freezing is more injurious than slow freezing, in the absence of glycerol or in the presence of extracellular glycerol, with slight or no differences seen as a function of thawing rate. Neither rate of freezing nor rate of thawing is of serious consequence when glycerol is intracellular. (6) Rate of thawing has importance after slow freezing, when slow thawing is more injurious than rapid, but not after rapid freezing, either in the presence or absence of extracellular glyeerol.  相似文献   

5.
Intact adult rat hearts were cooled in the presence of 10% DMSO according to an external cooling program which approximated the optimal external three-step cooling program for the isolated adult heart cells: 20 min at ?20 °C, 0.2 °C/min from ?20 to ?25, ?30, or ?50 °C, and rapid cooling to ?196 °C. Following rapid thawing, cells were isolated after perfusion with a 0.1% collagenase solution. Only cells which originated from the free wall of the right ventricle could be isolated, even after cooling to ?20 °C. Most cells from hearts cooled to ?196 °C did not survive. When the third cooling step was omitted and the end temperature of the second cooling step was ?30 °C, 38% of the cells excluded trypan blue, 29% were morphologically intact, and 30% showed spontaneous contractions after thawing, expressed as percentages of the control, A much lower survival was found after cooling to ?50 °C.Histological and electron microscopical study of the heart immediately after thawing revealed no differences between hearts cooled to ?20, ?30, or ?196 °C. Also no marked differences were observed between the morphological integrity after freezing and thawing of the atrium, the left and right ventricle walls, and the ventricular septum. The survival data suggest the presence of nonmorphologically detectable alterations in cells frozen to ?196 °C, compared to cells frozen to ?30 °C. The morphological investigations indicate no essential differences in resistance of atrial and ventricular cells to the freezing process.Experiments involving neonatal rat hearts cooled to ?196 °C, according to the method which gave optimal preservation of the isolated cells, revealed that after thawing cells are present from which growing and contracting cultures can be derived. It appears that cells in the neonatal rat heart are more resistant to freezing to ?196 °C than cells in the adult rat heart.  相似文献   

6.
A E Woolgar 《Cryobiology》1974,11(1):44-51
Human red blood cells were frozen at temperatures down to ?9 °C in solutions containing sucrose, and the hemolysis on thawing was measured. This was compared with the hemolysis caused by exposing the cells to high concentrations of sucrose and then resuspending them in more dilute solutions at 4 °C. The effects of the hypertonic solutions of sucrose on potassium, sodium, and sucrose movements were also investigated. It was found that sucrose does not prevent damage to the cells by very hypertonic solutions (whether during freezing and thawing or at 4 °C) but it does reduce hemolysis of cells previously exposed to these solutions if present in the resuspension (or thawing) solution. Evidence is presented that the damaging effects of the hypertonic solutions of sucrose occurring during freezing are associated with changes in cell membrane permeability but that posthypertonic hemolysis is not primarily associated with a “loading” of the cells with extracellular solutes in the hypertonic phase. It is concluded that sucrose may reduce hemolysis of red blood cells by slow freezing and thawing by reducing colloid osmotic swelling of cells with abnormally permeable membranes.  相似文献   

7.
Experimentally induced diabetes in rats can be reversed by the transplantation of several fresh or frozen-thawed fetal pancreases. An important question to both the mechanistic and practical aspects of cryobiology is the role played by the permeation of protective additives during freezing, thawing, and subsequent dilution. Answers require knowledge of the kinetics of permeation of the specific additive into the cell or tissue. In this paper, we report isotopic measurements of the rate of permeation of 2 M glycerol and 1 and 2 M dimethylsulfoxide (Me2SO) into 17-day fetal pancreases at 0 and 22 °C. In Me2SO, equilibrium was achieved in about 10–15 min at 0 °C and in less than 10 min at 22 °C. In glycerol, equilibrium was attained in about 60 min at 22 °C; but at 0 °C permeation was only 65% complete after 180 min. In general, Me2SO permeated 10–30 times more rapidly than glycerol at 0 °C, and glycerol permeated about 10 times more rapidly at 22 than at 0 °C.The kinetics of permeation were more characteristic of a two-compartment than a single-compartment system. In all probability, the two compartments are the intercellular space and the intracellular space. The permeability data suggest that each compartment occupies about half the total volume.  相似文献   

8.
J.K. Sherman  K.C. Liu 《Cryobiology》1982,19(5):503-510
Tails of mouse epididymides were treated as follows: control, unfrozen with and without cryoprotective agents (CPA); frozen (to below ?80 °C), slowly (8 °C/min), and rapidly (18 °C/sec), with and without CPA. Intracellular and/or extracellular location of CPA, at least glycerol, was influenced, respectively, by high (22 °C) or low (0 °C) exposure temperature. Standard procedures in electron microscopy were employed and the frozen state preserved by freeze-substitution. Motility before freezing and after thawing was the criterion of cryosurvival.Results showed no evidence of deleterious ultrastructural effects of freezing at rates compared, or of benefits of CPA, regardless of their cellular location. Differences were noted, however, in the appearance of spermatozoa in the frozen state, as a function of the rate of freezing but not as a function of the presence, absence, or location of either glycerol of DMSO. Rapidly frozen cells showed intracellular ice formation in the acrosome, neck, midpiece, and tail regions; there was no intranuclear ice, and extracellular ice artifacts were small. Slowly frozen cells showed large extracellular ice artifacts with evidence of shrinkage distortion due to the dehydration induced by extracellular ice. No spermatozoa survived any of the freezing treatments, showing the lethal effect of both extracellular ice during slow freezing and of intracellular and/or extracellular ice during rapid freezing.  相似文献   

9.
One widely accepted explanation of injury from slow freezing is that damage results when the concentration of electrolyte reaches a critical level in partly frozen solutions during freezing. We have conducted experiments on human red cells to further test this hypothesis. Cells were suspended in phosphate-buffered saline containing 0-3 M glycerol, held for 30 min at 20 degrees C to permit solute permeation, and frozen at 0.5 or 1.7 degrees C/min to various temperatures between -2 and -100 degrees C. Upon reaching the desired minimum temperature, the samples were warmed at rates ranging from 1 to 550 degrees C/min and the percent hemolysis was determined. The results for a cooling rate of 1.7 degrees C/min indicate the following: (a) Between 0.5 and 1.85 M glycerol, the temperature yielding 50% hemolysis (LT50) drops slowly from -18 to -35 degrees C. (b) The LT50's over this range of concentrations are relatively independent of warming rate. (c) With glycerol concentrations of 1.95 and 2.0 M, the LT50 drops abruptly to -60 degrees C and to below -100 degrees C, respectively, and becomes dependent on warming rate. The LT50 is lower with slow warming at 1 degree C/min than with rapid. With still higher concentrations (2.5 and 3.0 M), there is no LT50, i.e., more than 50% of the cells survive freezing to-100 degrees C. Results for cooling at 0.5 degrees C/min in 2 M glycerol were similar except that the LT50s were some 10-20 degrees C higher. A companion paper (Rall et al., Biophys. J. 23:101-120, 1978) examines the relation between survival and the concentrations of salts produced during freezing.  相似文献   

10.
Heavy concentrations of viable P. berghei in the natural milieu [20% (vv) parasitized red blood cells, or 20% (wv) homogenate of splenic tissue in which malarial cells sequestered wer suspended in a serum-free, protective medium. Various rates of cooling are designated as low (1.3 °C/min) and intermediate (4 °C/ min) on exposure in cold gas evolving from liquid nitrogen refrigerant to ?70 °C, and this followed by direct immersion in the low temperature refrigerant (?196 °C). Cooling designated high was accomplished by abrupt immersion of the sealed vials with the live malaria-bearing tissue in the liquid nitrogen refrigerant. Rates of warming and thawing were designated low (after slow rewarming of frozen tissue in air at 25.5 °C) and high (after rapid rewarming and thawing in a water bath at 40 °C). Strip chart recordings were made of the complete cooling and freezing wave patterns of the suspending medium to ?70 ° C. The functional survivals of the freeze-thaw P. berghei malaria were measured by a special infectivity titration method.None of the cooling and freezing treatments adversely influenced the parasite survivals. Our data showed the optimum cooling velocity that maximally protected this highly lethal P. berghei strain within the host erythrocyte matrix was 1.3 ° C/min to ?70 to ?196 ° C. The functional survivals of two RBC stabilates with P. berghei, after retrieval from 25 days storage in the liquid nitrogen refrigerant, excelled by more than 100-fold the infectivity titer found by viability assay in the pool of the 0-days nonfrozen infected RBC.The precise factors favoring the maximal survivals of the freeze-thaw P. berghei are unclear. Several factors, singly or in combination, may have played key roles in protecting the living P. berghei from the freeze-thaw damage. These factors are: The composition of the suspending medium fortified by additions of bicarbonate, glucose, lactalbumin hydrolysate and yeastolate; the presence of naturally occurring peptide-containing materials surrounding the parasites in the host red cell milieu; and the protective glycerol agent. Any of these constituents singly or combined possess potential for reducing freeze-thaw injury to the parasites to produce maximal survivals.  相似文献   

11.
Five experiments evaluated the effects of processing, freezing and thawing techniques on post-thaw motility of equine sperm. Post-thaw motility was similar for sperm frozen using two cooling rates. Inclusion of 4% glycerol extender was superior to 2 or 6%. Thawing in 75 degrees C water for 7 sec was superior to thawing in 37 degrees C water for 30 sec. The best procedure for concentrating sperm, based on sperm motility, was diluting semen to 50 x 10(6) sperm/ml with a citrate-based centrifugation medium at 20 degrees C and centrifuging at 400 x g for 15 min. There was no difference in sperm motility between semen cooled slowly in extender with or without glycerol to 5 degrees C prior to freezing to -120 degrees C and semen cooled continuously from 20 degrees C to -120 degrees C. From these experiments, a new procedure for processing, freezing and thawing semen evolved. The new procedure involved dilution of semen to 50 x 10(6) sperm/ml in centrifugation medium and centrifugation at 400 x g for 15 min, resuspension of sperm in lactose-EDTA-egg yolk extender containing 4% glycerol, packaging in 0.5-ml polyvinyl chloride straws, freezing at 10 degrees C/min from 20 degrees C to -15 degrees C and 25 degrees C/min from -15 degrees C to -120 degrees C, storage at -196 degrees C, and thawing at 75 degrees C for 7 sec. Post-thaw motility of sperm averaged 34% for the new method as compared to 22% for the old method (P<0.01).  相似文献   

12.
Summary The photosynthetic cell suspension culture of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Corsoy] (SB-M) was successfully cryopreserved in liquid nitrogen using a preculture and controlled freezing to −40° C (two-step) freezing method. The effective method included a preculture treatment with gradually increasing levels of sorbitol added to the 3% sucrose already present in the medium. The cells were then placed in a cryoprotectant solution [10% DMSO (dimethylsulfoxide) and 9.1% sorbitol, or 10% DMSO and 8% sucrose], incubated for 30 min at 0° C, cooled at a rate of 1° C/min to −40° C, held at −40° C for 1 h, and then immersed directly into liquid nitrogen. The cells were thawed at 40° C and then immediately placed in liquid culture medium. The cell viabilities immediately after thawing were 75% or higher in all cases where cell growth resumed. The original growth rate and chlorophyll level of the cells was recovered within 40 to 47 d. If the sorbitol level was not high enough or the preculture period too short, growing cultures could not be recovered. Likewise, survival was not attained with cryoprotectant mixtures consisting of 15% DMSO, 15% glycerol, and 9.1% sucrose or 15% glycerol and 8% sucrose. The successful method was reproducible, thus allowing long-term storage of this and certain other unique photosynthetic suspension cultures in liquid nitrogen.  相似文献   

13.
G Rapatz  B Luyet  A MacKenzie 《Cryobiology》1975,12(4):293-308
Human erythrocytes suspended in a sodium-free buffered salt solution containing glycerol in 1 m concentration (1 part of packed cells to 4 parts buffered salt solution) were frozen by slow, moderately rapid, or very rapid cooling to various subzero C temperatures. The frozen specimens, after a 5-min storage period at a given temperature, were thawed at low, moderately high, or very high rates. The hemolysis in the frozen and thawed samples was measured by a colorimetric determination of the hemoglobin released from the damaged cells. At ?10 °C, the highest freezing temperature employed, nearly 100% recovery of intact erythrocytes was obtained irrespective of the cooling and rewarming conditions. The extent of the hemolysis after exposure to lower freezing temperatures depended upon the cooling and rewarming conditions. Moderately rapid and very rapid freezing to, and thawing from temperatures below ?40 °C permitted significantly higher recoveries of intact cells than the other freezing/ thawing combinations. In the temperature range ?15 to ?30 °C the combination slow cooling and slow rewarming afforded maximum protection. Very rapid freezing/ slow thawing was the most damaging combination throughout the entire freezing range. The results were interpreted in part by a conventional two-factor analysis, lower cooling rates allowing concentrated salts to determine hemolysis, higher cooling rates destroying the cells by intracellular freezing. Apparent anomalies were explained in terms of a generalized “thermal/osmotic” shock according to which the erythrocytes were subject to greater hemolysis the higher the rates of cooling and/or warming.  相似文献   

14.
Cryopreservation of heart cells from the eastern oyster   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Summary Conditions were developed to cryopreserve cells from pronase-dissociated atria and ventricles of eastern oysters (Crassostrea virginica). The effect of three concentrations (5, 10, 15%) of the cryoprotectants (dimethyl sulfoxide, glycerol, and propylene glycol), three thawing temperatures (25, 45, 75°C), and three cooling rates (slow, medium, fast) were compared. Cells were frozen at −80°C and plunged in liquid nitrogen. Thawed cells were seeded in 96-well plates and primary cultures were evaluated after 3 d by measuring the metabolic activity using a tetrazolium compound, 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-5-( 3-carboxymethoxyphenyl)-2-(4-sulfophenyl)-2H-tetrazolium, and by comparing the relative spreading of cells between treatments. The best conditions for freezing and thawing of cells for each cryoprotectant were selected and a final study was performed to compare cryoprotectants. For this final study, we measured the number of cells and their viability 3 d after thawing, in addition to determining cell metabolic activity and cell spreading. Primary cultures of cells frozen without cryoprotectant and of nonfrozen cells were used as controls in all studies. Atrial cells were best cryopreserved with glycerol at a concentration of 10%, a medium cooling rate, and thawing at 45°C. After thawing, atrial cells showed 53±5% of the metabolic activity, 84±5% of the number, and 92±2% of the viability of nonfrozen cells. For ventricular cells, 10% glycerol, a medium cooling rate, and thawing at 25°C yielded the best results. The thawed ventricular cells showed 83±5% of the metabolic activity, 91±5% of the number, and 96±2% of the viability of nonfrozen cells.  相似文献   

15.
The toxic effects of sucrose and the conditions of in-straw glycerol removal after freezing and thawing were studied using Day-3 mouse embryos. At 20 degrees C, exposure to less than or equal to 1.0 M-sucrose for periods up to 30 min had no adverse effects on freshly collected embryos. At 25 and 36 degrees C, however, greater than or equal to 1.0 M-sucrose significantly reduced the developmental potential (P less than 0.001). In the freezing experiments the embryos were placed in 0.5 ml straws containing 40 microliters freezing medium separated by an air bubble from 440 microliters sucrose solution. The straws were frozen rapidly in the vapour about 1 cm above the surface of liquid nitrogen. The post-thaw viability was substantially better after sucrose dilution at 20 degrees C than at 36 degrees C. Mixing the freezing medium with the sucrose diluent immediately after thawing further improved the rate of survival relative to mixing just before freezing (P less than 0.001). The best survival was obtained when the freezing medium contained 3.0 M-glycerol + 0.25 M-sucrose; it was mixed with the diluent after thawing and the glycerol was removed at 20 degrees C. Under such conditions the sucrose concentration in the diluent had no significant effect on the rate of development (0.5 M, 69%; 1.0 M, 73%; 1.5 M, 64%). The results show that during sucrose dilution the temperature should be strictly controlled and suggest that intracellular and extracellular concentrations of glycerol are important in the cryoprotection of embryos.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of various thawing velocities on the motility and acrosomal maintenance of ram spermatozoa frozen at 20 degrees C/min (optimal) or 2 degrees C/min (suboptimal) was studied. The freeze-thaw motility and the percentage of intact acrosomes of spermatozoa frozen at 20 degrees C/min increased progressively with the thawing velocity. In semen frozen at 2 degrees C/min, motility of spermatozoa and the percentage of intact acrosomes declined drastically when the thawing velocity obtained in air at 20 degrees C was increased by thawing in water at 20 degrees C. Thawing at higher temperatures markedly increased both motility and acrosomal preservation, but the best results with semen frozen at 2 degrees C/min were lower than those obtained with semen frozen at 20 degrees C/min. The optimal freeze-thaw conditions for semen protected by 4% glycerol were freezing at 20 degrees C/min and thawing in water at 60 or 80 degrees C for 8 or 5 sec, respectively. Semen collected from rams exposed to a decreasing photoperiod exhibited higher motility after freezing and thawing than those exposed to an increasing photoperiod. However, there was no effect on acrosomal preservation after freezing at 20 degrees C/min.  相似文献   

17.
T Nei 《Cryobiology》1976,13(3):287-294
Morphological alterations of human red blood cell membranes were examined with the cells containing different concentrations of glycerol being subjected to rapid rates of cooling, approximately 104 and 105 °C/min, and subsequent rewarming. Small membrane defects, similar to holes, were observed in specimens frozen with and without 10% glycerol. Various degrees of roughness were found on the surface of the cells at all freezing rates tested. The membrane alterations were reduced with increasing glycerol concentration, although roughness also appeared on the surface of the cells in 30% glycerol suspensions, frozen rapidly, and rewarmed to ?80 or ?60 °C. The cell membrane surface texture correlated with the growth of intra- and extracellular ice particles. There was also a positive correlation between these alterations and post-thaw hemolysis. It is concluded, therefore, that morphological alterations appearing on the erythrocyte membranes may be a manifestation of freezing damage.  相似文献   

18.
T Nei 《Cryobiology》1976,13(3):278-286
The extent of hemolysis of human red blood cells suspended in different concentrations of glycerol and frozen at various cooling rates was investigated on the basis of morphological observation in the frozen state. Hemolysis of the cells in the absence of glycerol showed a V-shaped curve in terms of cooling rates. There was 70% hemolysis at an optimal cooling rate of approximately 103 °C/min and 100% hemolysis at all other rates tested. Morphologically, a lower than optimal cooling rate resulted in cellular shrinkage, while a higher than optimal rate resulted in the formation of intracellular ice.The cryoprotective effect of glycerol was dependent upon its concentration and on the cooling rate. Samples frozen at 103 and 104 °C/min showed freezing patterns which differed from cell to cell. The size of intraand extracellular ice particles became smaller, and there was less shrinkage or deformation of cells as the rate of cooling and concentration of glycerol were increased.There was some correlation between the morphology of frozen cells and the extent of post-thaw hemolysis, but the minimum size of intracellular ice crystals which might cause hemolysis could not be estimated. As a cryotechnique for electron microscopy, the addition of 30% glycerol and ultrarapid freezing at 105 °C/min are minimum requirements for the inhibition of ice formation and the prevention of the corresponding artifacts in erythrocytes.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The present study was undertaken to define the conditions for optimal cryopreservation of hepatocytes. Two different freezing procedures were analyzed: a slow freezing rate (SFR) (−2° C/min down to −30°C and then quick freezing to −196° C) and a fast freezing rate (FFR) (direct freezing of tubes to −196° C: −39° C/min). Cells were frozen in fetal bovine serum containing 10% Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). After rapid thawing at 37° C, followed by dilution and removal of the cryoprotectant, cells were plated and several parameters were followed as criteria for optimal cryopreservation of cells. The FFR cells showed no apparent ultrastructural damage after 24 h of culture. Plating efficiency and spreading were similar as controls. Gluconeogenesis from pyruvate and fructose, tyrosine amino transferase induction by glucagon and dexamethasone, urea production, and plasma protein synthesis of FFR cells were similar to those found in control cultures. The FFR procedure, in comparison to the SFR method, seemed to render the best preserved hepatocytes. The financial support for this work was from Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias de la Seguridad Social, Grants 41/82 and 48/82.  相似文献   

20.
M Pasic  L De Sa Faria 《Cryobiology》1979,16(4):390-400
Isolated Aplysia depilans abdominal ganglia were exposed to 10 and 20% dimethylsulphoxide (Me2SO) or glycerol at room temperature. Results indicate that Me2SO induced an irreversible depression of extracellularly recorded ganglionic spontaneous spike generation while glycerol proved to be non-toxic. Intracellular recordings of individual nerve cell spontaneous activity during exposure to the cryoprotective agents were obtained in a few preliminary experiments. Both Me2SO and glycerol induced a decrement in the nerve cell membrane potential. The main difference between the action of the two cryoprotectants was in the rate and the amount of depolarization, both being higher in the case of Me2SO exposure.The Aplysia abdominal ganglia were frozen to ?20 °C and to ?196 °C. In all but one ganglia frozen to ?20 °C, including the preparations frozen in the absence of any cryoprotective agent, functional recovery was obtained after thawing. However, only the application of 20% glycerol improved the recovery of the preparations to a significant extent. In ganglia protected with 20% glycerol a full recovery of the action potential amplitude and frequency was obtained. In ganglia protected with 20% glycerol intracellular recordings of individual nerve cells demonstrated spontaneous spike activities before freezing and after thawing.No functional recovery was observed in ganglia frozen to ?196 °C in the absence of a cryoprotective agent. While in most preparations frozen with a cryoprotectant spontaneously generated spikes were recorded after thawing. However, the action potential frequency and amplitude were significantly depressed. It is concluded that further investigation is required to improve the freezing technique so that Aplysia ganglia may be preserved at low temperatures. It is suggested that intracellular exploration of the effects of cryoprotectants and freezing on identified nerve cell membrane may prove to be useful in future investigations.  相似文献   

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