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1.
DTA of lettuce seeds was used to study the cryoprotective mode of action of DMSO. Lettuce seeds were imbibed for 16 hr in 5, 10, 15 or 20% aqueous solutions of DMSO either with or without a 6 hr preimbibition in water. Seeds were frozen to postsecondary exotherm temperatures; exotherms were recorded; and germination was tested after freezing. DMSO had at least a twofold effect on the lettuce seeds: it increased the degree of supercooling, and it imparted a capacity to survive following freezing beyond secondary exotherm levels.  相似文献   

2.
D B Pribor 《Cryobiology》1975,12(4):309-320
Human erythrocytes washed with phosphate buffered saline (PBS) were frozen for 1 or 16 min at temperatures ranging from ?10 to ?80 °C. Red cell suspensions contained either no protective agent or various concentrations of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) or glycerol. The similarities between cryoprotection by DMSO and glycerol reinforce Rapatz and Luyet's classification of cryoprotective agents into three types and support Mazur's two-factor theory of cryoprotection. However, there are important differences between the cryoprotective effects of DMSO and glycerol. The most noteworthy is that for all concentrations of DMSO a 16-min freezing exposure was equal to or more damaging than a 1-min exposure; the converse was true for 11.8 and 17.7% glycerol solutions. This and other differences suggest that the general mechanism of freeze-thaw damage and cryoprotection is more complex than described by Mazur's two-factor theory. Likewise cryoprotective agents cannot be consistently classified into two or three types. A multifactor theory was suggested as a more extensive model for understanding freeze-thaw damage and cryoprotection. The major new contribution of this theory is the idea of biological interaction. This latter refers to solutes in conjunction with various factors which disturb the steady state of the cell membrane. The change in the membrane may be reversible or irreversible depending upon the circumstances.  相似文献   

3.
H Lenz  W Goertz  H Preussler 《Cryobiology》1975,12(5):486-496
Fifty sciatic nerves of 39 rabbits are treated at different temperatures (+5, +1, 0, ?3, ?5, ?10, ?15 and ?20 °C), for different freezing times (10, 20, 30, 60 and 120 sec), and for different numbers of freeze-thaw cycles (1, 2 and 4). After electric supramaximal stimulation (3.8 V) action potentials of the sciatic nerve are measured before, immediately after, and 1, 3, 5, 10, 20, 30, 60, 90 min, 2, 5 and 10 days after freezing. Two or ten days after freezing, the nerves are examined in a light microscope. The cold threshold of the sciatic nerve was determined, i.e., the temperature at which after supramaximal stimulation it is still possible to measure an action potential within 1.5 hr after freezing. On application of one freeze-thaw cycle, the cold threshold is ?15 °C after a freezing time of 10 sec, ?10 °C after 20 sec and 30 sec, and ?5 °C after 60 and 120 sec. After application of two and four freeze-thaw cycles, the cold threshold is elevated, and after a super-cooling time of 10 sec it is ?10 °C, after 30 sec ?5 °C. The longer the freezing time and the more freeze-thaw cycles, the higher is the cold threshold. At ?20 °C (superthreshold temperature) an action potential can no longer be measured and all myelinated nerve fibres have decayed, except some small-caliber ones.Electrophysiologically, it is evident that some of the myelinated nerve fibres become functionally damaged for 1.5 hr, while other parts of the nerve fibres will degenerate and later regenerate. The amplitudes of the measured action potentials correlate with the decay of myelin sheaths and axons of large- and medium-caliber nerve fibres. Action potentials between 0 and 40% show a gradual paresis, above 40% a physiological motor function. The pathophysiological mechanism of this reversible functional loss after super-cooling and freezing may be a consequence of a disturbed membrane permeability.It is of clinical importance that, if the cold threshold of a peripheral motor nerve is known, the nerve can be frozen concomitantly for a short time at application of low temperatures without suffering any functional loss. This is achieved by controlling during freezing the motor function of the corresponding nerve situated on the periphery of cryolesion, and, if there is a loss of motor function, the freezing process has to be interrupted immediately.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
D.B. Pribor 《Cryobiology》1974,11(1):60-72
Washed human erythrocytes were suspended in 0, 5, 10, 15, and 20% PVP in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Fifty lambda samples were frozen in alcohol baths at temperatures ranging from ?10 ° to ?80 °C. The specimens were frozen either for 1 or 16 min, rapidly thawed, and resuspended in PBS or PBS plus PVP. Percent hemolysis was determined colorimetrically. Results indicate that there is a high degree of latent damage when red cells are frozen in the presence of PVP. This damage is evident from the large increase in hemolysis when freeze-thawed, intact red cells are resuspended in the PBS. Under some circumstances 16 min freezing is significantly less damaging than 1 min freezing. This indicates a partial recovery from the freezing stress during subzero storage of the red cells.The general cryoprotective properties of PVP were described in terms of: (1) latent damage; (2) storage damage; (3) optimal cooling and rewarming rates (as a function of freezing bath temperature); (4) optimum PVP concentration; and (5) post-thaw cryoprotection. The data were compared with that from a similar study using dextran-40. This comparison indicated six similarities and ten differences in the cryoprotective properties of dextran and PVP. The remarkable differences between dextran and PVP was counted as an important common characteristics of macromolecular cryoprotective agents. That is, their cryoproteetive properties cannot be reduced to one or a few physical characteristics held in common. Nine other common characteristics were listed. Several of these, which include latent damage and recovery from latent damage, cannot be explained by current theories of cryoprotection. A multifactor theory was proposed to account for these ten common features of macromolecular cryoprotective agents.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The protection of sheep erythrocytes at freezing temperatures was investigated using glycerol, dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), glucose and four different types of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) as cryoprotective agents. Depending on type (molecular weight) and concentration good protection was obtained with PVP, whereas glycerol, DMSO and glucose were unsatisfactory. Recovery of cells after thawing was most successful when the cells had been frozen at a concentration of 1–2 × 109 cells/ml. No cells tolerated freezing at −20 °G. Best results were obtained when the cells were frozen directly in liquid nitrogen (−196°G).  相似文献   

8.
Removal of cryoprotective additives through use of a room temperature (22 °C) washing step, instead of 0 °C, was found to improve the recovery of sugarcane suspension culture and rice callus tissues. Cultured cells were cryoprotected by gradual addition of a mixture of polyethylene glycol, glucose, and DMSO (PGD) to a final concentration of 10%-8%-10%, w/v, respectively, added at either 0 or 22 °C. After a programmed slow freezing of the cells, they were thawed rapidly and the cryoprotectants were gradually diluted and washed out using a 22 or 0 °C washing medium. Viability of suspension cultured sugarcane cells protected with PGD was greatly diminished when a cold washing solution was used, whether the cells had been frozen (?23 °C) or not. Two mutant lines of rice callus when frozen to ?196 °C in PGD and thawed showed less growth than unfrozen cells, but their growth was improved by washing the thawed cells with a 22 °C solution. With all cultures tested, the addition of PGD at 0 °C and post-thaw washing out at 22 °C gave improved survival. Particularly with the rice lines, optimizing the addition and washing procedures allowed culture survival of liquid nitrogen freezing not otherwise attained.  相似文献   

9.
Babesia rodhaini parasites in murine blood containing 1.5 m DMSO were frozen at two rates, as judged by the duration of the “freezing plateau”, then cooled to ?196 °C and rewarmed at two rates to detect interactions between the duration of the plateau and rates of subsequent cooling and rewarming. Infectivity tests showed that fast and slow freezing (plateau times of about 1 sec and 30 sec, respectively) had similar effects on parasite survival when cooling was at 130 °C/min and warming was at 800 °C/min. However, when either the cooling rate was increased to 3500 °C/min or the warming rate was decreased to 2.3 °C/min, fast freezing decreased parasite survival more than did slow freezing. It is suggested that fast freezing accentuated the damaging effects of fast cooling and slow warming by increasing intracellular ice formation.  相似文献   

10.
Preimplantation-stage mouse embryos suspended in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) have been used as a model to study details of the response of a simple multicellular system to freezing and thawing. Rapid freezing to ?196 °C kills the embryos unless they have first been cooled very slowly to at least below ?50 °C. The survival of both 2-cell and 8-cell embryos has been found to depend as critically on the rate at which the frozen embryos were thawed as on the rate at which they were first frozen. The damaging consequences of thawing frozen embryos too rapidly have been shown to occur between ?70 and ?20 °C. Finally, the survival of embryos as a function of the time in DMSO prior to freezing and thawing has been compared with their volume changes as a function of time in DMSO. This comparison leads to the tentative conclusion that dimethyl sulfoxide need not permeate the embryos to protect them against freezing damage. Overall, the embryos' response to freezing and thawing is qualitatively similar to that displayed by many other cell types.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract

Successful and efficient cryopreservation of living cells and organs is a key clinical application of regenerative medicine. Recently, magnetic cryopreservation has been reported for intact tooth banking and cryopreservation of dental tissue. The aim of this study was to assess the cryoprotective effects of static magnetic fields (SMFs) on human dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs) during cryopreservation. Human DPSCs isolated from extracted teeth were frozen with a 0.4-T or 0.8-T SMF and then stored at ?196?°C for 24?h. During freezing, the cells were suspended in freezing media containing with 0, 3 or 10% DMSO. After thawing, the changes in survival rate of the DPSCs were determined by flow cytometry. To understand the possible cryoprotective mechanisms of the SMF, the membrane fluidity of SMF-exposed DPSCs was tested. The results showed that when the freezing medium was DMSO-free, the survival rates of the thawed DPSCs increased 2- or 2.5-fold when the cells were exposed to 0.4-T or 0.8-T SMFs, respectively (p?<?0.01). In addition, after exposure to the 0.4-T SMF, the fluorescence anisotropy of the DPSCs increased significantly (p?<?0.01) in the hydrophilic region. These results show that SMF exposure improved DMSO-free cryopreservation. This phenomenon may be due to the improvement of membrane stability for resisting damage caused by ice crystals during the freezing procedure.  相似文献   

12.
A study was conducted to determine the effects of freezing on the major membrane proteins of isolated human erythrocyte membranes. Membranes in low or normal ionic strength medium were frozen at slow or fast freezing rates. The membrane protein composition and elution of proteins from the membranes were studied utilizing polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis in a sodium dodecyl sulfate or an acetic acid-urea-phenol solvent system. Neither a change in the composition of the membrane proteins nor any elution of membrane protein during freezing and thawing was observed. The data indicate that any human erythrocyte membrane damage during freezing and thawing was not related to a change in major membrane protein composition. Human red cell membranes were stable at ?80 or ?196 °C in the absence of a cryoprotective agent.  相似文献   

13.
K R Diller 《Cryobiology》1975,12(5):480-485
Human erythrocytes were frozen on the stage of a cryomicroscope at accurately controlled constant-cooling rates with varying degrees of extracellular supercooling. The formation of intracellular ice was detected by direct observation of the frozen cells through the microscope. A significant coupling effect was determined between the minimum cooling rate necessary to produce intracellular freezing and the extent of supercooling. Increased degrees of extracellular supercooling reduced the range of cooling rates for which water would freeze within the cell. Specific data points were obtained at ΔTSC = 0, ?5, and ?12 °C for which the corresponding transition cooling rates were respectively ?845, ?800, and ?11 °C/min.An explanation for the occurrence of this phenomenon is presented based on the physiochemical processes that govern the freezing of a cell suspension.  相似文献   

14.
Differing actions of penetrating and nonpenetrating cryoprotective agents.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
L E McGann 《Cryobiology》1978,15(4):382-390
A two-step freezing technique has been used to examine the role of cryoprotective agents during cooling. Chinese hamster fibroblasts were cooled to various subzero holding temperatures and subsequently thawed or cooled to ?196 °C before thawing. Cells were suspended in various concentrations of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) or hydroxyethyl starch (HES) before freezing. The results indicated differing protective actions of DMSO and HES. These differences were verified using glycerol as either a penetrating or a nonpenetrating agent.The results are consistent with the concepts that cryoprotection is based on the avoidance or minimization of intracellular freezing and the minimization of damage to the cell from the environment of concentrated solutes during cooling, and that the colligative action of both penetrating and nonpenetrating agents allows the cells to survive the conditions for a reduction of cell water content during cooling thereby reducing the amount of intracellular freezing. The results indicate that penetrating and nonpenetrating agents accomplish this in different ways. Penetrating agents create the environment for a reduction of cell water content at temperatures sufficiently low to reduce the damaging effect of the concentrated solutes on the cells. Nonpenetrating agents osmotically “squeeze” water from the cells primarily during the initial phases of freezing at temperatures between ?10 and ?20 °C when these additives become concentrated in the extracellular regions.  相似文献   

15.
Two populations of the gall fly Eurosta solidaginsis utilize different strategies to endure seasonal exposure to temperatures below freezing. Both populations are freezing tolerant. In north temperate populations, supercooling points rise from ?10.2°C to ?6.2°C following exposures to temperatures below freezing. This level is maintained throughout winter and ensures frequent and prolonged periods of tissue freezing. South temperate populations depress the supercooling point to ?14.2°C during autumn and early winter, and this depression precludes extracellular ice formation during periods of supra-optimal temperature fluctuations. During mid-winter, supercooling points rise to the same level as in northern groups.Both populations accumulate three principal cryoprotective agents following first frost exposures (glycerol, sorbitol and trehalose). Cryoprotectants levels do not peak in northern populations until 4–6 weeks after first frost. In southern populations the accumulation profile is characterized by a high initial rate of synthesis, a protective overshoot and pronounced seasonal fluctuations. The relative survival advantages of each strategy are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Adult rat heart cells were isolated by perfusion of the coronary system of the heart with a 0.05% collagenase solution.In one method (A), cells were finally isolated by shaking the heart fragments in a collagenase solution, after which the cells were washed and suspended in a Ca- and Mg-free buffered salt solution. The effect of different DMSO concentrations, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, and 30% and the effect of the addition and dilution rate of DMSO on the number of trypan blue-excluding, intact, and contracting cells were studied. The highest DMSO concentration which was tolerated by the isolated adult heart cells was 15%. Variation of addition rate and the dilution rate of DMSO had no effect. After freezing at external cooling rates of 1, 5, 10, 30, and 50 °C/min to ?100 °C, and then rapidly to ?196 °C, in the presence of 5, 10, or 15% DMSO, reanimation of these cells was not achieved.In another method (B), heart fragments, after collagenase perfusion of the heart, were first treated with 5, 10, or 15% DMSO, after which the cells were isolated. If these cells were frozen at 1 °C/min with 10% DMSO, 15% of the cells, expressed as a percentage of the control, remained morphologically intact and 38% of the cells were contracting after thawing. Significantly higher survival percentages of 30 and 61%, respectively, were obtained if the heart fragments were left intact during freezing.  相似文献   

17.
Freezing-susceptible adult Ips acuminatus hibernate underneath bark of Scots pine. The beetles lower their supercooling points from ?20 to ?34°C due to accumulation of low molecular weight antifreezes. The capability of specimens to supercool to about ?20°C in the absence of cryoprotective solutes during winter, seemed to be at least partially attributable to the presence of a thermal hysteresis factor at 3–4°C.Using a GC-MS-COM technique, a unique combination of accumulated solutes present only in specimens demonstrating supercooling points below ?20°C was identified as ethylene glycol, mannitol, sorbitol and dulcitol. Not previously found in nature, ethylene glycol was the major solute (90%) synthesized at sub-zero temperatures. Exposure to ?10°C was an effective cue to accumulation of ethylene glycol and nearly 5 times as effective in promoting sorbitol synthesis than was ?5°C. When low molecular weight substances were lost at high temperatures, they were not re-synthesized in beetles re-exposed to sub-zero temperature. The supercooling point was closely related to both the concentration of ethylene glycol and to the haemolymph melting point. Attempts to correlate changes in sorbitol concentrations to changes in supercooling points were not conclusive.Proliferation of thermal hysteresis was observed in the beginning of November. A melting-hysteresis freezing point differential of about 3.6°C was demonstrated in the haemolymph of beetles during December. No thermal hysteresis was demonstrated in the haemolymph of positive phototactic beetles or in the outdoor beetles in May. The combination of high temperature and long photoperiod appeared to be a more effective cue to the final loss of thermal hysteresis than was high temperature alone.  相似文献   

18.
The ultrastructure of neonatal rat heart cells in suspension and in tissue culture after freezing at optimal, suboptimal, and supraoptimal cooling rates with 2.5, 5, 7.5, and 10% DMSO was investigated. The effect of DMSO treatment only on the structure of the cells was also studied. A comparison was made with the survival in culture.Without freezing, increasing DMSO concentrations caused an increase of morphological damage, correlating with a decrease of the survival in culture. With 2.5% DMSO there was no difference with untreated cells. At higher DMSO concentrations, the ultrastructural damage increased from spaces between cell membrane and cytoplasm at 5% DMSO to interrupted cell membranes, swollen or destroyed mitochondria, and nuclei with clumped chromatin at 10% DMSO.After freezing at optimal or nonoptimal cooling rates with 5 or 7.5% DMSO, the ultrastructure correlated well with the survival. After freezing with 2.5 or 10% DMSO at optimal or nonoptimal cooling rates, differences in survival were found, which were not reflected in the ultrastructure of the cell. After 8 days of culturing, cells which were frozen at all the different cooling rates and DMSO concentrations appeared to have a normal structure.  相似文献   

19.
In the unique supply chain of cellular therapies, preservation is important to keep the cell product viable. Many factors in cryopreservation affect the outcome of a cell therapy: (i) formulation and introduction of a freezing medium, (ii) cooling rate, (iii) storage conditions, (iv) thawing conditions and (v) post-thaw processing. This article surveys clinical trials of cellular immunotherapy that used cryopreserved regulatory, chimeric antigen receptor or gamma delta T cells, dendritic cells or natural killer (NK) cells. Several observations are summarized from the given information. The aforementioned cell types have been similarly frozen in media containing 5–10% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) with plasma, serum or human serum albumin. Two common freezing methods are an insulated freezing container such as Nalgene Mr. Frosty and a controlled-rate freezer at a cooling rate of -1°C/min. Water baths at approximately 37°C have been commonly used for thawing. Post-thaw processing of cryopreserved cells varied greatly: some studies infused the cells immediately upon thawing; some diluted the cells in a carrier solution of varying formulation before infusion; some washed cells to remove cryoprotective agents; and others re-cultured cells to recover cell viability or functionality lost due to cryopreservation. Emerging approaches to preserving cellular immunotherapies are also described. DMSO-free formulations of the freezing media have demonstrated improved preservation of cell viability in T lymphocytes and of cytotoxic function in natural killer cells. Saccharides are a common type of molecule used as an alternative cryoprotective agent to DMSO. Improving methods of preservation will be critical to growth in the clinical use of cellular immunotherapies.  相似文献   

20.
Hatchlings of the painted turtle, Chrysemys picta, hibernate terrestrially and can survive subfreezing temperatures by supercooling or by tolerating the freezing of their tissues. Whether supercooled or frozen, an ischemic hypoxia develops because tissue perfusion is limited by low temperature and/or freezing. Oxidative stress can occur if hatchlings lack sufficient antioxidant defenses to minimize or prevent damage by reactive oxygen species. We examined the antioxidant capacity and indices of oxidative damage in hatchling C. picta following survivable, 48 h bouts of supercooling (−6°C), freezing (−2.5°C), or hypoxia (4°C). Samples of plasma, brain, and liver were collected after a 24 h period of recovery (4°C) and assayed for Trolox-equivalent antioxidant capacity (TEAC), thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), and carbonyl proteins. Antioxidant capacity did not vary among treatments in any of the tissues studied. We found a significant increase in TBARS in plasma, but not in the brain or liver, of frozen/thawed hatchlings as compared to untreated controls. No changes were found in the concentration of TBARS or carbonyl proteins in supercooled or hypoxia-exposed hatchlings. Our results suggest that hatchling C. picta have a well-developed antioxidant defense system that minimizes oxidative damage during hibernation.  相似文献   

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