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1.
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   

2.
The effect of five cooling rates, 1, 5, 10, 30, and 50 °C/min, and of four DMSO concentrations, 2.5, 5, 7.5, and 10%, on the survival of neonatal rat heart cells after freezing and thawing were studied. Growth area, contracting area and contraction frequency were used as viability parameters. Growth area and contracting area were measured in a number of fields in statistically adjusted locations of the culture dish on the second and on the fifth day of culturing.Without freezing, DMSO concentrations higher than 5% caused a considerable decrease of the growth area and of the contracting area. After freezing and thawing, biphasic survival curves were found with a narrow optimum at 2.5, 5, and 10% DMSO and a broad optimum at 7.5% DMSO. The survival based on the growth area and the survival based on the contracting area were about the same on the second day of culturing but differed on the fifth day. On the second day of culturing the highest survival was 73%, at a cooling rate of 5 °C/min and with 5% DMSO. On the fifth day of culturing the highest survival based on the growth area was 100%, at a cooling rate of 10 °C/min with 7.5% DMSO; the contracting area was the same as on the second day. The cooling rate of 5 °C/min was optimal at all DMSO concentrations tested. There was no correlation between the contracting area and the spontaneous contraction frequency after freezing and thawing when both were expressed as percentages of the control. The contraction frequency after freezing and thawing was independent of the cooling rate and was maximally 50% of the control value.  相似文献   

3.
Adult rat heart cells were exposed to two-step cooling to ?196 °C with different holding periods at different subzero temperatures between both steps. The highest survival based on the percentage of trypan blue-excluding cells was 25% with 10% DMSO and a holding period of 6 min, and 21% with 15% DMSO and a holding period of 30 min. The highest survival based on morphological intactness was about 10%; there was no difference in results after cooling with 10 and 15% DMSO, and after holding between 2 and 30 min. The optimal survival based on the percentage of contracting cells was 52%, with 15% DMSO and a holding period of 2 min.When the holding period was replaced by a programmed cooling stage, the results could be improved. With this threestep cooling method, the optimal values, based on the number of trypan blue-excluding, intact, and contracting cells, were 40, 32, and 60%, respectively. It appeared that in the presence of 10% DMSO, which provided better survival than 5 and 15%, no significantly different results were obtained when the starting temperatures of the second cooling step varied between ?10 and ?20 °C, when the end temperatures varied between ?30 and ?60 °C, or when the cooling rates of the second cooling step varied between 0.1 and 1 °C/min. Three-step cooling provided similar results as linear cooling from 0 to ?100 °C, followed by rapid cooling to ?196 °C.  相似文献   

4.
The factors that affect the survival of mouse lymphocytes throughout a procedure for storage at ?196 °C have been studied both for the improvement of recovery and the possible extension to the mouse system of cell selection by freezing. After thawing, the survival of cells cooled at different rates in dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO, 5 or 10%, vv) was assessed from the [3H]thymidine incorporation in response to phytohaemagglutinin and concanavalin A. Before freezing the protection against freezing damage increased with time (up to 20 min) in DMSO (5%, vv) at 0 °C. Superimposed upon this effect was toxicity due to the DMSO. During freezing and thawing the cooling rate giving optimal survival was 8 to 15 °C/min for cells in DMSO (5%) and 1 to 3 °C/min for DMSO (10%). Omission of foetal calf serum was detrimental. Rapid thawing (>2.5 °C/min) was superior to slow thawing. After thawing dilution at 25 or 37 °C greatly improved cell survival compared with 0 °C; at 25 °C survival was optimal (75%) at a moderate dilution rate of 2.5 min for a 10-fold dilution in FCS (10%, vv) followed by gentle centrifugation (50g).Dilution damage during both thawing and post-thaw dilution may be due to osmotic swelling as DMSO and normally excluded solutes leave the cell. The susceptibility of the cell membrane to dilution damage may also be increased during freezing. The need to thaw rapidly and dilute at 25 °C after thawing is probably due to a decrease in dilution stress at higher temperatures. Optimisation of dilution procedures both maximised recovery and also widened the range of cooling rates over which the cells were recovered. These conditions increase the possibility of obtaining good recovery of a mixed cell population using a single cooling procedure. Alternatively, if cell types have different optimal cooling rates, stressful dilution may allow their selection from mixed cell populations.  相似文献   

5.
Subcutaneous adipose tissue is a rich source of stromal vascular fraction (SVF) and adipose-derived stromal/stem cells (ASCs) that are inherently multipotent and exhibit regenerative properties. In current practice, lipoaspirate specimens harvested from liposuction surgeries are routinely discarded as a biohazard waste due to a lack of simple, cost effective, and validated cryopreservation protocols. The aim of this study is to develop a xenoprotein-free cryoprotective agent cocktail that will allow for short-term (up to 6 months) preservation of lipoaspirate tissues suitable for fat grafting and/or stromal/stem cell isolation when stored at achievable temperatures (−20 °C or −80 °C). Lipoaspirates donated by three consenting healthy donors undergoing elective cosmetic liposuction surgeries were suspended in five freezing media (FM1: 10% DMSO and 35% BSA; FM2: 2% DMSO and 43% BSA; FM3: 10% DMSO and 35% lipoaspirate saline; FM4: 2% DMSO and 6% HSA; and FM5: 40% lipoaspirate saline and 10% PVP) all suspended in 1X DMEM/F12 and frozen using commercially available freezers (−20 °C or −80 °C) and stored at least for a 1 month. After 1 month of freezing storage, SVF cells and ASCs were isolated from the frozen-thawed lipoaspirates by digestion with collagenase type I. Cell viability was evaluated by fluorescence microscopy after staining with acridine orange and ethidium bromide. The SVF isolated from lipoaspirates frozen at −80 °C retained comparable cell viability with the tested freezing media (FM2, FM3, FM4) comparable with the conventional DMSO and animal serum media (FM1), whereas the FM5 media resulted in lower viability. In contrast, tissues frozen and stored at −20 °C did not yield live SVF cells after thawing and collagenase digestion. The surface marker expression (CD90, CD29, CD34, CD146, CD31, and CD45) of ASCs from frozen lipoaspirates at −80 °C in different cryoprotectant media were also evaluated and no significant differences were found between the groups. The adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation potential were studied by histochemical staining and gene expression by qRT-PCR. Oil Red O staining for adipogenesis revealed that the CPA media FM1, FM4 and FM5 displayed robust differentiation. Alizarin Red S staining for osteogenesis revealed that FM1 and FM4 media displayed superior differentiation in comparison to other tested media. Measurement of adipogenic and osteogenic gene expression by qRT-PCR provided similar outcomes and indicated that FM4 CPA media comparable with FM1 for adipogenesis and osteogenesis.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Brian Harvey 《Cryobiology》1983,20(4):440-447
Single cells from the developing embryo of the zebra fish survive freezing when protected with 1 M DMSO and cooled to ?196 °C in two steps. Cell survival drops from 85 to 26% when clumps of 5–10 cells are similarly frozen, and to 2% when isolated blastoderms are treated in the same way. This drastic decrease in survival is interpreted as an example of the “scale-up problem,” in which diffusional barriers prevent cryoprotectant equilibration and osmotic dehydration in large cell assemblanges.Isolated blastoderms develop considerably in culture, and retain some of this ability following cooling to ?25 °C after protection with DMSO or glycerol.Intact embryos protected with high concentrations of glycerol (2.8 M) tolerate slow cooling to ?196 °C surprisingly well, with most of the embryonic cells morphologically intact and actively extruding lobopodia. Glycerol could, however, only be removed from cells by disrupting the embryo so that diffusional barriers were removed. DMSO (2.8 M) was ineffective in preserving embryos or cells cooled to ?196 °C.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Cryo-preservation of carp, Cyprinus carpio, sperm Deep-freezing trials of carp sperm were carried out by varying several factors such as the basic saline solution, the cryoprotectors added (glycerol, propanediol, ethylene glycol and DMSO), the media (Menezo-INRA B2, egg yolk, urea) and the deep-freezing and dilution rates. The success of deepfreezing was judged by the percentage of motile spermatozoa, intensity of motility, fertilizing ability and morphological integrity of the spermatozoa studied under the scanning electron microscope. DMSO was the best cryoprotector and the mineral composition of the dilution medium the least important factor, but there was noticeable improvement after organic compounds were added. The following mixture has been proposed: NaCl 100 mM + KC1100 mM, Tris 20 mM, pH 8: 37%, Menezo medium B2 INRA: 15%, urea 5%, DMSO: 10%, fresh sperm: 33%. Optimal deep-freezing rate was: 5°C/min from 2 to-7°C and 25°C/min from-7 to-70°C. In these conditions, about 70 to 80% of the spermatozoa were motile after thawing compared to fresh control sperm, but fertilizing ability was not more than 30 to 40% of that with fresh sperm. The percentage of spermatozoa considered intact was 66% after thawing as against 83% for fresh control sperm. The motility and fertilizing ability of deep-frozen sperm were significantly improved when the dilution rate at insemination was reduced from 1/100 to 1/2.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
L J Menz 《Cryobiology》1975,12(4):405-416
Desheathed rat cutaneous nerves were exposed to various concentrations of ethylene glycol (EG), glycerol and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) at temperatures of 1, 24, and 38 °C for periods of time ranging from 5 to 60 min. Measurements of the percent recovery of the original action potential (AP) were determined after removal of the cryoprotective agent (CPA) under various conditions, i.e., temperature, time and sequence of rinsing. A comparison of the results obtained after the nerves were exposed directly to a 15% concentration of the three CPAs at 1 °C for a 15-min period showed that the percentage of recovery of the AP was 90, 69, and 36% of the original values when treated with DMSO, EG, or glycerol, respectively. In all three groups, the nerves were rinsed at 1 °C for 15 min. If the exposure to glycerol at 1 °C was carried out in a gradual stepwise manner, the recovery of the AP in 10 and 15% solutions ranged from 58 to 64%. If the temperatures of the exposure and rinse were increased to 24 and 38 °C, glycerol produced some toxicity within 10 min and after 25 min no recovery of AP was obtained. The results of a 10-min direct exposure to EG at 1 °C showed a moderate decrease in recovery of the AP as the concentration was increased from 10 to 15–20%. Increasing the exposure time to 15 and 30 min at 1 °C also contributed to further reduction in recovery. DMSO, however, in concentrations of 10, 15, and 20% produced only a slight decline of AP after a 5–15 min exposure at 1 °C. Recovery ranged from 96% after 10 min in a 10% solution to 88% after 15 min in a 20% solution. Toxicity became more apparent with DMSO when nerves were exposed to 30% concentrations for 5–10 min; the latter time resulted in a 49% recovery of the AP. Exposure of nerves to a CPA solution containing isotonic concentrations of electrolytes resulted in a 10–30% improvement in recovery when compared with specimens treated with lower levels of salt. The effect of raising the temperature of the rinse to 38 °C and increasing the wash time to 20 min was studied in a few selected experiments. After a direct 15-min exposure to a 15% solution of a CPA at 1 °C the recovery in the case of glycerol was significantly increased with such treatment whereas with EG and DMSO it remained unchanged. There was no evidence of thermal or cold shock in this work.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The optimal conditions were determined under which maximum survival of murine hematopoietic erythropoietin-responsive cells (ERC) could be ensured during manipulations required for cryopreservation. Cell survival was similar over freezing rates between 2 and 10 °C/min. Optimal cryoprotectants were 10% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and 20% fetal calf serum; the DMSO was removed by centrifugation after stepwise dilution with 20 vol of medium over a 10-min period. Differing thawing rates for the cell suspensions had minimal effects on survival. “Seeding” the cell suspensions with ice crystals had no effect on ERC recovery. Overall ERC survival varied between 20 and 40%. These results confirm earlier reports that certain ERC populations are more sensitive to damage during cryopreservation than are other hematopoietic progenitor cells.  相似文献   

14.
E Hem 《Cryobiology》1976,13(2):134-141
Rat spleen and lymph node lymphocytes have been frozen with dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) at 1 °C/min and stored at ?196 °C for 10 min. The functional recovery of the cell populations was monitored by the mitogenic response (uptake of [3H]thymidine) to phytohemagglutinin (PHA) or pokeweed mitogen (PWM) in culture after thawing. With 5 to 10% DMSO in the freezing medium, frozen-thawed lymph node cells were found to retain about 40% of their response to PHA. In contrast, frozen-thawed spleen cells responded better to PHA than fresh cells. The response to PWM was markedly decreased in both spleen and lymph node cell cultures.A similar effect was observed when DMSO was added to the culture medium of fresh spleen cells, i.e., an augmentation of the response to PHA and a suppression of the response to PWM. However, the concentrations of DMSO needed to induce this effect was more than 10-fold higher than that present in the culture medium after freezing and thawing.Since removal of adherent cells from the spleen cell population also produced an augmentation of the response to PHA, it is suggested that the freezing procedure and DMSO may have an inhibitory effect on suppressor cell functions present in spleen cell populations.  相似文献   

15.
Conditions were evaluated for optimum cryopreservation of primary chicken embryo kidney (CEK) cells. The recovery of viable CEK cells was best (50.8% viability) when the concentration of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) in the freezing medium was 20% (v/v). The viability of primary CEK cells was not influenced by the concentration of calf serum in the freezing medium, the duration of storage at −70°C before storage in liquid nitrogen, cell concentration, or the method of addition or dilution of DMSO. Thawed cells recovered and grew in complete growth medium similarly to cells freshly isolated from kidney, and influenza viruses produced plaques in the monolayer. The cryopreservation procedures described here may facilitate maintenance of a standard stock of primary CEK cells for laboratories where preparation of primary CEK cells is not an option.  相似文献   

16.
The right sciatic nerve of 78 cross-breed rabbits was exposed. Fifty-two of these nerves were treated with 10% DMSO or 10% ethanol for a period of 10 min before being frozen or supercooled. Twenty-six nerves were just supercooled or frozen, these being used for control purposes. A capacity-limited solid silver probe, 15 cm in length and 1 cm in diameter, was employed. Ethanol was used as the cooling agent. The freezing or supercooling temperatures were 0, ?5, ?10, ?20, ?25, and ?30 °C, and the freezing or supercooling times were 10, 30, and 120 sec. One, two, or four freeze- or supercool-thaw cycles were employed. After electric supramaximal stimulation with 3.8 V, the amplitudes of the action potentials (AP) were measured before and immediately after 1, 3, 5, 10, 20, 30, 60, and 90 min and 2, 5, and 10 days after supercooling or freezing, respectively. The pretreated nerves were examined under light and electron microscopes after 2 days. The damage to the nerve fibers depends on the freezing or supercooling temperature, the freezing or supercooling time, and the number of freeze- or supercooling-thaw cycles. Electrophysiologically, this damage leads to a decrease in the amplitude or complete disappearance of the APs and to a reduction in motor function. The morphological findings were clumping and at times even vacuolization of the myelin sheaths and a thickening of the axon with a loss of microfilaments, microtubules, and mitochondria. First the large, then the medium and small myelinated nerve fibers appeared to be affected. The unmyelinated fibers seem well preserved. No differences in quality but differences in quantity were observed between those nerves treated with cryoprotective agents and the nontreated control nerves. With the latter, the damage was spread diffusely over the whole nerve; whereas with the pretreated nerves, damage was localized in the periphery, primarily where the cryoprobe was applied.DMSO and ethanol have a cryoprotectivc effect on the nerves, and in this respect it would appear, from electron microscopic observations, that fewer nerve fibers were damaged compared with the control nerves and, from an electrophysiological viewpoint, following pretreatment the action potentials had a greater amplitude than that of the control nerves.After pretreatmcnt with 10% DMSO or 10% ethanol, the freezing or supercooling threshold of the sciatic nerves was determined in relation to the freezing or supercooling times and the freeze- or supercool-thaw cycles. With one freeze-thaw cycle this freezing threshold was, for both 10% DMSO and 10% ethanol, ?25 °C with a freezing time of 10 sec, ?20 °C with a freezing time of up to 30 sec, and ?15 °C with a freezing time of up to 120 sec. Consequently, the freezing threshold was higher than with motor nerves frozen under the same conditions without cryoprotective agents (the controls).If these experimental results could be applied in clinical cryosurgery it might be possible to preserve a peripheral motor nerve in the periphery of the cryolesion to a certain extent by injecting such cryoprotective agents around the nerve.  相似文献   

17.
Adult rat heart muscle cells obtained by perfusion of the heart with collagenase have been used to characterize the insulin receptors by equilibrium binding and kinetic measurements. Binding of 125I-labelled insulin to heart cells exhibited a high degree of specificity; it was dependent on pH and temperature, binding at steady increased with decreasing temperatures. About 70% of the radioactivity bound at equilibrium at 25°C could be dissociated by addition of an excess of unlabelled insulin. 54 and 40% of 125I-labelled insulin was degraded by isolated heart cells after 2 h at 37°C and 4 h at 25°C, respectively. This degrading activity was effectively inhibited by high concentration of albumin.Equilibrium binding studies were conducted at 25°C using insulin concentrations ranging from 2.5 · 10?11 mol/l to 10?6 mol/l. Scatchard analysis of the binding data resulted in a curvilinear plot (concave upward), which was further analyzed using the average affinity profile. The empty site affinity constant was calculated to be 9.5 · 107 l/mol with a total receptor concentration of 3.4 · 106 sites per cell.The presence of site-site interactions of the negative cooperative type among the insulin receptors has been confirmed by kinetic experiments. The rate of dilution induced dissociation was enhanced in the presence of native insulin (5 · 10?9 mol/l), both, under conditions of low and high fractional saturation of receptors.  相似文献   

18.
Cryopreservation of human granulocytes.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Granulocyte preservation was undertaken using hydroxyethylstarch for both sedimentation of red cells and cryopreservation of buffy coat white cells from CPD whole blood. Buffy coats were mixed with HES to a final concentration of 4% (w/v) and hematocrit of 30%, and sedimented in inverted plastic syringes. The leukocyte enriched (100–500×) supernatant was frozen at 2.0 °C/min to ?80 °C (and stored frozen up to 3 months). Alternatively, sedimented leukocytes were frozen after a slow addition of 10% DMSO to 5%. Tubes were thawed at 37 °C, and DMSO was removed by dilution with Hank's solution containing CPD and centrifugation. The pellets of granulocytes were resuspended in Normosol.Buffy coat from 10 units yielded 60 ± 9.7% of the available whole blood leukocytes, of which 43 ± 14% were recovered after sedimentation in HES. Freezing in DMSO yielded all, 101% of the prefrozen leukocytes. Postthawed viability of granulocytes was estimated morphologically and by their ability to inhibit the rate of growth of E. coli. Complete inhibition was observed at a ratio of one E. coli to one granulocyte. Postthawed granulocytes were characterized by high myeloperoxidase activity and exclusion of trypan blue. Approximately 25% of the total available granulocytes in CPD whole blood were recovered.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract

FTIR and cryomicroscopy have been used to study mouse embryonic fibroblast cells (3T3) during freezing in the absence and presence of DMSO and glycerol. The results show that cell volume changes as observed by cryomicroscopy typically end at temperatures above ?15°C, whereas membrane phase changes may continue until temperatures as low as ?30°C. This implies that cellular dehydration precedes dehydration of the bound water surrounding the phospholipid head groups. Both DMSO and glycerol increase the membrane hydraulic permeability at subzero temperature and reduce the activation energy for water transport. Cryoprotective agents facilitate dehydration to continue at low subzero temperatures thereby decreasing the incidence of intracellular ice formation. The increased subzero membrane hydraulic permeability likely plays an important role in the cryoprotective action of DMSO and glycerol. In the presence of DMSO water permeability was found to be greater compared to that in the presence of glycerol. Two temperature regimes were identified in an Arrhenius plot of the membrane hydraulic permeability. The activation energy for water transport at temperature ranging from 0 to ?10°C was found to be greater than that below ?10°C. The non-linear Arrhenius behavior of Lp has been implemented in the water transport model to simulate cell volume changes during freezing. At a cooling rate of 1°C min-1, ~5% of the initial osmotically active water volume is trapped inside the cells at ?30°C.  相似文献   

20.
In blood banks, platelets are stored at 20–24°C, which limits the maximum time they can be stored. Platelets are chilling sensitive, and they activate when stored at temperatures below 20°C. Cryopreservation could serve as an alternative method for long term storage of platelet concentrates. Recovery rates using dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) as cryoprotective agent, however, are low, and removal of DMSO is required before transfusion. In this study, we have explored the use of trehalose for cryopreservation of human platelets while using different cooling rates. Recovery of membrane intact cells and the percentage of nonactivated platelets were used as a measure for survival. In all cases, survival was optimal at intermediate cooling rates of 20°C min?1. Cryopreservation using DMSO resulted in high percentages of activated platelets; namely 54% of the recovered 94%. When using trehalose, 98% of the platelets had intact membranes after freezing and thawing, whereas 76% were not activated. Using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, subzero membrane phase behavior of platelets has been studied in the presence of trehalose and DMSO. Furthermore, membrane hydraulic permeability parameters were derived from these data to predict the cell volume response during cooling. Both trehalose and DMSO decrease the activation energy for subzero water transport across cellular membranes. Platelets display a distinct lyotropic membrane phase transition during freezing, irrespective of the presence of cryoprotective agents. We suggest that concomitant uptake of trehalose during freezing could explain the increased survival of platelets cryopreserved with trehalose. © 2012 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2012  相似文献   

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