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1.
AIMS: To study the viability of a culture of the rumen protozoon Entodinium caudatum after a cryopreservation procedure by a fluorescence microscopy staining method. METHODS AND RESULTS: Fluorescence method is based on the different colour of cells depending on their membrane integrity. When the temperature effect was studied either by fluorescence or motility, the techniques were correlated (r = 0.727) and their slopes and intercepts were not different (P > 0.05). However, motility showed a higher variation coefficient (0.40 vs 0.12). There were no differences between cooling rates at cryopreservation (1 and 4 degrees C min-1) at 38, 15 or 5 degrees C, nor after thawing. CONCLUSIONS: Fluorescence staining is more accurate than motility for assessing protozoal viability. Viability after thawing was 0.50, and the number of viable cells per 250 microl straw was 320 and 420 for 1 and 4 degrees C min-1. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: This cryopreservation procedure seems to ensure culture recovery for E. caudatum.  相似文献   

2.
Membrane status of boar spermatozoa after cooling or cryopreservation   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
This study tested the hypothesis that sperm membrane changes during cooling contribute substantially to the membrane damage observed after cryopreservation of boar spermatozoa. Flow cytometry was used to assess viability (percentages of live and dead cells) of boar sperm cells after staining with SYBR-14 and propidium iodide (PI) and acrosome status after staining with FITC-pisum sativum agglutenin and PI. Incubation (38 degrees C, 4 h), cooling (to 15 or 5 degrees C) and freezing reduced the proportion of live spermatozoa compared with those in fresh semen. There were more membrane changes in spermatozoa cooled to 5 degrees C than to 15 degrees C. The proportion of live spermatozoa decreased during processing for cryopreservation and cooling to 5 degrees C, but was unaffected by freezing and thawing if held at 15 degrees C for 3.5 h during cooling. Spermatozoa not held during cooling exhibited further loss of viability after freezing and thawing. Holding the spermatozoa also increased the proportion of acrosome-intact spermatozoa at both 15 degrees C and 5 degrees C and at thawing compared with that of the unheld controls. The results of this study suggest that a substantial proportion of the membrane changes associated with cryopreservation of boar spermatozoa may be attributed to the cooling of the cells to 5 degrees C rather than to the freezing and thawing process, and that sperm membrane changes are reduced when semen is held at 15 degrees C during cooling.  相似文献   

3.
Huang C  Dong Q  Tiersch TR 《Theriogenology》2004,62(6):971-989
The objectives of this study were to evaluate the effects of cryoprotectant, osmotic pressure, cooling rate, equilibration time, and sperm-to-extender ratio, as well as somatic relationships of body length, body weight, and testis weight to sperm density in the platyfish Xiphophorus couchianus. Sperm motility and survival duration after thawing were significantly different between cryopreservation with dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and glycerol, with the highest motility at 10 min after thawing obtained with 14% glycerol. With subsequent use of 14% glycerol as cryoprotectant, the highest motility after thawing was observed with Hanks' balanced salt solution (HBSS) across a range of 240-300 mOsm/kg. Samples cooled from 5 to -80 degrees C at 25 degrees C/min yielded the highest post-thaw motility, although no significant difference was found for cooling rates across the range of 20-30 degrees C/min. In addition, the highest motility after thawing was found in samples equilibrated from 10 to 30 min with 14% glycerol and cooled at 25 degrees C/min. The post-thaw motility declined rapidly with use of 10% glycerol and cooling at 5 degrees C/min across the equilibration range of 10 min to 2h. Sperm motility with a dilution ratio of sperm to extender of 1:10 was not different at 10 min after thawing with those samples at greater dilutions, but declined significantly from Day 1 after thawing and showed lower survival duration when stored at 4 degrees C. However, the additional dilution of sperm solutions with HBSS (300 mOsm/kg) immediately after thawing significantly slowed the decline of motility and prolonged the duration of survival. Based on the above findings, the highest average sperm motility (78+/-3 %) at 10 min after thawing was obtained when sperm were suspended in HBSS at 300 mOsm/kg with 14% glycerol as cryoprotectant, diluted at a ratio of sperm to HBSS-glycerol of 1:20, equilibrated for 10 min, cooled at 25 degrees C/min from 5 to -80 degrees C before plunging into liquid nitrogen, and thawed at 40 degrees C in a water bath for 7 s. If diluted within 5 h after thawing, sperm frozen by the above protocol retained continuous motility for 15 days when stored at 4 degrees C.  相似文献   

4.
Freezing rabbit semen by the use of BF5 diluent   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Three experiments were carried out to find the optimal concentration of DMSO and glycerol in BF5 diluent for freezing rabbit spermatozoa. Semen was diluted 1:1 with diluent A (BF5 + DMSO) at 25 degrees C and diluted further 1:1 with diluent B (diluent A + glycerol) after cooling down to 5 degrees C. Diluted semen was frozen immediately and stored in liquid nitrogen. Maximum percentages for motility and normal acrosomes were obtained in the presence of 12% DMSO (as expressed in diluent A) and 3% glycerol (final concentration) after thawing.  相似文献   

5.
Several conditions that allow the preservation, storage and rapid, efficient recovery of viable Acanthamoeba castellanii organisms were investigated. The viability of trophozoites (as determined by time to confluence) significantly declined over a period of 12 months when stored at -70 degrees C using dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO; 5 or 10%) as cryopreservant. As A. castellanii are naturally capable of encystment, studies were undertaken to determine whether induced encystment might improve the viability of organisms under a number of storage conditions. A. castellanii cysts stored in the presence of Mg2+ at 4 degrees C remained viable over the study period, although time to confluence was increased from approximately 8 days to approximately 24 days over the 12-month period. Storage of cysts at -70 degrees C with DMSO (5 or 10%) or 40% glycerol, but not 80% glycerol as cryopreservants increased their viability over the 12-month study period compared with those stored at room temperature. Continued presence of Mg2+ in medium during storage had no adverse effects and generally improved recovery of viable organisms. The present study demonstrates that A. castellanii can be stored as a non-multiplicative form inexpensively, without a need for cryopreservation, for at least 12 months, but viability is increased by storage at -70 degrees C.  相似文献   

6.
Rat hepatocytes were cryopreserved in hormonally-defined medium (HDM) containing either fetal bovine serum (FBS), glycerol, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), sucrose or a mixture of these as a cryoprotectant. The best survival was with 10% (v/v) DMSO containing 30% (v/v) FBS using 5 x 10(5) hepatocytes ml(-1) at -70 degrees C for 5 d on type I collagen-coated dishes. After thawing, the cell viability was 81% determined by the MTT-test. The cryopreserved hepatocytes had the capacity of albumin synthesis similar to hepatocytes without cryopreservation. This result shows that cryopreservation of rat hepatocyte can be used for the evaluation of hepatic functions.  相似文献   

7.
The purpose of this study was to develop effective strategies for cooling and cryopreservation of immature porcine testis tissue that maintain its developmental potential. Testes from 1-wk-old piglets (Sus domestica) were subjected to 1 of 12 cooling/cryopreservation protocols: as intact testes, cooling at 4 °C for 24, 48, or 72 h (Experiment 1); as fragments, programmed slow-freezing with dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), glycerol, or ethylene glycol (Experiment 2); or solid-surface vitrification using DMSO, glycerol, or ethylene glycol, each using 5-, 15-, or 30-min cryoprotectant exposure times (Experiment 3). For testis tissue xenografting, four immunodeficient recipient mice were assigned to each protocol, and each mouse received eight grafts. Recipient mice were killed 16 wk after grafting to assess the status of graft development. Based on morphology and in vitro assessment of cell viability, cooling of testis tissue for up to 72 h maintained structural integrity, cell viability, in vivo growth, and developmental potential up to complete spermatogenesis comparable with that of fresh tissue (control). In frozen-thawed testis tissues, higher numbers of viable cells were present after programmed slow-freezing using glycerol compared with that after DMSO or ethylene glycol (P < 0.001). Among the vitrified groups, exposure to DMSO for 5 min yielded numerically higher viable cell numbers than that of other groups. Cryopreserved tissue fragments recovered after xenografting had normal spermatogenesis; germ cells advanced to round and elongated spermatids after programmed slow-freezing using glycerol, as well as after vitrification using glycerol with 5- or 15-min exposures, or using DMSO for a 5-min exposure.  相似文献   

8.
Huang C  Dong Q  Walter RB  Tiersch TR 《Cryobiology》2004,48(3):220-308
Sperm cryopreservation for fishes with internal fertilization is essentially unexplored although many species of these fishes are valuable biomedical research models. To explore methods for sperm cryopreservation within the live-bearing genus Xiphophorus, this study used X. helleri to evaluate the effects of cryoprotectant, osmotic pressure, cooling rate, equilibration time, and sperm-to-extender ratio. Sperm motility and survival duration after thawing showed significant differences among different cryoprotectants with the highest motility at 10 min after thawing obtained with 14% glycerol. With subsequent use of 14% glycerol as the cryoprotectant, the highest motility after thawing was observed with Hanks' balanced salt solution (HBSS) at 300 mOsmol/kg. Samples cooled from 5 to -80 degrees C at 20 degrees C/min yielded the highest post-thaw motility although no significant difference was found in the first 4h after thawing for cooling rates across the range of 20-35 degrees C/min. Evaluation of equilibration time revealed no significant difference between 20 min and 2h, but the highest motility at 10 min after thawing was found with a 20-min equilibration. Dilution ratios of sperm-to-extender at 1:20, 1:60, and 1:120 showed no significant differences in motility and survival duration after thawing, but the dilution of sperm solutions with HBSS (320 mOsmol/kg) immediately after thawing reduced the decline of sperm motility, and significantly prolonged the survival duration. Based on these findings, the highest average sperm motility (77%) at 10 min after thawing was obtained when sperm were suspended in HBSS at 300 mOsmol/kg with 14% glycerol as cryoprotectant, diluted at a ratio of sperm to HBSS-glycerol of 1:20, equilibrated for 10 min, cooled at 20 degrees C/min from 5 to -80 degrees C before being plunged in liquid nitrogen, and thawed in a 40 degrees C water bath for 7s. If diluted immediately after thawing, sperm frozen by the protocol above retained continuous motility after thawing for more than 8 days when stored at 4 degrees C.  相似文献   

9.
Experiments were conducted with a final goal of providing a suitable protocol for cryopreservation of Bactrian camel semen. In Experiment I, the effect of average cooling rate (slow cooling: 0.14 versus fast cooling: 0.55 degrees C/min) on the viability of chilled semen was evaluated. In Experiment II, the effect of different concentrations of glycerol (4, 6 and 8%) on the post-thaw viability of frozen sperm was investigated. In Experiment III, the efficiency of SHOTOR diluent was compared with IMV buffers for the cryopreservation of camel semen. Viability parameters including progressive forward motility (PFM), plasma membrane integrity and percentage of live spermatozoa were assessed. Progressive forward motility of sperm cooled at the faster rate was superior after incubating for 24h at 4 degrees C compared to that cooled at the slower rate (P<0.05). Post-thaw viability of Bactrian camel sperm was better using a final glycerol concentration of 6% compared to 4 and 8% (P<0.05). Progressive forward motility of frozen-thawed sperm was greater using SHOTOR diluent (29.9%) compared to IMV buffers (4.2%, P<0.05). In conclusion, semen cryopreservation in Bactrian camel is feasible when it is extended in SHOTOR diluent, cooled within 1h (average cooling rate: 0.55 degrees C/min) to 4 degrees C, and then exposed to glycerol, at the final concentration of 6%.  相似文献   

10.
The aim of this research was to optimise protocols for freezing spermatozoa of the Pacific oyster. All the phases of the cryopreservation procedure (choice of cryoprotectant, cooling, freezing, and thawing) were studied in relation to the species of spermatozoa to restore on thawing the morphological and physiological characteristics of fresh semen. The choice of type and concentration of cryoprotectant in which semen is incubated before freezing is fundamental for a successful cryopreservation: the cryoprotectants (dimethylsulfoxide--Me(2)SO, ethylene glycol--EG, propylene glycol-PG, and glycerol in concentrations between 5 and 15%) were tested for their toxicity on the semen exposed up to 30 min at +26 degrees C (room temperature) by evaluating its ability to fertilise and the embryo development to the regular D larval stage. The best cryoprotectants, Me(2)SO, EG, and PG 5, 10, and 15% respectively, were used for the pre-cooling (adaptation/cooling) tests. Two different adaptation/cooling procedures were tested: (A) from +26 degrees C to 0-2 degrees C (2.6 degrees C/min) and (B) at +26 degrees C for 15 min. Lastly, using the cryoprotectants and the adaptation procedure (B) that had given the best results in the preceding stages of the experiment, four cooling rates were tested: 6, 11, 16, and 21 degrees C/min. It was seen that the semen that was incubated with EG 10%, adapted at +26 degrees C for 15 min, and then cooled at a rate of 6 degrees C/min showed a percentage of regular D larvae on thawing comparable to that of fresh semen (p > 0.05).  相似文献   

11.
Ritar AJ  Campet M 《Theriogenology》2000,54(3):467-480
Methods of short-term storage and cryopreservation were examined for semen from striped trumpeter (Latris lineata). For fresh semen at 18 degrees C, the percentage of motile sperm declined rapidly from over 80% immediately after activation with sea water to less than 2% within 9 min after activation. The motility after activation of undiluted fresh sperm stored at 5 degrees C was maintained for two days and then declined markedly so that by the eighth day, sperm were mostly immotile after activation. The post-thawing motility was higher for sperm frozen with a non-activating diluent containing 2.84 M DMSO in saline (117 mM NaCl) than in an activating glycerol (2 M) medium in dilute sea water (300 mOsm). Post-thawing motility was higher for a dilution rate of 1:5 (semen:diluent) than 1:2 or 1:11 but was similar when frozen semen was thawed at 10 degrees, 20 degrees or 30 degrees C. For semen stored at a range of volumes as pellets frozen on dry ice (0.2 to 2.0 mL) or straws frozen in liquid nitrogen vapor (0.25 to 0.5 mL) and thawed in a waterbath at 20 degrees C, the post-thawing motilities were similar even though the patterns of cooling and thawing differed markedly between methods of freezing and sizes of pellets and straws.  相似文献   

12.
The objectives of this study were to determine the effect of cryoprotectants on sperm viability and develop a freezing protocol for long-term storage of P. monodon spermatophores. Spermatophores suspended for 30 min in calcium-free saline (Ca-F saline) containing the cryoprotectants dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), ethylene glycol (EG), 1,2-propylene glycol (PG), formamide, and methanol at concentrations of 5, 10, 15, or 20% were studied using a modified eosin-nigrosin staining technique. The smallest reductions in apparent sperm viability occurred with DMSO; therefore, a freezing protocol was developed using Ca-F saline containing 5% DMSO. Spermatophores were cryopreserved using three protocols; cooling to a final temperature of -30, -80 or -80 degrees C and immediately stored in liquid nitrogen (cooling rates of -2, -4, -6, -8, -10, -12, -14 or -16 degrees C/min). Frozen spermatophores were thawed (2 min) at 30, 60, 70, or 90 degrees C. Successful cryopreservation of spermatophores in liquid nitrogen was achieved by a one-step cooling rate of -2 degrees C/min between 25 and -80 degrees C before storing in liquid nitrogen. Optimal thawing was in a 30 degrees C water bath for 2 min; this yielded live sperm after storage in liquid nitrogen for 210 days. Average sperm viability for fresh (97.8+/-2.9%) and cryopreserved spermatophores held for less than 60 days (87.3+/-4.1%) did not differ (P>0.05); however, that for spermatophores stored in liquid nitrogen between 90 and 210 days were lower (P<0.05) and varied from 27.3+/-3.4 to 53.3+/-4.3%. Thawed spermatophores previously held in liquid nitrogen for less than 62 days fertilized eggs (fertilization and hatching rates of 71.6-72.2% and 63.6-64.1%, respectively) at rates comparable to fresh spermatophores (70.8-78.2% and 66.3-67.8%, respectively). In conclusion, sperm within cryopreserved spermatophores stored in liquid nitrogen retained their viability for up to 210 days.  相似文献   

13.
Ultrastructural observations of cryoinjury in kangaroo spermatozoa   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Macropod spermatozoa have proven difficult to cryopreserve such that empirical studies using high concentrations of glycerol and/or DSMO have resulted in only 10% post-thaw motility. We examined the ultrastructure and freeze-fracture of caput and cauda epididymal macropod spermatozoa at 35, 4 degrees C and following cryopreservation with and without 20% glycerol. The addition of 20% glycerol resulted in significant damage to the sperm plasma membrane and mitochondria compared to no glycerol at the same temperatures (P<0.05). Following cryopreservation, 20% glycerol significantly improved the preservation of the cauda epididymal sperm plasma membrane and mitochondria and reduced the incidence of axonemal damage and axonemal spaces. For caput epididymal spermatozoa, glycerol only improved the preservation of the plasma membrane following cryopreservation (P<0.05). Freeze fracture microscopy revealed a pattern of helically wound intramembranous particles in the plasma membrane over the fibre network of the mid piece of the sperm tail. The fibre network is an interconnecting cytoskeletal structure found underneath the plasma membrane of the kangaroo sperm midpiece and is thought to add rigidity to the proximal portion of the sperm tail. After thawing, the plasma membrane was damaged such that this structure was missing in patches, and the helical rows of particles were mal-aligned. On the principal piece, particles were arranged randomly at physiological temperatures; however, upon cooling to 4 degrees C with 20% glycerol, the particles become aggregated. Once rewarmed (35 degrees C), particles over the principal piece resumed their random organisation. This finding is further evidence of a reversible phase transition of the macropod sperm plasma membrane during cooling that is not associated with a loss of motility or membrane integrity.  相似文献   

14.
Adequate cell dehydration is the precipitating element in the successful cryopreservation of plant cells and organs. This could be achieved by using different cooling rates, transfer temperatures and cryoprotectants. Experiments were performed to determine these critical points in the freeze preservation procedure of Cannabis sativa (L.) suspension cultures. The explants were frozen at a cooling rate of 2 degrees C/min, while the transfer temperatures were -10 degrees C, -20 degrees C, -30 degrees C, -40 degrees C and -50 degrees C. The applied cryoprotectants were the DMSO, glycerol, proline and PEG in different concentration. The highest viability (58%) was obtained by using 10% DMSO and at -10 degrees C transfer temperature. The optimum transfer temperature varied remarkably by different cryoprotectant concentrations indicating the importance of their interactions.  相似文献   

15.
Cryopreservation of sperm from the marine shrimp Sicyonia ingentis   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Sperm from a marine shrimp, Sicyonia ingentis, were frozen to -196 degrees C using a variety of cooling rates and cryoprotectants. A cooling rate of 1 degree C/min resulted in minimal cell breakage. Sperm samples were frozen in solutions of known membrane stabilizers--trehalose, sucrose, proline, and glycerol. These compounds were somewhat effective but a dramatic increase in sperm viability was seen when DMSO was present in the freezing medium. Sperm viability was assessed using the in vitro acrosome reaction technique of Griffin et al. (1987). The highest sperm survival (56%) was obtained with samples frozen at 1 degrees C/min in a 5% (v/v) DMSO solution. No decrease in viability was seen in sperm samples stored in liquid nitrogen (-196 degrees C) for 1 month.  相似文献   

16.
We tested the protective action of seminal plasma on epididymal spermatozoa from Iberian red deer, especially considering cryopreservation, as a means for germplasm banking improvement. We obtained seminal plasma by centrifuging electroejaculated semen, and part of it was thermically inactivated (denatured plasma; 55 degrees C 30 min). Epididymal samples (always at 5 degrees C) were obtained from genitalia harvested after regulated hunting, and pooled for each assay (five in total). We tested three seminal plasma treatments (mixing seminal plasma with samples 2:1): no plasma, untreated plasma and denatured plasma; and four incubation treatments: 32 degrees C 15 min, 5 degrees C 15 min, 5 degrees C 2h and 5 degrees C 6h. After each incubation, samples were diluted 1:1 with extender: Tes-Tris-Fructose, 10% egg yolk, 4% glycerol; equilibrated for 2h at 5 degrees C, extended down to 10(8) spz./mL and frozen. Sperm quality was evaluated before 1:1 dilution, before freezing and after thawing the samples, assessing motility (CASA) and viability (percentage of viable and acrosome-intact spermatozoa; PI/PNA-FITC and fluorescent microscopy). Plasma treatment, both untreated and denatured, rendered higher viability before freezing and higher results for most parameters after thawing. The improvement was irrespective of incubation treatment, except for viability, which rendered slightly different results for untreated and denatured plasma. This may be due to the presence of thermolabile components. We still have to determine the underlying mechanisms involved in this protection. These results might help to improve the design of cryopreservation extenders for red deer epididymal sperm.  相似文献   

17.
Cryopreservation of murine embryos with trehalose and glycerol   总被引:6,自引:1,他引:5  
Several concentrations of trehalose (0.0, 0.04, 0.1, 0.25 M) in combination with three concentrations of glycerol (1.0, 1.5, 2.0 M) were evaluated for the cryopreservation of murine embryos. Embryos were transferred through increasing concentrations of glycerol in Dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline with 10% fetal calf serum (PBS + FCS) to reach the final glycerol concentrations. They were then randomly assigned to one of the concentrations of trehalose. A total of 506 morulae were packaged individually in 0.25-ml plastic straws and cooled from ambient temperature at 1.0 degrees C/min in a programmable methanol freezer. Embryos were seeded at -7 degrees C and then cooled to -25 degrees C at 0.3 degrees C/min before being plunged into liquid nitrogen. After thawing and a one-step dilution of glycerol, embryos were cultured for 48 hr and viability was determined by blastocoel formation. Highest viability (70.0%) after 48 hr in culture was obtained for embryos frozen in 1.5 M glycerol plus 0.10 M trehalose as compared to 31% viability for embryos frozen with glycerol alone. These observations suggest that trehalose can be used in combination with glycerol as a cryoprotectant and that a high rate of viability can be achieved after a one-step dilution of the cryoprotectants.  相似文献   

18.
Seminal plasma is generally removed from equine spermatozoa prior to cryopreservation. Two experiments were designed to determine if adding seminal plasma back to spermatozoa, prior to cryopreservation, would benefit the spermatozoa. Experiment 1 determined if different concentrations of seminal plasma affected post-thaw sperm motility, viability and acrosomal integrity of frozen/thawed stallion spermatozoa. Semen was washed through 15% Percoll to remove seminal plasma and spermatozoa resuspended to 350 x 10(6)sperm/mL in a clear Hepes buffered diluent containing either 0, 5, 10, 20, 40 or 80% seminal plasma for 15 min, prior to being diluted to a final concentration of 50 x 10(6)sperm/mL in a Lactose-EDTA freezing diluent and cryopreserved. Sperm motility was analyzed at 10 and 90 min after thawing, while sperm viability and acrosomal integrity were analyzed 20 min after thawing. Seminal plasma did not affect sperm motility, viability or acrosomal integrity (P>0.05). Experiment 2 tested the main affects of seminal plasma level (5 or 20%), incubation temperature (5 or 20 degrees C) and incubation time (2, 4 or 6 h) prior to cryopreservation. In this experiment, spermatozoa were incubated with 5 or 20% seminal plasma for up to 6h at either 5 or 20 degrees C prior to cryopreservation in a skim milk, egg yolk freezing extender. Samples cooled immediately to 5 degrees C, prior to freezing had higher percentages of progressively motile spermatozoa than treatments incubated at 20 degrees C (31 versus 25%, respectively; P<0.05), when analyzed 10 min after thawing. At 90 min post-thaw, total motility was higher for samples incubated at 5 degrees C (42%) compared to 20 degrees C (35%; P<0.05). In addition, samples containing 5% seminal plasma had higher percentages of total and progressively motile spermatozoa (45 and 15%) than samples exposed to 20% seminal plasma (33 and 9%; P<0.05). In conclusion, although the short-term exposure of sperm to seminal plasma had no significant effect on the motility of cryopreserved equine spermatozoa, prolonged exposure to seminal plasma, prior to cryopreservation, was deleterious.  相似文献   

19.
The changes in morphology of Penicillium expansum Link and Phytophthora nicotianae Van Breda de Haan during freezing and thawing in a growth medium with and without the cryoprotective additive glycerol were examined with a light microscope fitted with a temperature-controlled stage. Viability of 0.5-1.0 mm diameter colonies of both fungi was determined after equivalent rates of cooling to -196 degrees C in the presence or absence of glycerol. In P. expansum shrinkage occurred in all hyphae at rates of cooling of less than 15 degrees C min-1; at faster rates intracellular ice nucleation occurred. The addition of glycerol increased the rate of cooling at which 50% of the hyphae formed intracellular ice from 18 degrees C min-1 to 55 degrees C min-1. This species was particularly resistant to freezing injury and recovery was greater than 60% at all rates of cooling examined. At rapid rates of cooling recovery occurred in hyphae in which intracellular ice had nucleated. In contrast, during the cooling of Ph. nicotianae in the growth medium, shrinkage occurred and no samples survived on thawing from -196 degrees C. However, on the addition of glycerol, shrinkage during freezing decreased and viable hyphae were recovered upon thawing; at rates of cooling over 10 degrees C min-1 the loss of viability was related to glycerol-induced osmotic shrinkage during cooling rather than to the nucleation of intracellular ice.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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