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1.
Liu XH  Zhang T  Rawson DM 《Theriogenology》2001,55(8):1719-1731
High chilling sensitivity is one of the main obstacles to successful cryopreservation of zebrafish embryos. So far the nature of the chilling injury in fish embryos has not been clear. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of cooling rate and partial removal of yolk on chilling injury in zebrafish embryos. Zebrafish embryos at 64-cell, 50%-epiboly, 6-somite and prim-6 stages were cooled to either 0 degrees C or -5 degrees C at three different cooling rates: slow (0.3 degrees C/min or 1 degree C/min), moderate (30 degrees C/min), and rapid (approximately 300 degrees C/min). After chilling, embryos were warmed in a 26 degrees C water bath, followed by 3-day culturing in EM at 26 +/- 1 degrees C for survival assessment. When embryos were cooled to 0 degrees C for up to 30 min, 64-cell embryos had higher survival after rapid cooling than when they were cooled at a slower rate. When 64-cell embryos were held at -5 degrees C for 1 min, their survival decreased greatly after both slow and rapid cooling. The effect of cooling rate on the survival of 50%-epiboly and 6-somite embryos was not significant after 1 h exposure at 0 degrees C and 1 min exposure at -5 degrees C. However, rapid cooling resulted in significantly lower embryo survival than a cooling rate of 30 degrees C/min or 1 degree C/min after 1 h exposure to 0 degrees C for prim-6 stage or 1 h exposure to -5 degrees C for all stages. Chilling injury in 64-cell embryos appears to be a consequence of exposure time at low temperatures rather than a consequence of rapid cooling. Results also indicate that chilling injury in later stage embryos (50%-epiboly, 6-somite and prim-6) is a consequence of the combination of rapid cooling and exposure time at low temperatures. Dechorionated prim-6 embryos were punctured and about half of yolk was removed. After 24 h culture at 26 +/- 1 degrees C after removal of yolk, the yolk-reduced embryos showed higher embryo survival than did control embryos after rapid cooling to -5 degrees C for 10 to 60 min. Results suggest that cold shock injury after rapid cooling can be mitigated after partial removal of yolk at the prim-6 stage. These findings help us to understand the nature of chilling sensitivity of fish embryos and to develop protocols for their cryopreservation.  相似文献   

2.
Nucleation temperatures of intraembryonic water and cryoprotectant penetration in zebrafish embryos were studied using differential scanning calorimetry. The effects of embryo developmental stage, dechorionation, partial removal of yolk, cooling rate, and cryoprotectant treatment on the temperatures of intraembryonic freezing were investigated. Embryo stages were found to have a significant effect on the nucleation temperatures of intact embryos. Freeze onset temperatures of -11.9 +/- 1.5, -15.6 +/- 0.3, and -20.5 +/- 0.1 degrees C were obtained for intact embryos at 6-somite, prim-6, and high-pec stages, respectively. After dechorionation, the freeze onset temperatures of intraembryonic water shifted to significantly lower temperatures, being -23.5 +/- 0.8, -18.7 +/- 0.7, -24.9 +/- 0.8 degrees C for 6-somite, prim-6, and high-pec stages, respectively. Yolk-reduced high-pec stage embryos showed significantly lower nucleation temperatures with an average onset at -27.9 +/- 0.4 degrees C. The effect of cryoprotectant treatment on the nucleation temperatures of intraembryonic water varies among different embryo stages and different cryoprotectants. Thirty-minute treatment with 2 M methanol significantly decreased the nucleation temperatures of dechorionated 6-somite embryos whilst no temperature decrease was observed for prim-6 or yolk-reduced high-pec embryos. Thirty-minute exposure to 1 M propylene glycol did not significantly affect the nucleation temperatures of dechorionated 6-somite, prim-6, or yolk-reduced high-pec embryos. In order to increase the permeability of embryos to cryoprotectants, the yolk sacs of dechorionated embryos at 6-somite or prim-6 embryos were punctured with a sharp micro-needle before exposure to cryoprotectants. The punctured prim-6 embryos showed significantly lower temperatures of intraembryonic freezing after 30 min of exposure to 2 M methanol following the multi-punctures. The nucleation temperatures of punctured 6-somite or prim-6 embryos were also decreased significantly after exposure to 1 M propylene glycol for 30 min. These results suggested that in intact embryos, intraembryonic freezing appeared to be seeded by the external ice in the perivitelline fluid and that in dechorionated embryos (in the absence of external water) intraembryonic freezing was more likely a consequence of heterogeneous nucleation. Methanol was demonstrated to show a limited degree of penetration into prim-6 stage embryos, but it did not penetrate later-stage embryos such as prim-6 and yolk-reduced high-pec. No propylene glycol permeation was observed for embryos at all stages. However, multi-punctures of yolk resulted in the permeation of both cryoprotectants into prim-6 embryos and propylene glycol permeation into 6-somite embryos. These findings may have important implications in overcoming the problem associated with the low membrane permeability of zebrafish embryos to cryoprotectants.  相似文献   

3.
As an essential step toward cryopreservation of fish embryos, we examined the chilling sensitivity of medaka (Oryzias latipes) embryos at various developmental stages. Embryos at the 2-4 cell, 8-16 cell, morula, blastula, and early gastrula stages were suspended in Hanks solution. They were chilled to various temperatures (usually 0 degrees C), kept for various periods (usually 20 min), then cultured for up to 14 d to determine survival (assessed by the ability to hatch). Embryos at the 2-4 cell stage were the most sensitive to chilling to 0 degrees C, but sensitivity decreased as development proceeded. The survival rate of 2-4 cell embryos was affected after 2 min of chilling at 0 degrees C; although the rate decreased gradually as the duration of chilling increased, 38% of them still survived after 40 min of chilling. Embryos at the 2-4 cell stage were sensitive to chilling at 0 or -5 degrees C, but much less sensitive at 5 or 10 degrees C. The survival rate of 2-4 cell embryos subjected to repeated rapid cooling and warming was similar to that of those kept chilled. When early gastrula embryos were preserved at 0 or 5 degrees C, the hatching rate did not decrease after 12 and 24h of chilling, respectively, but then decreased gradually as storage was prolonged; however, 3-10% of the embryos hatched even after storage for 10 d. In conclusion, although later-stage medaka embryos would be suitable for cryopreservation (from the perspective of chilling sensitivity), chilling injury may not be serious in earlier stage embryos.  相似文献   

4.
Studies on permittivity changes in fish embryos measured by impedance spectroscopy after ultrasound treatment during exposure to cryoprotectant is reported here for the first time. The permittivity changes of zebrafish embryos in cryoprotectant solutions before and after ultrasound treatment were measured using impedance spectroscopy. Zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos at 50% epiboly stage were exposed to 2 M methanol for 25 min before ultrasound treatment for 5 min at 22 degrees C. Embryos were treated with ultrasound in different frequencies (24 and 48 kHz) and voltages (50, 100, 150 and 175 V) combinations. The results showed a clear increasing trend of permittivity from voltage 50 to 175 V over lower impedance frequency range of 10-10(3) Hz indicating increased methanol penetration into the embryos after ultrasound treatment. The embryo survival was not compromised after ultrasound treatment under conditions used in the present study. The use of impedance spectroscopy technique provides a useful none-invasive tool for detecting changes of cryoprotectant penetration in fish embryos after ultrasound treatment. The technique is especially useful for the selection of the suitable cryoprotectants in embryo cryopreservation and may also allow quantitative measurements in embryo membrane permeability studies.  相似文献   

5.
The unsolved problem of cryopreservation of the yolk-rich teleost embryos may be related, in part, to their sensitivity to chilling and cryoprotective agents. The aim of this study was to gain data on the sensitivity of carp embryos to low temperatures at different developmental stages and on the possible protective and toxic effects of cryoprotectants. A total of 86,400 morulae, half-epiboly and heartbeat-stage embryos was selected and then placed in water or in 1 M methanol, dimethyl sulfoxide (Me2SO), glycerol or 0.1 M sucrose solution at 0, 4 or 24 degrees C for 5 min or 1 h. Following these treatments, the embryos were held in a 24 degrees C water bath until the evaluation of hatching rates. In every developmental stage a significant decrease of hatching rates following exposure to 4 or 0 degree C was detected. Sensitivity to chilling changed significantly with development (heartbeat < morula < half-epiboly). Half-epiboly stage embryos were less sensitive to a short period of exposure to cryoprotectants than morula and heartbeat stages. A 1-h exposure to cryoprotectants revealed a stage dependent sensitivity. Toxicity increased in the order of methanol < Me2SO < glycerol in morula and half-epiboly stages, and methanol < glycerol < Me2SO in the heartbeat stage. The results show morulae are partially protected against chilling in Me2SO and sucrose, half-epiboly in Me2SO, sucrose and methanol, and heartbeat-stage in methanol and glycerol. The results further suggest that carp embryos are sensitive to chilling and that toxicity and protective effects against chilling of cryoprotectants are stage-dependent. The finding on the low chilling sensitivity of heartbeat-stage embryos and the protective effect of certain cryoprotectants may be useful in designing cryopreservation protocols.  相似文献   

6.
Drosophila embryos manifest unusually high sensitivity to chilling in that they are killed with increased rapidity by exposure to temperatures between 0 and -25 degrees C in the absence of ice formation. Thus, 50% of 15-h eggs succumb in 35, 4, and 1 h at 0, -9, and -15 degrees C, respectively. The sensitivity becomes substantially greater in embryos at stages of development earlier than 12 h, especially at 3 and 6 h. The killing kinetics at given subzero temperatures between 0 and -25 degrees C are characterized by a shoulder followed by a more-or-less linear decrease in survival with time. The lower the temperature, the shorter the shoulder and the faster the postshoulder decline. The rate of both components follows Arrhenius kinetics, i.e., plots of log rate vs 1/absolute temperature are linear, the slopes being proportional to the activation energy. In both cases the activation energy is high and negative; namely, -46.5 kcal/mol for the shoulder length and -24.7 kcal/mol for the postshoulder inactivation. Negative activation energies are unusual, and according to absolute reaction rate theory, they exist only when the entropy of activation is negative, which suggests that the activated state is more ordered. By combining the duration of the shoulder as a function of time and temperature with the rate of postshoulder inactivation, one can compute survival as a function of temperature for embryos cooled at various rates. For those cooled at less than or equal to 1 degree C/min, the computed curve of survival vs temperature agrees closely with observed survivals. But for embryos cooled at approximately 10 degrees C/min, the drop in survival occurs some 7 to 10 degrees above that computed. Embryos exposed to 0 degree C for greater than 5 min undergo conditioning that renders them more resistant to subsequent exposure to lower temperatures, and those cooled at 10 degrees C/min presumably lack sufficient time at 0 degree C to undergo such conditioning; hence the discrepancy between observed and computed survivals. As a test of the possibility that chilling injury is a consequence of the loss of synchrony of coupled reactions involved in embryological development, embryos were rendered anoxic prior to chilling, a treatment that has been shown by Foe and Alberts to reversibly halt development of early stages. Although anoxia somewhat reduced chilling injury in 6-h eggs, it had no effect on 15-h eggs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Chilled storage of zebrafish embryos was investigated at a temperature that arrests embryonic development as this technique might offer interesting practical applications. Five parameters played an important role for chilled storage: (a) storage temperature, (b) development stage of embryos, (c) storage solution (extender), (d) postchilling treatment, and (e) inhibition of growth of microorganisms by antibiotics. The optimal chilling temperature was 8 °C. Prim-5 stage (24 h postfertilization [hpf]) and prim-25 stage (36 hpf) embryos had similar high chilling resistance and could be chilled for 33 h without a loss in viability. Five-somite stage (12 hpf) embryos had a lower chilling resistance and could be chilled only for 14 h without a loss in viability. After longer incubation periods, the viability started to decrease. Under these conditions, chilling in physiologic saline solutions was superior to that in water. Fifty percent of the prim-5 stage and prim-25 stage embryos survived for 41 h at 8 °C in water but for 46 h in physiologic saline solution. A similar effect was observed for 5-somite stage embryos (50% survival rate in water, 28 h; 50% survival rate in physiologic saline solution, 35 h). When embryos were incubated in physiologic saline solution instead of water in the postchilling phase, the embryo viability was positively affected, too. Also, supplementation of the storage solution with antibiotics (penicillin and streptomycin) increased the viability of chilled embryos. In summary, the current study shows that chilled storage of zebrafish embryos is possible for sufficiently long periods to synchronize the development of embryos deriving from different spawning dates or to delay the development for experimental purposes. To prolong the storage periods, further development and standardization of the methodology is necessary.  相似文献   

8.
Zhang T  Wang RY  Bao QY  Rawson DM 《Theriogenology》2006,66(4):982-988
Information on fish embryo membrane permeability is vital in their cryopreservation. Whilst conventional volumetric measurement based assessment methods have been widely used in fish embryo membrane permeability studies, they are lengthy and reduce the capacity for multi-embryo measurement during an experimental run. A new rapid 'real-time' measurement technique is required to determine membrane permeability during cryoprotectant treatment. In this study, zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryo membrane permeability to cryoprotectants was investigated using impedance spectroscopy. An embryo holding cell, capable of holding up to 10 zebrafish embryos was built incorporating the original system electrods for measuring the impedance spectra. The holding cell was tested with deionised water and a series of KCl solutions with known conductance values to confirm the performance of the modified system. Untreated intact embryos were then tested to optimise the loading capacity and sensitivity of the system. To study the impedance changes of zebrafish embryos during cryoprotectant exposure, three, six or nine embryos at 50% epiboly stage were loaded into the holding cell in egg water, which was then removed and replaced by 0.5, 1.0, 2.0 or 3M methanol or dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). The impedance changes of the loaded embryos in different cryoprotectant solutions were monitored over 30 min at 22 degrees C, immediately following embryo exposure to cryoprotectants, at the frequency range of 10-10(6)Hz. The impedance changes of the embryos in egg water were used as controls. Results from this study showed that the optimum embryo loading level was six embryos per cell for each experimental run. The optimum frequency was identified at 10(3.14) or 1,380 Hz which provided good sensitivity and reproducibility. Significant impedance changes were detected after embryos were exposed to different concentrations of cryoprotectants. The results agreed well with those obtained from conventional volumetric based studies.  相似文献   

9.
The objective of this research was to verify the effects of cooling embryos of pacu, Piaractus mesopotamicus, in four stages of development during two stocking periods. The stages of embryo development were at: blastoderm, ∼64 cells—1.4 h after fertilization (haf); 25% of the epiboly movement—5.2 haf; blastoporous closing—8.0 haf; and optical vesicle appearing—13.3 haf. Embryos were exposed to a cryoprotectant solution containing methanol (10%) and sucrose (0.5 M). Thereafter, embryos were submitted to a cooling curve until they reached −8 °C, and then kept cooled for 6 or 10 h. In addition, for each stage of embryonic development, a control group with uncooled embryos was used to compare hatching rates. The total number of larvae from the first two stages of ontogenetic development (1.4 and 5.2 haf) was lower compared to the other stages (0.0 and 8.0 haf). There was no significant difference between stages 8.0 and 13.3 haf for the total number of larvae (49.9 ± 6.7% and 55.2 ± 6.7%, respectively). Embryo diameter varied according to embryonic stage, providing evidence of differences in membrane permeability. There was a negative correlation between embryo diameter and the total number of larvae (r = −0.372). In conclusion, use of embryonic stages 8.0 and 13.3 haf were recommended for maintaining cooled pacu embryos at −8 °C for 6 or 10 h.  相似文献   

10.
Factors affecting the cryosurvival of mouse two-cell embryos   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A series of 4 experiments was conducted to examine factors affecting the survival of frozen-thawed 2-cell mouse embryos. Rapid addition of 1.5 M-DMSO (20 min equilibration at 25 degrees C) and immediate, rapid removal using 0.5 M-sucrose did not alter the frequency (mean +/- s.e.m.) of blastocyst development in vitro when compared to untreated controls (90.5 +/- 2.7% vs 95.3 +/- 2.8%). There was an interaction between the temperature at which slow cooling was terminated and thawing rate. Termination of slow cooling (-0.3 degrees C/min) at -40 degrees C with subsequent rapid thawing (approximately 1500 degrees C/min) resulted in a lower frequency of blastocyst development than did termination of slow cooling at -80 degrees C with subsequent slow thawing (+8 degrees C/min) (36.8 +/- 5.6% vs 63.9 +/- 5.7%). When slow cooling was terminated between -40 and -60 degrees C, higher survival rates were achieved with rapid thawing. When slow cooling was terminated below -60 degrees C, higher survival rates were obtained with slow thawing rates. In these comparisons absolute survival rates were highest among embryos cooled below -60 degrees C and thawed slowly. However, when slow cooling was terminated at -32 degrees C, with subsequent rapid warming, survival rates were not different from those obtained when embryos were cooled to -80 degrees C and thawed slowly (52.4 +/- 9.5%, 59.5 +/- 8.6%). These results suggest that optimal cryosurvival rates may be obtained from 2-cell mouse embryos by a rapid or slow thawing procedure, as has been found for mouse preimplantation embryos at later stages.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Hochi S  Semple E  Leibo SP 《Theriogenology》1996,46(5):837-847
The effect of cooling and warming rates during cryopreservation on subsequent embryo survival was studied in 607 bovine morulae and 595 blastocysts produced by in vitro maturation, fertilization and culture (IVM/IVF/IVC). Morulae and blastocysts were prepared by co-culturing presumptive zygotes with bovine oviductal epithelial cells (BOEC) in serum-free TCM199 medium for 6 and 7 d, respectively. The embryos in 1.5 M ethylene glycol in plastic straws were seeded at -7 degrees C, cooled to -35 degrees C at each of 5 rates (0.3 degrees, 0.6 degrees , 0.9 degrees, 1.2 degrees, or 1.5 degrees C/min) and then immediately plunged into liquid nitrogen. The frozen embryos were warmed either rapidly in a 35 degrees C water bath (warming rate > 1,000 degrees C/min) or slowly in 25 degrees to 28 degrees C air (< 250 degrees C/mm). With rapid warming, 42.1% of the morulae that had been cooled at 0.3 degrees C/min developed into hatching blastocysts. The proportions of rapidly wanned morulae that hatched decreased with increasing cooling rates (30.4, 19.0, 15.8 and 8.9% at 0.6 degrees , 0.9 degrees, 1.2 degrees and 1.5 degrees C/min, respectively). With slow warming 25.9% of the morulae that had been cooled at 0.3 degrees C/min developed into hatching blastocysts, while <10% of the morulae that had been cooled faster developed. The hatching rate of blastocysts cooled at 0.3 degrees C/min and warmed rapidly (96.3%) was higher than those cooled at 06 degrees and 0.9 degrees C/min (82.7 and 84.6%, respectively), and was also significantly higher than those warmed slowly after cooling at 0.3 degrees, 0.6 degrees or 0.9 degrees C/min (69.1, 56.6 and 51.8%, respectively). Cooling blastocysts at 1.2 degrees or 1.5 degrees C/min resulted in lowered hatching rates either with rapid (71.2 or 66 0%) or slow warming (38.2 or 38.9%). These results indicate that the survival of in vitro-produced bovine morulae and blastocysts is improved by very slow cooling during 2-step freezing, nevertheless, slow warming appears to cause injuries to morulae and blastocysts even after very slow cooling.  相似文献   

12.
A cryomicroscope was used to observe changes in the appearance of day 6 1 2 to 7 1 2 cattle embryos during cooling and warming in 1.4M glycerol/PBS. Embryos were cooled at various rates between 0.2 and 25 degrees C/min to temperatures between -25 and -60 degrees C and then cooled rapidly ( approximately 250 degrees C/min) to temperatures below -140 degrees C. The volume of the embryos calculated from the cross-sectional area during slow cooling decreased at -25 degrees C to about 50% of the isotonic volume. Fracture planes could be observed in the extracellular ice matrix surrounding the embryos after rapid cooling to approximately -140 degrees C. The fracture planes often touched the zona pellucida and sometimes caused cracks in the zona. Cracks in the zona pellucida were observed more often after rapid cooling from temperatures between -20 to -35 degrees C (9 13 ) than from temperatures between -36 to -60 degrees C (2 7 ). When embryos were warmed rapidly ( approximately 250 degrees C/min) from temperatures below -140 degrees C, no change was observed in the appearance of either the embryo or its surroundings except the melting of the extracellular ice. However, when embryos were warmed slowly (2 or 5 degrees C/min), a series of events was observed; first, at approximately -70 degrees C the cytoplasm and the extracellular space gradually darkened and reached maximum darkness at approximately -55 degrees C. Then, on continued slow warming, the dark material gradually disappeared and finally the large extracellular ice crystals melted.  相似文献   

13.
To date, all attempts at fish embryo cryopreservation have failed. One of the main reasons for this to occur is the high chilling sensitivity reported in fish embryos thus emphasizing the need for further testing of different methods and alternative cryoprotective agents (CPAs) in order to improve our chances to succeed in this purpose. In this work we have used the antifreeze protein type I (AFP I) as a natural CPA. This protein is naturally expressed in sub-arctic fish species, and inhibits the growth of ice crystals as well as recrystallization during thawing. Embryos from Sparus aurata were microinjected with AFP I at different developmental stages, 2 cells and blastula, into the blastomere-yolk interface and into the yolk sac, respectively. Control, punctured and microinjected embryos were subjected to chilling at two different temperatures, 0 degrees C (1h) and -10 degrees C (15min) when embryos reached 5-somite stage. Embryos were subjected to -10 degrees C chilling in a 3M DMSO extender to avoid ice crystal formation in the external solution. Survival after chilling was established as the percentage of embryos that hatch. To study the AFP I distribution in the microinjected embryos, a confocal microscopy study was done. Results demonstrate that AFP I can significantly improve chilling resistance at 0 degrees C, particularly in 2-cell microinjected embryos, displaying nearly 100% hatching rates. This fact is in agreement with the confocal microscopy observations which confirmed the presence of the AFP protein in embryonic cells. These results support the hypothesis that AFP protect cellular structures by stabilizing cellular membranes.  相似文献   

14.
Adams SL  Zhang T  Rawson DM 《Theriogenology》2005,64(7):1591-1602
The effect of external medium composition on chorion and plasma membrane permeability of zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos was investigated in this study. Initially, survival of embryos spawned into varying strengths (10-40%) of Hank's solution (HBSS) was assessed. Development and hatching rates for embryos spawned into 30% and 40% HBSS were significantly lower than those obtained with embryos spawned into system water. The effect of embryo survival in 30% HBSS with different calcium levels was then investigated. Embryo survival in calcium free 30% HBSS or 30% HBSS with 10x the standard calcium concentration was similar to survival in standard 30% HBSS. Membrane water permeability was determined by measuring the floatation time of embryos in test solutions made up with heavy water (D2O) instead of deionized water. Intact embryos at early developmental stages were less permeable than later stages irrespective of the external medium that they were spawned into. In system water, the floatation time of embryos at one-cell and two-cell stages were 1323+/-83 and 1189+/-55 s, respectively, compared to 432+/-6 and 353+/-10 s at the high and 50% epiboly stages. Change of external medium composition had no effect on membrane permeability of intact embryos at early developmental stages. However, at later stages embryos spawned into 30% HBSS were less permeable than embryos spawned into system water, irrespective of calcium concentration. The flotation time of embryos at the high stage increased from 432+/-6s in system water to 468+/-10s in 30% HBSS. The study on dechorionated embryos showed that change of external medium composition had no effect on plasma membrane permeability.  相似文献   

15.
Gwo JC  Lin CH 《Theriogenology》1998,49(7):1289-1299
To improve availability of penaeid seedstock during periods of high demand, experiments were conducted to determine the feasibility of stockpiling embryos by freezing them. Embryos were screened for developmental stage; cryoprotectants, chilling effects, and freezing regimens were likewise evaluated. Juvenile forms (embryos, nauplii and zoea) of Penaeus japonicus were exposed to various cryoprotectants, including dimethyl sulfoxide, glycerol, methanol, ethylene glycerol and polyethylene glycol 300 under ambient temperature (25 degrees C). Following this bioassay, maximum safe concentrations of each cryoprotectant were tested on the juveniles under chilling to 0 degree C and with 42 freezing regimens. Methanol was found to be relatively nontoxic. Early developmental stages were the most sensitive to chilling. Initial attempts to freeze P. japonicus juveniles were reported. The survival rate of nauplii and zoea treated with 10% methanol in natural sea water (35 ppt salinity) and frozen to -15 degrees C was 85%, and some nauplii and zoea survived freezing to -25 and -196 degrees C. However, no treatment yielded normal nauplii or zoea after freezing.  相似文献   

16.
Isayeva A  Zhang T  Rawson DM 《Cryobiology》2004,49(2):114-122
Human activity in the last few decades has had a devastating effect on the diversity of fresh water and marine fish. Further decline of fish population may have serious economic and ecological consequences. One of the most promising techniques to preserve fish population is to cryopreserve their germ cells. Cryopreservation has been successfully applied to fish sperm of many species, but there has been no success with fish embryo cryopreservation and fish oocyte cryopreservation has never been studied systematically. The aim of this study is to investigate the chilling sensitivity of fish oocytes. Experiments were conducted with zebrafish stage III (vitellogenic) and stage V (mature) oocytes, which were chilled at 10, 5, 0, -5 or -10 degrees C for 15 or 60 min using a low temperature bath. Control oocytes were kept at room temperature at 22 degrees C. Oocyte viability was assessed using three different methods: trypan blue staining (TB), thiazolyl blue tetrazolium bromide (MTT) staining and observation of germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD). The results showed that zebrafish oocyte are very sensitive to chilling and their survival decreased with decreasing temperature and increasing exposure time periods. Normalised survivals assessed with TB staining after exposure to 0, -5 or -10 degrees C for 15 or 60 min were 90.1+/-6.0, 77.8+/-7.6, and 71.2+/-9.3%, and 60.2+/-3.8, 49.6+/-6.7, and 30.4+/-3.0%, respectively. The study found that the sensitivity of viability assessment methods increase in the order of MTT < TB < GVBD. It was found that stage III oocytes were more susceptible to chilling than stage V oocytes, and that individual female had a significant influence (p < 0.0001) on oocyte chilling sensitivity. Zebrafish oocyte chilling sensitivity may also be one of the limiting factors for development of protocol of their cryopreservation.  相似文献   

17.
Wang HS  Kang L 《Cryobiology》2005,51(2):220-229
To examine the relationship between cooling rate and cold hardiness in eggs of the migratory locust, Locusta migratoria, the survival rates and cryoprotectant levels of three embryonic developmental stages were measured at different cooling rates (from 0.05 to 0.8 degrees C min(-1)) in acclimated and non-acclimated eggs. Egg survival rate increased with decreasing cooling rate. The concentration of cryoprotectants (myo-inositol, trehalose, mannitol, glycerol, and sorbitol) increased in non-acclimated eggs, but varied significantly in response to different cooling rates in acclimated eggs. The acclimation process (5 degrees C for 3 days) did not increase eggs resistance to quick cooling ("plunge" cooling and 0.8 degrees C min(-1)). Earlier stage embryos were much more sensitive than later stage embryos to the same cooling rates. Time spent at subzero temperatures also had a strong influence on egg survival.  相似文献   

18.
Cryopreservation of oyster (Crassostrea gigas) embryos   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Gwo JC 《Theriogenology》1995,43(7):1163-1174
Several critical variables associated with successful cryopreservation of oyster embryos (Crassostrea gigas) were examined. These were 1) embryo developmental stage, 2) kind and concentration of cryoprotectant, 3) equilibration time, and 4) freezing rate. The percentage of survival was scored as the number of recovered embryos that swam actively 12 h after thawing and had developed into veliger stage. The oyster embryos became increasingly susceptible to the cryoprotectants as the concentration was increased and the equilibration time was lengthened. The stage of development appears to be a critical factor for survival of oyster embryos, with trochophore stage embryos more resistant than morula and gastrula stages embryos to cryoprotectant exposure and having better surviving after freezing. The optimum cryoprotectant concentration for the trochophore embryos differed markedly from the morula stage. Cryopreservation of fertilized eggs (2 to 8 cells) was unsuccessful. Varying degrees of success were achieved using gastrula- and trochophore-stage embryos. Maximum survival was obtained when trochophore embryos incubated in 10% propylene glycerol-artificial sea water were cooled at -2.5 degrees C/min to -30 degrees C and were then directly placed into liquid nitrogen. The results showed a clear effect of the stage of development on survival.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of the rate of rewarming on the survival of 8-cell mouse embryos and blastocysts was examined. The samples were slowly cooled (0.3--0.6 degrees C/min) in 1.5 M-DMSO to temperatures between -10 and -80 degrees C before direct transfer to liquid nitrogen (-196 degrees C). Embryos survived rapid thawing (275--500 degrees C/min) only when slow cooling was terminated at relatively high subzero temperatures (-10 to -50 degrees C). The highest levels of survival in vitro of rapidly thawed 8-cell embryos were obtained after transfer to -196 degrees C from -35 and -40 degrees C (72 to 88%) and of rapidly thawed blastocysts after transfer from -25 to -50 degrees C (69 to 74%). By contrast, for embryos to survive slow thawing (8 to 20 degrees C/min) slow cooling to lower subzero temperatures (-60 degrees C and below) was required before transfer to -196 degrees C. The results indicate that embryos transferred to -196 degrees C from high subzero temperatures contain sufficient intracellular ice to damage them during slow warming but to permit survival after rapid warming. Survival of embryos after rapid dilution of DMSO at room temperature was similar to that after slow (stepwise) dilution at 0 degrees C. There was no difference between the viability of rapidly and slowly thawed embryos after transfer to pseudopregnant foster mothers. It is concluded that the behaviour of mammalian embryos subjected to the stresses of freezing and thawing is similar to that of other mammalian cells. A simpler and quicker method for the preservation of mouse embryos is described.  相似文献   

20.
Effect of warming rate on mouse embryos frozen and thawed in glycerol   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Mouse embryos (8-cell) fully equilibrated in 1.5 M-glycerol were cooled slowly (0.5 degrees C/min) to temperatures between - 7.5 and - 80 degrees C before rapid cooling and storage in liquid nitrogen (-196 degrees C). Some embryos survived rapid warming (approximately 500 degrees C/min) irrespective of the temperature at which slow cooling was terminated. However, the highest levels of survival of rapidly warmed embryos were observed when slow cooling was terminated between -25 and -80 degrees C (74-86%). In contrast, high survival (75-86%) was obtained after slow warming (approximately 2 degrees C/min) only when slow cooling was continued to -55 degrees C or below before transfer into liquid N2. Injury to embryos cooled slowly to -30 degrees C and then rapidly to -196 degrees C occurred only when slow warming (approximately 2 degrees C/min) was continued to -60 degrees C or above. Parallel cryomicroscopical observations indicated that embryos became dehydrated during slow cooling to -30 degrees C and did not freeze intracellularly during subsequent rapid cooling (approximately 250 degrees C/min) to -150 degrees C. During slow warming (2 degrees C/min), however, intracellular ice appeared at a temperature between -70 and -65 degrees C and melted when warming was continued to -30 degrees C. Intracellular freezing was not observed during rapid warming (250 degrees C/min) or during slow warming when slow cooling had been continued to -65 degrees C. These results indicate that glycerol provides superior or equal protection when compared to dimethyl sulphoxide against the deleterious effects of freezing and thawing.  相似文献   

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