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1.
The influence of lipids on ice formation during the freezing of cryoprotective medium for the semen of rainbow trout has been studied by the cryomicroscopy technique. It was shown that the lipids extracted from marine vertebrates and liposomes from the lipids of trout sperm effectively inhibit the ice formation in cryoprotective solutions during freezing, fundamentally changing the form and size of ice crystals. At high concentrations of lipids, either the crystallization does not occur in the cryoprotective medium or, even if ice crystals are formed, they have a broken shape and blurred borders. The addition of egg yolk sligthly increases the size and essentially changes the shape of ice crystals during the freezing of solution.  相似文献   

2.
Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) are ice binding proteins found in some plants, insects, and Antarctic fish allowing them to survive at subzero temperatures by inhibiting ice crystal growth. The interaction of AFPs with ice crystals results in a difference between the freezing and melting temperatures, termed thermal hysteresis, which is the most common measure of AFP activity. Creating antifreeze protein constructs that reduce the concentration of protein needed to observe thermal hysteresis activities would be beneficial for diverse applications including cold storage of cells or tissues, ice slurries used in refrigeration systems, and food storage. We demonstrate that conjugating multiple type I AFPs to a polyallylamine chain increases thermal hysteresis activity compared to the original protein. The reaction product is approximately twice as active when compared to the same concentration of free proteins, yielding 0.5 °C thermal hysteresis activity at 0.3 mM protein concentration. More impressively, the amount of protein required to achieve a thermal hysteresis of 0.3 °C is about 100 times lower when conjugated to the polymer (3 μM) compared to free protein (300 μM). Ice crystal morphologies observed in the presence of the reaction product are comparable to those of the protein used in the conjugation reaction.  相似文献   

3.
Although freezing is the most popular long-term food preservation method, the formation of ice crystals during the freezing process often degrades the quality of the product. Recently, several reports have argued that oscillating magnetic fields (OMFs) may affect ice crystallization. In this paper, we investigated the effects of OMFs on fresh mackerel using the Cell Alive System® (CAS®) developed as an additional OMF generator for a rapid freezer. Mackerel fillets were frozen with home freezing (HF), air blast freezing without (ABF) or with CAS (ABF-CAS) (ABI Co. Ltd., Chiba, Japan), and stored them for 2 weeks in the frozen storage between −30 °C and −35 °C. We analyzed the tissue damages of thawed samples histologically. The OMFs has been shown to significantly inhibit tissue damage in mackerel tissue after freezing and thawing (especially, thawing in ice water). And it seems that OMFs suppressed the ice hole counts (p < 0.05), the mean size (p = 0.061), and the increase of interstitial area% (p < 0.05) after freezing/thawing. We also found that it is necessary to avoid re-crystallization during thawing to maintain the quality of the frozen product. The use of OMFs with rapid thawing has the potential to improve cryopreservation in the food industry as well as in the bioscience industry.  相似文献   

4.
An isothermal ice recrystallization behavior in trehalose solution was investigated. The isothermal recrystallization rate constants of ice crystals in trehalose solution were obtained at ?5 °C, ?7 °C, and ?10 °C. Then the results were compared to those of a sucrose solution used as a control sample. Simultaneous estimation of water mobility in the freeze-concentrated matrix was conducted by 1H spin–spin relaxation time T2 to investigate mechanisms causing the different ice crystal recrystallization behaviors of sucrose and trehalose. At lower temperatures, lower recrystallization rates were obtained for both trehalose and sucrose solutions. The ice crystallization rate constants in trahalose solution tended to be smaller than those in sucrose solution at the same temperature. Although different ice contents (less than 3.6%) were observed between trehalose and sucrose solutions at the same temperature, the recrystallization behaviors of ice crystals were not markedly different. The 1H spin–spin relaxation time T2 of water components in a freeze-concentrated matrix for trehalose solution was shorter than in a sucrose solution at the same temperature. Results show that the water mobility of trehalose solutions in freeze-concentrated matrix was less than that of sucrose solutions, which was suggested as the reason for retarded ice crystal growth in a trehalose solution. Results of this study suggest that the replacement of sucrose with trehalose will not negatively affect deterioration caused by ice crystal recrystallization in frozen foods and cryobiological materials.  相似文献   

5.
Cutting frozen sections of large (greater than 60 cc) blocks of monkey brain using the conventional procedures of infiltration with 30% sucrose as a cryoprotectant before freezing with pulverized dry ice often produces unacceptable levels of freezing artifact (FA) caused by displacement of tissue by ice crystals. Experiments investigating FA utilized perfusion-fixed brains from 46 monkeys and spanned combinations of cryoprotectants (glycerol, sucrose), freezing methods (dry ice or -75 degrees C isopentane), and fixatives (10% formalin, Karnovsky's or Timm's). The effects were evaluated by rating of FA severity in frozen sections of whole monkey brains. Minor FA appears as enlarged capillaries, more serious FA as large vacuoles, and both first appear midway between the periphery and center of the block. Stronger fixatives increased the severity of freezing artifact. The best method for eliminating FA was graded infiltration with up to 20% glycerol and 2% DMSO (in buffer or fixative), followed by rapid freezing in -75 degrees C isopentane. Although using a glycerol-DMSO infiltration before conventional freezing with pulverized dry ice or using conventional sucrose infiltration before freezing in isopentane gave better results than sucrose infiltration and dry-ice freezing, only the combination of glycerol-DMSO infiltration and freezing in isopentane produced consistently excellent results and virtually eliminated freezing artifact. To determine the effect of freezing with dry ice or isopentane on the rate of cooling in large blocks of CNS tissue, thermocouples were embedded in an 80-cc block of albumin-gelatin and frozen with the two methods. The rate of cooling (-3.5 degrees C/min) was twice as fast using isopentane.  相似文献   

6.
The objective of this study was to determine how different techniques used during the freezing step of lyophilization affect morphology of the dried protein solids. Aqueous solutions containing recombinant human albumin, trehalose, and sodium phosphate buffer were dried after their freezing by shelf-ramp cooling, immersion in liquid nitrogen, or controlled ice nucleation. Some shelf-frozen solutions were heat treated (annealed) before the vacuum drying. We used three-dimensional (3D) X-ray micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to study the morphology of solids. The X-ray micro-CT images of the lyophilized microporous solids showed traces of varied size and structure ice crystals that were comparable to corresponding SEM images. A post-freeze heat treatment and a controlled nucleation both induced larger ice crystal ghosts in the solids. The variations in the structure of walls surrounding ice crystals, formed by the different freezing procedures, should affect the water vapor transition during the primary and secondary drying. Some solids also showed higher-density layer in the upper surface. Overall, the simple sample preparation procedures and the ample morphological information make the X-ray micro-CT appropriate for analyzing lyophilized pharmaceuticals.  相似文献   

7.
Lyophilization is the most popular method for achieving improved stability of labile biopharmaceuticals, but a significant fraction of product activity can be lost during processing due to stresses that occur in both the freezing and the drying stages. The effect of the freezing rate on the recovery of herpes simplex virus 2 (HSV-2) infectivity in the presence of varying concentrations of cryoprotectant excipients is reported here. The freezing conditions investigated were shelf cooling (223 K), quenching into slush nitrogen (SN2), and plunging into melting propane cooled in liquid nitrogen (LN2). The corresponding freezing rates were measured, and the ice crystal sizes formed within the samples were determined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The viral activity assay demonstrated the highest viral titer recovery for nitrogen cooling in the presence of low (0.25% w/v sucrose) excipient concentration. The loss of viral titer in the sample cooled by melting propane was consistently the highest among those results from the alternative cooling methods. However, this loss could be minimized by lyophilization at lower temperature and higher vacuum conditions. We suggest that this is due to a higher ratio of ice recrystallization for the sample cooled by melting propane during warming to the temperature at which freeze-drying was carried out, as smaller ice crystals readily enlarge during warming. Under the same freezing condition, a higher viral titer recovery was obtained with a formulation containing a higher concentration of sugar excipients. The reason was thought to be twofold. First, sugars stabilize membranes and proteins by hydrogen bonding to the polar residues of the biomolecules, working as a water substitute. Second, the concentrated sugar solution lowers the nucleation temperature of the water inside the virus membrane and prevents large ice crystal formation within both the virus and the external medium.  相似文献   

8.
Ponomareva  E. N.  Firsova  A. V.  Tikhomirov  A. M.  Andreev  A. A. 《Biophysics》2020,65(3):468-471

Cryopreservation of fish and amphibian eggs is still an unsolved problem. The formation of ice crystals inside and outside cells acts as a main detrimental factor during a deep freezing of fish eggs, as well as crystal growth (recrystallization and repeated crystallization). Designing efficient cryoprotective media is necessary in order to avoid egg injury from freezing. Additional components that are present in a cryoprotective medium and reduce the thermomechanical stress and cracks of frozen tissues might increase oocyte survival after freezing–thawing. Natural components of eggs and the ovarian fluid are promising as such additives. The formation of ice microparticles was studied in thin layers (0.2 mm) of the ovarian fluid and components of Russian sturgeon egg homogenates upon their cooling to a liquid nitrogen temperature (–196°C). The processes of freezing, ice cracking, and microparticle formation were observed as the temperature was decreased gradually. The shape and size of ice microparticles were found to depend on the composition of the freezing solution. Certain fractions of egg homogenate were assumed to be suitable as components of a cryoprotective medium.

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9.
Ice Morphology: Fundamentals and Technological Applications in Foods   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Freezing is the process of ice crystallization from supercooled water. Ice crystal morphology plays an important role in the textural and physical properties of frozen and frozen-thawed foods and in processes such as freeze drying, freeze concentration, and freeze texturization. Size and location of ice crystals are key in the quality of thawed tissue products. In ice cream, smaller ice crystals are preferred because large crystals results in an icy texture. In freeze drying, ice morphology influences the rate of sublimation and several morphological characteristics of the freeze-dried matrix as well as the biological activity of components (e.g., in pharmaceuticals). In freeze concentration, ice morphology influences the efficiency of separation of ice crystals from the concentrated solution. The cooling rate has been the most common variable controlling ice morphology in frozen and partly frozen systems. However, several new approaches show promise in controlling nucleation (consequently, ice morphology), among them are the use of ice nucleation agents, antifreeze proteins, ultrasound, and high pressure. This paper summarizes the fundamentals of freezing, methods of observation and measurement of ice morphology, and the role of ice morphology in technological applications.  相似文献   

10.
Mechanism of cryoprotection by extracellular polymeric solutes.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
To elucidate the means by which polymer solutions protect cells from freezing injury, we cooled human monocytes to -80 degrees C or below in the presence of various polymers. Differential scanning calorimetric studies showed that those polymers which protect cells best have a limiting glass transition temperature (T'g) of approximately -20 degrees C; those with a T'g significantly higher or lower did not protect. Freeze-etch electron micrographs indicated that intracellular ice crystals had formed during this freezing procedure, but remained smaller than approximately 300 nm in the same proportion of cells as survived rapid thawing. We propose that cryoprotection of slowly frozen monocytes by polymers is a consequence of a T'g of -20 degrees C in the extracellular solution. In our hypothesis, the initial concentration and viscosity of protective polymer solutions reduce the extent and rate of cell water loss to extracellular ice and limit the injurious osmotic stress, which cells face during freezing at moderate rates to -20 degrees C. Below -20 degrees C, glass formation prevents further osmotic stress by isolating cells from extracellular ice crystals, virtually eliminating cell water loss at lower temperatures. On the other hand, the protective polymer solutions will allow some diffusion of water away from cells at temperatures above T'g. If conditions are correct, cells will concentrate the cytoplasm sufficiently during the initial cooling to T'g to avoid lethal intracellular freezing between T'g and the intracellular Tg, which has been depressed to low temperatures by that concentration. Thus, when polymers are used as cryoprotective agents, cell survival is contingent upon maintenance of osmotic stress within narrow limits.  相似文献   

11.
Devitrification has been determined to be one of the major causes of cell death in cryopreservation by vitrification method. Reliable quantification of the nucleation and growth of ice crystals of devitrification is of great importance for the optimization of the vitrification solutions. In the present study, cryomicroscopy was used to investigate the nucleation and growth of ice crystals in concentrated glycerol aqueous solution (60 wt%) in the presence of sucrose, trehalose, maltose and lactose. Results showed that sucrose rather than trehalose seems to be the most effective one to inhibit the nucleation and ice growth, despite the excellent inhibitory ability of trehalose on ice growth that has been confirmed in many researches. Hence, for ice inhibition, sucrose was a more effective disaccharide additive to suppress nucleation and growth of ice crystals that occurred during devitrification in concentrated glycerol solutions.  相似文献   

12.
Frozen thin sections and sections from freeze-dried and embedded tissue are used for the autoradiographic localization of diffusible substances at the electron microscope level. The presence of ice crystals in such sections may limit the autoradiographic resolution. Ice crystals are formed during freezing and may grow during subsequent processing of tissue. The contribution of ice crystal growth to the final image was estimated by measuring the distribution of the ice crystal sizes in freeze-etch replicas and in sections from freeze-dried and embedded tissues. A surface layer (10-15 mu) without visible ice crystals was present in both preparations. Beneath this surface layer the diameter of ice crystals increased towards the interior with the same relationship between crystal size and distance from the surface in the freeze-etch preparation as in the freeze-dry preparation. Ice crystal growth occurring during a much longer time during freeze-drying compared to freeze-etching does not significantly contribute to the final image in the electron microscope. The formation of ice crystals during freezing determines to a large extent the image (and therefore the autoradiographic resolution) of freeze-dry preparations and this probably holds also for thin cryosections of which examples are given.  相似文献   

13.
Complex living systems such as mammalian cells can be arrested in a solid phase by ultrarapid cooling. This allows for precise observation of cellular structures as well as cryopreservation of cells. The state of water, the main constituent of biological samples, is crucial for the success of cryogenic applications. Water exhibits many different solid states. If it is cooled extremely rapidly, liquid water turns into amorphous ice, also called vitreous water, a glassy and amorphous solid. For cryo-preservation, the vitrification of cells is believed to be mandatory for cell survival after freezing. Intracellular ice crystallization is assumed to be lethal, but experimental data on the state of water during cryopreservation are lacking. To better understand the water conditions in cells subjected to freezing protocols, we chose to directly analyze their subcellular water states by cryo-electron microscopy and tomography, cryoelectron diffraction, and x-ray diffraction both in the cryofixed state and after warming to different temperatures. By correlating the survival rates of cells with their respective water states during cryopreservation, we found that survival is less dependent on ice-crystal formation than expected. Using high-resolution cryo-imaging, we were able to directly show that cells tolerate crystallization of extra- and intracellular water. However, if warming is too slow, many small ice crystals will recrystallize into fewer but bigger crystals, which is lethal. The applied cryoprotective agents determine which crystal size is tolerable. This suggests that cryoprotectants can act by inhibiting crystallization or recrystallization, but they also increase the tolerance toward ice-crystal growth.  相似文献   

14.
The basis for hyperactivity of antifreeze proteins   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) bind to the surface of ice crystals and lower the non-equilibrium freezing temperature of the icy solution below its melting point. We have recently reported the discovery of three novel hyperactive AFPs from a bacterium, a primitive insect and a fish, which, like two hyperactive AFPs previously recognized in beetles and moths, are considerably better at depressing the freezing point than most fish AFPs. When cooled below the non-equilibrium freezing temperature, ice crystals formed in the presence of any of five distinct, moderately active fish AFPs grow suddenly along the c-axis. Ice crystals formed in the presence of any of the five evolutionarily and structurally distinct hyperactive AFPs remain stable to lower temperatures, and then grow explosively in a direction normal to the c-axis when cooled below the freezing temperature. We argue that this one consistent distinction in the behaviour of these two classes of AFPs is the key to hyperactivity. Whereas both AFP classes bind irreversibly to ice, the hyperactive AFPs are better at preventing ice growth out of the basal planes.  相似文献   

15.
Freeze-drying is commonly used to stabilize lactic acid bacteria. Many factors have been reported to influence freeze-drying survival, including bacterial species, cell density, lyoprotectant, freezing rate, and other process parameters. Lactobacillus coryniformis Si3 has broad antifungal activity and a potential use as a food and feed biopreservative. This strain is considered more stress sensitive, with a low freeze-drying survival, compared to other commercialized antifungal lactic acid bacterial strains. We used a response surface methodology to evaluate the effects of varying sucrose concentration, cell density and freezing rate on Lb. coryniformis Si3 freeze-drying survival. The water activity of the dry product, as well as selected thermophysical properties of importance for freeze-drying; degree of water crystallization and the glass transition temperature of the maximally freeze concentrated amorphous phase (Tg') were determined. The survival of Lb. coryniformis Si3 varied from less than 6% to over 70% between the different conditions. All the factors studied influenced freeze-drying survival and the most important factor for survival is the freezing rate, with an optimum at 2.8 degrees C/min. We found a co-dependency between freezing rate and formulation ingredients, indicating a complex system and the need to use statistical tools to detect important interactions. The degree of water crystallization decreased and the final water activity increased as a function of sucrose concentration. The degree of water crystallization and Tg' was not affected by the addition of 10(8)-10(10) CFU/ml. At 10(11) CFU/ml, these thermophysical values decreased possibly due to increased amounts of cell-associated unfrozen water.  相似文献   

16.
Evidence in the literature shows that ice crystals that form in the nucleus of many rapidly cooled cells appear much larger than the ice crystals that form in the surrounding cytoplasm. We investigated the phenomenon in our laboratory using the techniques of freeze substitution and low temperature scanning electron microscopy on liver tissue frozen by liquid nitrogen plunge freezing. This method is estimated to cool the tissue at 1000°C/min. The results from these techniques show that the ice crystal sizes were statistically significantly larger in the nucleus than in the cytoplasm. It is our belief that this finding is important to cryobiology considering its potential role in the process of freezing and the mechanisms of damage during freezing of cells and tissues.  相似文献   

17.
Tumor cells of an ascites sarcoma of rat were primarily frozen very rapidly with the original host ascitic fluid at ?27 °C by the spraying method. Frozen specimens were fractured and replicated at about ?100 °C under vacuum by a special spray-sandwich method for freeze-etching, and the morphological appearance of ice crystals formed in and around the frozen cells were observed by electron microscopy.The cells cooled very rapidly at ?27 °C actually froze intracellularly, and intracellular ice crystals ranged from 0.03 to 0.5 μm in grain size due to the initial freezing rate of the specimens. In the cells having granulous intracellular ice crystals less than 0.05 μm in grain size, cytoplasmic organelles seemed to maintain their original structures.We suggested in our previous report that these tumor cells, frozen very rapidly at temperatures above ?30 °C, survived intracellular freezing as long as they remained translucent, and optically no ice crystals appeared within them, as seen in intact unfrozen cells. It may therefore be concluded that the tumor cells frozen very rapidly at temperatures near ?30 °C actually freeze intracellularly and probably maintain their viability as long as the size of individual intracellular ice-crystals is kept smaller than 0.05 μm, although the exact critical size of innocuous intracellular ice crystals is uncertain.  相似文献   

18.
Natural deep eutectic systems (NADES) are mostly composed of natural primary metabolites such as sugars, sugar alcohols, organic acids, amino acids and amines. These simple molecules have been identified in animals living in environments with extreme temperature amplitudes, being responsible for their survival at negative temperatures during winter. Herein, we report for the first time the use of NADES based on trehalose (Treh) and glycerol (Gly) in cryopreservation, as cryoprotective agents (CPA). The evaluation of the thermal behaviour of these eutectic systems, showed that NADES have a strong effect on the water crystallization/freezing and melting process, being able to reduce the number of ice crystals and hence ice crystal damage in cells, which is a crucial parameter for their survival, upon freezing. Using this NADES as CPA, it is possible to achieve similar or even better cellular performance when compared with the gold standard for cryopreservation dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). In this sense, this work relates the physical properties of the NADES with their biological performance in cryopreservation. Our comprehensive strategy results in the demonstration of NADES as a promising nontoxic green alternative to the conventional CPA's used in cryopreservation methods.  相似文献   

19.
M S Brown  F W Reuter 《Cryobiology》1974,11(3):185-191
A new technique was developed for the observation and recording on videotape of thermal and microscopic changes that occur simultaneously during the freezing of cucumber tissue. The freezing process occurs in two steps. Nucleation and growth of ice crystals in the continuous extracellular liquid phase is followed by nucleation and growth of ice crystals in individual supercooled cells. The freezing of cells in rapid succession causes the average temperature to remain constant for a short time. This mechanism explains the second freezing plateau found in most plant tissue freezing curves.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Wall lizards were collected in the fall of 1988 from a population introduced in 1951 into Cincinnati, OH. They were acclimated to 5 °C for several weeks prior to testing at sub-zero temperatures. Eleven super-cooled lizards were removed from the cooling chamber prior to crystallization after between 15 min and 26 h at body temperatures ranging from -2.2 to -5.9 °C. With the exception of one individual supercooled to-5.0 °C, all lizards recovered fully. The crystallization temperatures of 15 lizards which froze ranged from -0.6 to -6.4 °C. Frozen lizards were stiff with a distinct blue color, which faded upon thawing at 3 °C. The ice contents of frozen lizards were determined calorimetrically and/or estimated from a theoretical model, the two methods being generally in close agreement. Remarkably, five individuals recovered fully from exposures as long as 2 h and with as much as 28% of their body water frozen. Although these animals are not as tolerant as certain other vertebrates they are clearly able to withstand freezing under some circumstances. Failure to survive freezing was attributed either to excessive ice accumulation during a prolonged freeze or to excessive supercooling prior to freezing, which induced a large initial surge of ice formation upon crystallization. Our results accord with those of Weigmann (1929). We accordingly recognize him as the first to demonstrate freeze-tolerance in vertebrates, and we further recognize P. muralis as the first vertebrate known to survive freezing.  相似文献   

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