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1.
The toxic effects of sucrose and the conditions of in-straw glycerol removal after freezing and thawing were studied using Day-3 mouse embryos. At 20 degrees C, exposure to less than or equal to 1.0 M-sucrose for periods up to 30 min had no adverse effects on freshly collected embryos. At 25 and 36 degrees C, however, greater than or equal to 1.0 M-sucrose significantly reduced the developmental potential (P less than 0.001). In the freezing experiments the embryos were placed in 0.5 ml straws containing 40 microliters freezing medium separated by an air bubble from 440 microliters sucrose solution. The straws were frozen rapidly in the vapour about 1 cm above the surface of liquid nitrogen. The post-thaw viability was substantially better after sucrose dilution at 20 degrees C than at 36 degrees C. Mixing the freezing medium with the sucrose diluent immediately after thawing further improved the rate of survival relative to mixing just before freezing (P less than 0.001). The best survival was obtained when the freezing medium contained 3.0 M-glycerol + 0.25 M-sucrose; it was mixed with the diluent after thawing and the glycerol was removed at 20 degrees C. Under such conditions the sucrose concentration in the diluent had no significant effect on the rate of development (0.5 M, 69%; 1.0 M, 73%; 1.5 M, 64%). The results show that during sucrose dilution the temperature should be strictly controlled and suggest that intracellular and extracellular concentrations of glycerol are important in the cryoprotection of embryos.  相似文献   

2.
The relative volume of Day-3 mouse embryos changed as a linear function of the reciprocal of osmolality [corrected] of non-permeating solutes after 10 min exposure to sucrose and glycerol-sucrose solutions at 20 degrees C. The slope of the linear regression line was less in glycerol-sucrose than in sucrose solutions because glycerol permeation caused re-expansion. Before freezing by direct transfer to -180 degrees C the embryos were placed into glycerol-sucrose in 1-step (1-step equilibration) or first into glycerol and then into glycerol-sucrose (2-step equilibration). Using 2-step equilibration the post-thaw survival rate was substantially higher at 3.0 and 4.0 M-glycerol levels and less dependent on changes in the sucrose concentration within the range of 0.125 to 1.0 M than with 1-step equilibration. Under optimal conditions 90-95% of rapidly frozen embryos developed to blastocysts in vitro and 30% into live young in vivo. It is suggested that the cryoprotective role of glycerol is due to its ability to reduce osmotic pressure differences between the extra and intracellular spaces during rapid freezing of embryos.  相似文献   

3.
Role of equilibration before rapid freezing of mouse embryos   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The time requirements for permeation by glycerol and dehydration by sucrose before rapid freezing of Day-3 mouse embryos by direct transfer to -180 degrees C were studied. When the embryos were equilibrated in 2.0, 3.0, or 4.0 M-glycerol + 0.25 M-sucrose for 2.5 to 40 min, the post-thaw viability increased (P less than 0.001) with the length of equilibration period at 4 degrees C. At 20 degrees C the volume of embryos increased with the duration of equilibration up to 20 min (P less than 0.001), but the post-thaw viability was not affected. The effect of equilibration in glycerol-sucrose was determined at 20 degrees C for embryos which were previously permeated by glycerol, dehydrated by sucrose or left in PBS + 5% FCS. The survival of previously permeated embryos was not affected by equilibration for 1-16 min in glycerol-sucrose. The maximum survival rate was attained after shorter equilibration in glycerol-sucrose for embryos without pretreatment (4 min) than for those previously dehydrated (8 min). It is concluded that increases in the intracellular glycerol level are beneficial for the viability of rapidly frozen mouse embryos and previous or concomitant exposure to sucrose unfavourably affects glycerol permeation.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of freezing container and method of glycerol removal on in vitro survival of frozen-thawed Day 7 bovine embryos was investigated. Two hundred and fifteen embryos were frozen in ampules or straws, in either vertical or horizontal position and at a cooling rate of 0.3 degrees C/minute from -7 degrees C to -35 degrees C, before being plunged into liquid nitrogen. Samples were thawed in a water bath at +35 degrees C and glycerol was removed by either step-wise dilution (increments 0.25 M) or by exposure to 1.0 M sucrose for 10 minutes. A total of 197 embryos was recovered post-thaw (91%) with an overall survival after 1, 3, 6 and 24 hours in culture of 87, 81, 71, and 23%, respectively. Embryonic quality and percent survival, as assessed morphologically, did not change significantly between 1 and 3 hours but decreased significantly between 6 and 24 hours in culture (p < 0.05). Survival at 24 hours was significantly higher after removal of the cryoprotectant with sucrose when compared to the step-wise glycerol dilution (p < 0.05). Overall, embryonic survival in straws equaled that in ampules; freezing orientation of straws did not affect results. Further, glycerol removal with sucrose tended to yield survival superior to that provided by a step-wise dilution technique.  相似文献   

5.
One-cell mouse embryos were frozen by direct plunging into liquid nitrogen (LN(2)) vapor after equilibration in 3 M ethylene glycol with 0.25 M sucrose (freezing medium) for 5 to 40 minutes. After thawing, the embryos were cultured in vitro and the effects of the equilibration period and dilution method were examined. No significant difference was observed in the in vitro survival of embryos when 0.5 or 1.0 M sucrose was used for the dilution of the cryoprotectant for each equilibration period. The highest survival rate (67.2%) was obtained when the embryos were equilibrated for 10 minutes, and the cryoprotectant diluted with either 0.5 or 1.0 M sucrose after thawing. Shorter (5 minutes) or prolonged (40 minutes) equilibration of embryos in the freezing medium yielded significantly lower survival rates. Dilution by direct transfer of the frozen-thawed embryos into PB1 resulted in lower survival rates than when 0.5 or 1.0 M sucrose was used. The in vitro development to the blastocyst stage of one-cell mouse embryos frozen after 10 minutes equilibration in the freezing medium and diluted after thawing in 0.5 M sucrose was significantly lower than the control (68.0 vs 92.7%). However, transfer of the blastocysts developing from frozen-thawed one-cell mouse embryos into the uterine horns of the recipients resulted in fetal development and implantation rates similar to the control.  相似文献   

6.
Survival of rapidly frozen hatched mouse blastocysts   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The objective of the present study was to examine the effect of rapid freezing on the in vitro and in vivo survival of zona-pellucida-free hatched mouse blastocysts. Hatched blastocysts were rapidly frozen in a freezing medium containing either ethylene glycol (EG) or glycerol (G) in 1.5 M or 3 M concentration. Prior to freezing, embryos were equilibrated in the freezing medium for 2 min, 10 min, 20 min or 30 min at room temperature. To freeze them, embryos were held in liquid nitrogen vapour [approximately 1 cm above the surface of the liquid nitrogen (LN2)] for 2 minutes and then immersed into LN2. After thawing, embryos were transferred either to rehydration medium (DPBS + 10% foetal calf serum +0.5 M sucrose) for 10 minutes or rehydrated directly in DPBS supplemented with foetal calf serum. In vitro survival of embryos frozen with EG was higher than those frozen with G. The highest survival was obtained with 3 M EG and 2 min or 10 min equilibration prior to freezing, combined with direct rehydration after thawing. Frozen blastocysts developed into normal foetuses as well as unfrozen control ones did, with averages of 30% (control), 26% (EG) and 15% (G). The results show that hatching and hatched mouse blastocysts can be cryopreserved by a simple rapid freezing protocol in EG without significant loss of viability. Our data indicate that the mechanical protection of the zona pellucida is not needed during freezing in these stages.  相似文献   

7.
Jekkel  Zs.  Gyulai  G.  Kiss  J.  Kiss  E.  Heszky  L.E. 《Plant Cell, Tissue and Organ Culture》1998,52(3):193-197
Cryopreservation of somatic embryos of Aesculus hippocastanum L. cultured on nutritive media containing abscisic acid (ABA) at concentrations of 0.75 μM, 7.5 μM and 75.0 μM was evaluated for three cooling methods: (i) slow freezing with cryoprotectants, (ii) fast freezing with cryoprotectants, and (iii) fast freezing with desiccation techniques. The ‘cryoprotectant’ freezing techniques included the embryo pretreatment on ABA containing medium for 4 days, followed by cryoprotective treatment in liquid medium containing 0.5 M dimethylsulfoxide, 0.5 M glycerol, 1.0 M sucrose, and cooled at slow, and rapid rates. Embryos pretreated on a medium containing 0.75 μM ABA, and cooled to −35 °C at 1°C /min, held for 30 min at this transfer temperature and then immersed in liquid nitrogen (LN) had the best embryo recovery (43%). The ‘desiccation’ method involved an air drying step of similar ABA-pretreated, non-cryoprotected embryos followed by rapid cooling. Embryos precultured on 0.75 μM ABA, then subjected to a 4 h period of air desiccation (water content reduction to 13%) showed about the same level of survival (46%) as found with the ‘cryoprotectant’ slow freezing technique. The air-dry ‘desiccation’ method is easier to apply than the more complicated ‘cryoprotectant’ method. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

8.
The use of soybean lecithin in an glycerol-based solution for slow freezing of in vitro matured, fertilized and cultured (IVMFC) bovine embryos was examined. Embryos were developed in vitro in INRA Menezo's B2 medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS) on Vero cells monolayers. Day 7 blastocysts were frozen in a two-step protocol consisting of exposure to 5% glycerol and 9% glycerol containing 0.2 M sucrose in F1 medium + 20% FCS. Soybean lecithin was either added or not to the freezing solutions at a final concentration of 0.1% (w/v). In Experiment 1, blastocysts were equilibrated in cryoprotectant solutions without cooling. Cryoprotectant was diluted from embryos with 0.5 M and 0.2 M sucrose. The percentages of fully expanded and hatched blastocysts treated with or without lecithin after 24 and 48 h in culture were not significantly different (100 versus 100% and 93.3 versus 100%, respectively). In Experiment 2, the in vitro survival of frozen-thawed IVMFC blastocysts was compared when cryoprotectant solutions were either supplemented or not with lecithin. No significant effect of lecithin was found on the ability of frozen-thawed blastocysts to re-expand after 48 h in culture (65.6 and 54.2%, respectively). However, the post-thaw hatching rate of embryos cryopreserved in the presence of 0.1% lecithin was significantly higher after 72 h in culture (52 and 31.8%, respectively). In Experiment 3, the ability of frozen-thawed IVMFC blastocysts to establish pregnancy following single embryo transfer was determined. Transfers of 58 and 66 frozen-thawed embryos cryopreserved with or without lecithin resulted in 6 and 10 (10.3 and 15.1%, respectively) confirmed pregnancies at Day 60. Addition of lecithin to cryoprotectants did not improve the in vivo development rate of cryopreserved IVMFC bovine blastocysts.  相似文献   

9.
Sheep embryos of the late morula to early blastocyst stage were frozen, thawed and cultured to test several sucrose solutions for post-thaw dilution of the cryoprotective agent glycerol. Ewes of mixed breeding were superovulated and embryos were flushed from the uterus either surgically or at slaughter 5 d after estrus. Fifty-eight embryos were pooled in microdrops of modified Dulbecco's phosphate buffered saline (MDPBS) then randomly divided into four treatments. A 2 x 2 factorial design was used to compare 0.25 M sucrose in MDPBS as an in-straw cryoprotectant dilution with a standard step-wise dilution procedure within standard fast and slow freeze-thaw systems. After storage in liquid nitrogen for 6 to 8 d, the embryos were thawed and the cryoprotectant (1.4 M glycerol) removed before culture in microdrops of modified synthetic oviduct fluid under paraffin oil in water-saturated 5% CO(2) in air atmosphere at 37 C. No significant interaction was found between the freeze-thaw procedure and cryoprotectant + dilution procedures. Embryos in the fast freeze-thaw procedure had a mean development score of 1.3 +/- 0.3 and those in the slow freeze-thaw procedure had a mean score of 1.2 +/- 0.3. The mean development score 2.0 +/- 0.3 for the standard dilution procedure was superior (P<0.001) to the score of 0.6 +/- 0.2 for the 0.25 M sucrose dilution procedure. In a separate trial, 18 sheep morulae were collected and equilibrated with 1.4 M glycerol in MDPBS. A standard fast freeze-thaw procedure was used and, after 18 d of storage at -196 C, the glycerol was diluted from the embryo with 1.0 M sucrose. Culture was conducted in a similar manner and a mean development score of 1.0 +/- 0.3 was obtained. These results indicate standard cryoprotectant dilution procedures for sheep embryos are superior to dilution with 0.25 M sucrose. In a limited study, dilution with 1.0 M sucrose was also not as effective as standard dilution procedures.  相似文献   

10.
The use of heat-stable plant proteins in an ethylene glycol-based solution for the vitrification of in vitro-derived embryos was examined. Day 7, 8 and 9 bovine in vitro matured, fertilized and cultured (IVMFC), full and expanded blastocysts were vitrified in solutions composed of 40% ethylene glycol (EG) plus 0.3 M sucrose supplemented with 20% Ficoll and 0.3% BSA (VF-1), 25 mg/ml heat-stable plant proteins (HSPP; VF-2), or with no supplement (VF-3). In Experiment 1, embryos were expelled from the straw after thawing, and EG was diluted from embryos with 0.5 M sucrose. There were no differences in post-thaw embryo survival rates or in hatching/hatched rates after 24 h of culture between the VF-1, VF-2 and VF-3 solutions (40.1, 54.1 and 50.8% and 10.7, 16.4 and 17.5%, respectively). Transfer of 12 frozen/thawed embryos to 6 recipients (2 recipients per treatment) resulted in 2 pregnancies from the VF-2 group and 1 pregnancy from the VF-3 group. In Experiment 2, EG was diluted from embryos after thawing within the straw with 0.5 M sucrose. There were no differences in post-thaw survival or hatching/hatched rates after 24 h of culture (19.0, 13.6 and 23.8% and 9.5, 9.0 and 14.4% for VF-1, VF-2 and VF-3, respectively). Transfer of 6 frozen/thawed embryos to 3 recipients (1 recipient per treatment) resulted in no pregnancies. The post-thaw histology of Day 7, 8 and 9 IVMFC blastocysts showed typical ultrastructure with well preserved cell-to-cell contacts. There were no major differences in the fine structure of blastocysts regardless of treatment. The use of HSPP at a concentration of 25 mg/ml in the vitrification medium did not affect the post-thaw embryo survival over that of no protein supplementation. The presence of macro molecules in a 40% EG/sucrose vitrification solution also did not improve post-thaw viability of IVMFC-derived blastocysts.  相似文献   

11.
Mouse morulae were frozen with 1.5-4.0 M glycerol + 0.25 M lactose solution by direct plunging into liquid nitrogen vapor 0.5-30 min after equilibration at room temperature. After thawing, embryos were cultured in vitro, and the highest survival rates were obtained after exposure for 3 min at 3.0 and 4.0 M and for 5 min at 1.5 and 2.0 M glycerol levels. Significant reductions in the survival rates (P less than 0.05) were observed when equilibration periods were extended for 3-5 min at 3.0 and 4.0 M and for 5-10 min at 1.5 and 2.0 M glycerol levels. These results clearly demonstrate that the equilibration time of embryos in glycerol-lactose mixture is one of the most important factors in the present rapid freezing conditions. To clarify the factors that lower embryo viability after prolonged equilibration, we performed further experiments on the effects of exposure to glycerol-lactose mixture on the developmental potential of embryos without freezing and on the volume changes of embryos during the exposure to glycerol solution with or without lactose. It was suggested that the detrimental effects of prolonged equilibration are due not only to the toxicity and osmotic injury of higher concentrations of cryoprotectant solution but also to the influx of water into embryonic cells caused by the hypotonic salt concentration of the extracellular (freezing) solution.  相似文献   

12.
In Study 1 over 2000 4- to 8-cell mouse embryos were randomly pooled and assigned to 1 of 12 treatment groups. A 2 X 2 X 3 factorial design was used to analyze two types of cryoprotectant/post-thaw (PT) dilutions (dimethyl sulfoxide [Me2SO]/stepwise dilution versus glycerol/sucrose dilution), two storage containers (glass ampoules versus plastic straws), and three cooling treatments. Two commercial, controlled-rate freezing machines were examined, employing either nitrogen gas (Planer) or thermoelectric (Glacier) cooling. Embryos were cooled slowly (0.5 degrees C/min) to -35 or -80 degrees C and then cooled rapidly by transfer into liquid nitrogen (LN2). Thawed embryos were cultured for 24 hr after which developmental stage, post-thaw survival (PTS), embryo degeneration rate (EDR), quality grade (QG), and fluorescein diacetate viability grade (VG) were assessed. Overall, PTS and EDR were similar (P greater than 0.05) among the three freezing unit/plunge temperature treatments. Cumulative results of container and cryoprotectant/PT dilution treatments consistently demonstrated greater PTS, QG, and VG ratings and lower EDR values when embryos were frozen in ampoules using glycerol/sucrose dilution. Embryos treated with Me2SO/stepwise dilution were particularly sensitive to freezing damage when stored in plastic straws and plunged into LN2 at -35 degrees C. Study 2 was directed at determining whether Study 1 methods for diluting Me2SO-protected embryos markedly affected PTS rates. Post-thaw culture percentages were no different (P greater than 0.05) for four- to eight-cell Me2SO-treated embryos frozen in ampoules (using the forced-LN2 device), thawed, and diluted either conventionally in reduced concentrations of Me2SO or in the sucrose treatment normally accorded glycerolated embryos.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Ware CB  Boland MP 《Theriogenology》1987,27(5):721-728
Two hundred fifty-one ovine embryos were frozen in different levels of glycerol (1.0, 1.4, 2.0 or 2.8M) and thawed into one of four sucrose levels (0, 0.25, 1.0 or 2.0M) to determine the optimal glycerol-sucrose combination for one-step, in-straw thawing. Sucrose was toxic at low glycerol levels and mandatory at high levels. The 1.0M sucrose level with either 1.4 or 2.0M glycerol was optimal for one-step cryoprotectant removal.  相似文献   

14.
Several concentrations of glycerol for cryoprotection and several concentrations of sucrose for cryoprotectant dilution were examined with frozen, thawed and cultured mouse embryos. Four hundred and eighty late morulae to early blastocyst stage embryos were collected from 35 superovulated mice (B6D2 x Swiss Webster crosses back-crossed to Swiss Webster males) 3-1/2 days after breeding. The embryos were transferred through increasing concentrations of glycerol in modified Dulbecco(1)s phosphate buffered saline (MDPBS) to reach three final concentrations of 1.0 M, 1.4 M and 1.8 M. The embryos were loaded in 0.5-ml French straws appropriately filled with the cryoprotectant and sucrose solutions for each treatment. The straws were cooled with a standard fast-freezing program to -35 degrees C, then plunged into liquid nitrogen. After 58 days of storage at -196 degrees C the straws were thawed in a 37 degrees C water bath. Cryoprotectant dilution was accomplished with a standard step-wise procedure or in the straw with one of three concentrations of sucrose solution (0.25 M, 0.5 M, 1.0 M) in MDPBS. The embryos were then washed twice in MDPBS, twice in Whitten's media for embryo culture and then placed in microdrops of Whitten's media under paraffin oil in a water saturated 5% CO(2) in air atmosphere at 37 degrees C. Embryos were observed 24 hours later for development to the expanded blastocyst stage. The proportion of embryos developing in vitro from the three glycerol concentrations were not significantly different with standard step-wise dilution procedures for glycerol removal. After step-wise cryoprotectant removal, blastocyst expansion occurred in 49%, 44% and 52% of embryos frozen in 1.0 M, 1.4 M and 1.8 M glycerol, respectively. The 1.0 M sucrose dilution of 1.0 M glycerol showed the highest development (60.5%) in vitro but was not significantly different from any of these three step-wise diluted glycerol concentrations. The step-wise dilution of the three glycerol concentrations and dilution of the 1.0 M glycerol and 1.0 M sucrose were all superior (P < 0.01) to any other dilution procedure examined.  相似文献   

15.
Experiments were conducted to develop a simple rapid-freezing protocol for mature mouse oocytes that would yield a high proportion of oocytes with developmental potential. The effects of concentration (3.5, 4.5 and 6.0 M dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) all with 0.5 M sucrose) and the duration of exposure (2.5 min vs 45 sec) of oocytes to the cryoprotectant and its extraction after thawing in 2, 3 or 4 steps of descending sucrose concentration were studied. The most effective of the rapid-freezing and thawing protocols (4.5 M DMSO; 45 sec exposure and 3-step thawing) was compared to slow freezing protocols using 1.5 M DMSO and 1.0 M 1,2 propanediol as cryoprotectants. The DMSO concentrations had an effect on survival, fertilization and embryo development using short (45 sec) but not long (2.5 min) exposure. The rate of morphological oocyte survival was significantly higher using 4.5 M DMSO than 3.5 or 6.0 M (92% vs 82 and 73%, respectively). The development of fertilized embryos to blastocysts was also significantly higher at 4.5 M than at 3.5 or 6.0 M (68% vs 42 and 53%, respectively). The extraction of cryoprotectant in 3 or 4 steps of descending sucrose concentration resulted in higher survival (P < 0.01) and fertilization than in 2 steps. The best survival, fertilization and development was achieved with the 3-step procedure. Optimal combinations of conditions were 4.5 M DMSO at 45 sec prefreeze exposure and 3-step extraction of the cryoprotectant. Oocytes frozen by conventional methods had a survival, fertilization and development to blastocyst rate significantly lower than those frozen under the optimal rapid conditions. Thus rapid freezing of mature mouse oocytes with 4.5 M DMSO + 0.5 M sucrose and short prefreeze exposure is effective and has the additional advantage of being less time-consuming than slow freezing methods.  相似文献   

16.
The aim of this study was to examine the effects of modifications to a standard slow freezing protocol on the viability of in vitro produced bovine embryos. Bovine oocytes were matured, fertilized with frozen-thawed semen, and presumptive zygotes cultured in defined two-step culture media. The standard freezing medium was 1.5M ethylene glycol (EG), 0.1M sucrose, 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) in Dulbecco's phosphate buffered saline (D-PBS). A preliminary trial showed that in vitro produced embryos cryopreserved in this medium had a survival rate of 74.6% at 24h and 53.5% at 48 h post-thaw. Experiment 1 studied the effects of omitting the sucrose supplement or replacing it with 0.1M xylose. In Experiment 2, the effects of partial (0%, 25% or 50%) or total (100%) replacement of sodium chloride with choline chloride in the cryopreservation medium were examined (the medium with 100% replacement was designated CJ1). The effects of replacing the 10% FBS with 0.4% BSA or 0.4% lipid-rich BSA (Albumax I) in CJ1 was studied in Experiment 3. In Experiment 4, pregnancy/calving rates following the post-thaw transfer of in vitro produced embryos cryopreserved in the standard freezing medium were compared with those of in vitro and in vivo produced embryos cryopreserved in the improved medium (Albumax I in CJ1). Supplementation of the cryopreservation medium with 0.1M sucrose resulted in higher post-thaw survival rates at 24 h (71.3% versus 53.5 and 51.7%; P<0.05), 48 h (51.1% versus 45.3 and 40.2%), and 72 h (34.0% versus 24.4 and 23.0%) than 0.1M xylose or no supplement, respectively, in Experiment 1. Experiment 2 showed that embryos cryopreserved in the standard medium had poorer survival rates at 24 h (72.8% versus 86.5%; P<0.05), 48 h (53.1% versus 66.3%) or 72 h (28.4% versus 44.9%) than those frozen in CJ1. The post-thaw survival rate of embryos frozen in medium supplemented with Albumax I was better than that for the FBS or BSA supplements at 24h (92.0% versus 90.7 and 87.3%), 48 h (87.3% versus 76.9 and 70.9%; P<0.05), and 72 h (70.4% versus 49.1 and 46 4%; P<0.05; Experiment 3). In Experiment 4, in vitro produced embryos cryopreserved in CJ1 medium supplemented with Albumax I resulted in higher pregnancy rates at Day 35 (31.9% versus 22.9%) and Day 60 (24.1% versus 14.3%) of gestation, and calving rates (22.6% versus 10.0%; P<0.05) than similar embryos frozen in the standard medium. However, in vivo produced embryos cryopreserved in Albumax I in CJ1 resulted in higher pregnancy rates at Day 35 (50.7%; P<0.05) and Day 60 (45.1%; P<0.05) of gestation, and calving rate (43.7%; P<0.05). It was concluded that modification of the freezing medium by addition of lipid-rich BSA and replacing sodium chloride with choline chloride improves the post-thaw survival of in vitro produced embryos, and their viability post-transfer.  相似文献   

17.
The aim of the present study was to compare the survival rates of goat morulae and blastocysts after different freezing procedures. The viability of frozen-thawed embryos was assessed both in vivo and in vitro. Two cryoprotectants, ethylene glycol and glycerol, were used and three cryoprotectant removal procedures were compared: progressive dilution in 1.0, 0.5, 0.3 and 0 M of cryoprotectant in PBS; a similar progressive dilution with cryoprotectant in PBS plus 0.25 M of sucrose; or one-step transfer in PBS containing 0.25 M of sucrose. In vitro development of frozen-thawed blastocysts was always higher than that of frozen morulae irrespective of the cryoprotectant (52 129 = 40.3% vs 23 161 = 14.3% ; P< 0.001). In vivo, however, frozen-thawed morulae developed equally as well as blastocysts after an identical freezing-thawing protocol. Development both in vivo and in vitro showed ethylene glycol to be a better cryoprotectant than glycerol for goat embryos at both developmental stages (23 vs 0%, 45 vs 35% in vitro; 34.5 vs 21%, 35 vs 23% in vivo for morulae and blastocysts, respectively).  相似文献   

18.
Eight-cell mouse embryos were frozen in 0.5-ml plastic straws in modified Dulbecco's phosphate buffered saline (PBS) plus 5% steer serum plus either 1.32 M dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) or 1.32 M glycerol. Upon thawing, embryos were diluted 1:4 with 0.0, 0.2, 0.6, or 1.0 M sucrose solutions within the straws. Thawing was either in air at ambient temperature or in 8 degrees C or 38 degrees C water. After 48 h of culture, more embryos frozen in DMSO and thawed in 8 degrees C and 37 degrees C water developed to blastocysts (87 and 93%, respectively) than embryos thawed in air (75%; P < 0.05). No significant differences in development were noted among the three thawing regimens when embryos were frozen with glycerol. There was no significant effect of concentration of sucrose during dilution on development of embryos postthaw. With glycerol as the cryoprotectant, damage to zonae pellucidae increased as thawing rates increased, whereas the opposite was observed with DMSO as the cryoprotectant (P < 0.05).  相似文献   

19.
Previous studies have demonstrated that glycerol does not have to permeate bovine red cells to protect them against subsequent freezing and thawing. The present study is concerned with the relation between solute permeation and freezing injury of human red cells. Cells were held in 2 m glycerol for 30 sec to 10 min at 0 °C and then frozen to ?196 °C at 60 °C/min. Cells cooled at this rate have a very low probability of undergoing intracellular freezing. Percent survivals (≡percent unhemolyzed) increased by 21% (from 66 to 80%) over the first 3-min period. Extrapolation to zero time (and zero glycerol permeation) yields a survival of 57%. Between 30 sec and 3 min the calculated osmolal ratio of intracellular glycerol to other solutes increased 240% (from 2.5 to 5.7). The human red cell is impermeable to sucrose at 0 °C. Cells suspended in 1.40 m sucrose (equiosmolal to 2.0 m glycerol) for 0.5 to 10 min prior to freezing yielded as high survivals after thawing as did cells in glycerol.These data indicate that prior permeation of additive is not a prerequisite for the survival of red cells subjected to subsequent freezing and thawing. Although sucrose and glycerol protect equally well to this point, differences appear when attempts are made to remove the additive. Over 90% of the cells survive the removal of glycerol. Only some 30% survive the removal of sucrose. Cells frozen in an equisomolal solution of sodium chloride do not even survive the initial freezing and thawing.The findings indicate that slow freezing injury cannot be accounted for in terms of the attainment of a critical minimum volume, nor can it be considered to be equivalent to posthypertonic hemolysis.  相似文献   

20.
An efficient and reproducible protocol has been developed for the cryopreservation of cell suspension cultures of the potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) cv. Desiree. An evaluation was made of the effectiveness of different pre-culture and post-thaw treatments on cell growth, as measured by changes in biomass. Cell suspensions were cultured in UM medium supplemented with 0.25, 0.5, 0.625, 0.75 or 1.0 M sucrose prior to cryopreservation. Sucrose-treated cells were harvested from suspension and 0.75 ml packed cell volumes placed in 2 ml capacity polypropylene vials with 0.5 ml of chilled cryoprotectant (glycerol 46.0 g 1(-1), dimethylsulphoxide 39.0 g 1(-1), sucrose 342.0 g 1(-1) proline 5.0 g 1(-1); pH 5.8). Cells were frozen at -0.5 degrees C min(-1) from 0 to -35 degrees C, held at -35 degrees C for 35 min and stored, for 10 days, in liquid nitrogen (-196 degrees C). The most effective pre-treatment, in terms of subsequent post-thaw cell viability as assessed by fluorescein diacetate uptake or triphenyltetrazolium chloride reduction, was culture with 0.75 M sucrose. For this treatment, the mean absorbance (490 nm) following triphenyltetrazolium chloride reduction was 88% greater (p < 0.05) than control and 59% greater (p < 0.05) for thawed cells also cultured on supporting filter paper discs.  相似文献   

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