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1.
Multi-proton spin-echo images were collected from cold-acclimated winter wheat crowns (Triticum aestivum L.) cv. Cappelle Desprez at 400 MHz between 4 and ?4 °C. Water proton relaxation by the spin-spin (T2) mechanism from individual voxels in image slices was found to be mono-exponential. The temperature dependence of these relaxation rates was found to obey Arrhenius or absolute rate theory expressions relating temperature, activation energies and relaxation rates, Images whose contrast is proportional to the Arrhenius activation energy (Ea), Gibb's free energy of activation (ΔG?), and the entropy of activation (ΔS?) for water relaxation on a voxel basis were constructed by post-image processing. These new images exhibit contrast based on activation energies rather than rules of proton relaxation. The temperature dependence of water proton T2 relaxation rates permits prediction of changes in the physical state of water in this tissue over modest temperature ranges. A simple model is proposed to predict the freezing temperature kof various tissue in wheat crowns. The average Ea and ΔH? for water proton T2 relaxation over the above temperature range in winter wheat tissue were ?6.4 ± 14.8 and ?8.6 ± 14.8kj mol?1, respectively. This barrier is considerably lower than the Ea for proton translation in ice at 0°C, which is reported to be between 46.0 and 56.5 kj mol?1  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Freezing tolerance and avoidance in high-elevation Hawaiian plants   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Freezing resistance mechanisms were studied in five endemic Hawaiian species growing at high elevations on Haleakala volcano, Hawaii, where nocturnal subzero (°C) air temperatures frequently occur. Extracellular freezing occurred at around -5°C in leaves of Argyroxiphium sandwicense and Sophora chrysophylla, but these leaves can tolerate extracellular ice accumulation to -15°C and -12°C, respectively. Mucilage, which apparently acted as an ice nucleator, comprised 9 to 11% of the dry weight of leaf tissue in these two species. Leaves of Vaccinium reticulatum and Styphelia tameiameiae were also found to tolerate substantial extracellular freezing. Dubautia menziesii, on the other hand, exhibited the characteristics of permanent supercooling; a very rapid decline in liquid water content associated with simultaneous intracellular and extracellular freezing. However, in those species that tolerate extracellular freezing, the decline in liquid water content during freezing is relatively slow. Osmotic potential was lower at pre-dawn than at midday in four of the species studied. Nocturnal production of osmotically active solutes may have helped to prevent intracellular freeze dehydration as well as to provide non-colligative protection of cell membranes. Styphelia tameiameiae supercooled to -9·3°C and tolerated tissue freezing to below -15°C, a unique combination of physiological characteristics related to freezing. Tolerance of extracellular ice formation after considerable supercooling may have resulted from low tissue water content and a high degree of intracellular water binding in this species, as determined by nuclear magnetic resonance studies. The climate at high elevations in Hawaii is relatively unpredictable in terms of the duration of subzero temperatures and the lowest subzero temperature reached during the night. It appears that plants growing in this tropical alpine habitat have been under selective pressures for the evolution of freezing tolerance mechanisms.  相似文献   

4.
Eggs of the stonefly, Arcynopteryx compacta, that overwinter in the alpine region of Norwegian mountains, increase their cold-hardiness by dehydration. Eggs enclosed in ice at −22°C survive the loss of about two-thirds of their total water content by shrinkage due to passive diffusion of body water along the concentration gradient. Fully hydrated eggs are killed by freezing at their supercooling point of −26°C, and by direct cooling to −30°C. Dehydrated eggs have a mean supercooling point of −31°C, and survive exposure at −27 and −29°C in ice. Judged from their melting points the eggs do not accumulate low-molecular-weight cryoprotective substances. The difference between freezing and melting points corresponds to a thermal hysteresis of up to 1.8°C. The presence of thermal hysteresis antifreezes may stabilize their supercooled state when enclosed by ice during overwintering. The eggs enter diapause in the autumn, and diapause completion is enhanced both by temperature and time during enclosure in ice.  相似文献   

5.
Storage of Porcine Articular Cartilage at High Subzero Temperatures   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Objective: Transplantation of osteochondral allograft tissue can treat large joint defects but is limited by tissue availability, surgical timing, and infectious disease transmission. Fresh allografts perform the best but requirements for infectious disease testing delay the procedure with subsequent decrease in cell viability and function. Hypothermic storage at lower temperatures can extend tissue banking time without loss of cell viability and, therefore, increase the supply of allograft tissue. This study investigated the effects of different cryoprotectant solutions on intact AC at various subzero temperatures. Design: 10 mm porcine osteochondral dowels were immersed for 30 minutes in various combinations of solutions [(XVIVO, propylene glycol (51% w/w), sucrose (46% w/w)] cooled to various subzero temperatures (−10, −15, and −20 °C), and held for 30 min. After warming, 70 μm slices were stained with membrane integrity dyes, viewed under fluorescence microscopy and cell recovery calculated relative to fresh controls. Results: Results demonstrated excellent cell recovery (>75%) at −10°C provided ice did not form. Excellent cell recovery (>70%) occurred at −15°C in solutions containing 51% propylene glycol but formation of extra-matrix ice in other solutions resulted in significant cell loss. All groups had <6% cell recovery at −20°C and propylene glycol did not provide a protective effect even though extra-matrix ice did not form Conclusions: These results suggest that extra-matrix ice plays an important role in cell damage during cryopreservation. Excellent cell recovery can be obtained after storage at subzero temperatures if ice does not form. Hypothermic preservation at high subzero temperatures may extend AC storage time in tissue banks compared to current techniques.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of various freezing rates on the extent of hemolysis in human, bovine and ovine erythrocytes, which are known to have different cell volumes, water contents and permeabilities, was investigated. Blood in stainless steel capillary tubes was frozen at various rates by abrupt immersion of the capillaries into cooling baths at temperatures ranging from ?20° to ?130°C. Minimum lysis values were obtained at freezing temperatures of ?40°, ?50° and ?70°C with, respectively, human, bovine and ovine blood. The smallest, highly permeable sheep erythrocytes were the least damaged at the highest freezing rates; the largest human cells with the highest water content, suffered the greatest damage; intermediate values were obtained with ox blood. At the lower freezing rates, the largest, human cells were the least damaged; the highest hemolysis values were obtained with the smallest, highly permeable sheep erythrocytes; ox blood again gave intermediate values. These results are in agreement with current views that, (1) very rapid freezing results in the formation of damaging intracellular ice; (2) injury associated with slow freezing is related to the extent of dehydration or to the increase in electrolyte concentration which accompanies ice formation; (3) minimum hemolysis is obtained under those freezing conditions in which osmotic dehydration has been sufficient to prevent the formation of intracellular ice, but has left enough water in the cells to prevent the damaging effects of dehydration and high electrolyte concentrations.  相似文献   

7.
While various fixation techniques for observing ice within tissues stored at high sub-zero temperatures currently exist, these techniques require either different fixative solution compositions when assessing different storage temperatures or alteration of the sample temperature to enable alcohol-water substitution. Therefore, high-subzero cryofixation (HSC), was developed to facilitate fixation at any temperature above −80 °C without sample temperature alteration. Rat liver sections (1 cm2) were frozen at a rate of −1 °C/min to −20 °C, stored for 1 h at −20 °C, and processed using classical freeze-substitution (FS) or HSC. FS samples were plunged in liquid nitrogen and held for 1 h before transfer to −80 °C methanol. After 1, 3, or 5 days of −80 °C storage, samples were placed in 3% glutaraldehyde on dry ice and allowed to sublimate. HSC samples were stored in HSC fixative at −20 °C for 1, 3, or 5 days prior to transfer to 4 °C. Tissue sections were paraffin embedded, sliced, and stained prior to quantification of ice size. HSC fixative permeation was linear with time and could be mathematically modelled to determine duration of fixation required for a given tissue depth. Ice grain size within the inner regions of 5 d samples was consistent between HSC and FS processing (p = 0.76); however, FS processing resulted in greater ice grains in the outer region of tissue. This differed significantly from HSC outer regions (p = 0.016) and FS inner regions (p = 0.038). No difference in ice size was observed between HSC inner and outer regions (p = 0.42). This work demonstrates that HSC can be utilized to observe ice formed within liver tissue stored at −20 °C. Unlike isothermal freeze fixation and freeze substitution alternatives, the low melting point of the HSC fixative enables its use at a variety of temperatures without alteration of sample temperature or fixative composition.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction of water with collagenous tissue was investigated using dynamic mechanical spectroscopy and cryogenic X-ray techniques. The loss spectrum was found to be very sensitive to water which is highly associated with the macromolecule. Two water-sensitive loss peaks were observed below 0°C: the β2 or “water dispersion” at 150°K and the β1 at 200°K which is attributed to motion of polar side chains. Changes in peak temperature and intensity were not continuous with water content, but exhibited regimes in behavior which were associated with two types of nonfreezable water, structural and bound water. In cryogenic X-ray experiments, specimens which contained some freezable water exhibited reflections identified with the cubic form of ice. These ice crystals underwent an irreversible transition to the more common hexagonal form when warmed above 200°K. On the basis of these experiments, a model for the hydration of native collagenous tissue was proposed.  相似文献   

9.
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and two dielectric techniques, broadband dielectric relaxation spectroscopy and thermally stimulated depolarization currents (TSDC), were employed to study glass transition and water and protein dynamics in mixtures of water and a globular protein, lysozyme, in wide ranges of water content, both solutions, and hydrated solid samples. In addition, water equilibrium sorption isotherms (ESI) measurements were performed at room temperature. The main objective was to correlate results by different techniques to each other and to determine critical water contents for various processes. From ESI measurements the content of water directly bound to primary hydration sites was determined to 0.088 (grams of water per grams of dry protein), corresponding to 71 water molecules per protein molecule, and that where clustering becomes significant to about 0.25. Crystallization and melting events of water were first observed at water contents 0.270 and 0.218, respectively, and the amount of uncrystallized water was found to increase with increasing water content. Two populations of ice crystals were observed by DSC, primary and bulk ice crystals, which give rise to two separate relaxations in dielectric measurements. In addition, the relaxation of uncrystallized water was observed, superimposed on a local relaxation of polar groups on the protein surface. The glass transition temperature, determined by DSC and TSDC in rather good agreement to each other, was found to decrease significantly with increasing water content and to stabilize at about −90 °C for water contents higher than about 0.25. This is a novel result of this study with potential impact on cryoprotection and pharmaceutics.  相似文献   

10.
The trajectory of the phase-boundary between ice I and liquid has been continuously followed by compression of deionized water, 0.10 m KCl, 0.10 m NaCl, and deionized water with suspended yeast cells (Saccharomyces cerevisiae, 180 mg/g) in a close-ended pressure chamber at temperatures below 0 °. Upon increasing pressure on deionized H2O at ?8.6 °C the temperature first increases, until the transition line between ice I and liquid is reached. Then the sample cools on further compression, which is concomitant with an increase in electrical conductivity, indicating the gradual formation of liquid. At ?34.8 °C the pressure drops spontaneously from 3 × 108 to 2.4 × 108 Pa, the conductivity decreases, and the volume of the samples becomes further reduced to ?3.1 cm3/mole of H2O, making the formation of ice III probable. On increase of pressure on 0.10 m KCl and 0.10 m NaCl the sample is gradually cooled, as the fusion line of the respective eutectic solid is reached. 0.10 m KCl is then super-cooled into the region of ice III and II, whereas 0.10 m NaCl is desalinated with a final conductivity of the suspension of 3–10 nmho/cm. In the sample with S. cerevisiae 180 mg/g the ice I-liquid phase-boundary was followed to ?36.0 °C into the region and ice III and II.These results are of great importance to the understanding of the freeze-pressing process, since they indicate that a transition from ice I to liquid may occur even at temperatures between ?22 °C and ?35 °C, thus facilitating flow of material through the press. This way they shed light on the pressures needed to initiate flow at different temperatures and compositions of the sample to be freeze-pressed.  相似文献   

11.
Using cryo‐SEM with EDX fundamental structural and mechanical properties of the moss Ceratodon purpureus (Hedw.) Brid. were studied in relation to tolerance of freezing temperatures. In contrast to more complex plants, no ice accumulated within the moss during the freezing event. External ice induced desiccation with the response being a function of cell type; water‐filled hydroid cells cavitated and were embolized at ?4 °C while parenchyma cells of the inner cortex exhibited cytorrhysis, decreasing to ~20% of their original volume at a nadir temperature of ?20 °C. Chlorophyll fluorescence showed that these winter acclimated mosses displayed no evidence of damage after thawing from ?20 °C while GCMS showed that sugar concentrations were not sufficient to confer this level of freezing tolerance. In addition, differential scanning calorimetry showed internal ice nucleation occurred in hydrated moss at ~?12 °C while desiccated moss showed no evidence of freezing with lowering of nadir temperature to ?20 °C. Therefore the rapid dehydration of the moss provides an elegantly simple solution to the problem of freezing; remove that which freezes.  相似文献   

12.
Optimal temperature ranges for control of cooling rate.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
L E McGann 《Cryobiology》1979,16(3):211-216
Survival of hamster fibroblasts following cooling at 1 °C/min to various subzero temperatures in the presence of penetrating or nonpenetrating cryoprotective agents was examined. In the presence of nonpenetrating agents maximum recovery was obtained when the cooling rate was controlled between ?5 and ?20 °C followed by rapid cooling to ?196 °C. For penetrating agents recovery was maximal in samples cooled at 1 °C/min to ?30 °C or lower. These different temperature ranges for maximum recovery indicate different modes of actions of penetrating and nonpenetrating cryoprotective agents. The action of penetrating agents appear to be based on their colligative properties. Nonpenetrating agents may promote electrolyte leaks out of the cell and a corresponding osmotic efflux of cell water during slow cooling, thereby reducing the amount of intracellular ice present at ?196 °C.  相似文献   

13.
K C Gupta 《Cryobiology》1975,12(4):417-426
Blood films (3–8 μm thick) supported between two glass coverslips were frozen to ?20 °C. In the extracellular areas, ice cavities of the order of 0.2 μm separated by bands of dense plasma were evident when examined with the electron microscope; intracellular ice was not observed with the light microscope. Electron microscopy also showed the presence of intracellular ice particles of the order of 0.2–0.7 μm, these appeared as fine reticulations when observed with the light microscope. Upon gradual rewarming the following changes were observed: recrystallization in the extracellular matrix (?18 to ?8 °C), intracellular recrystallization (?13 to ?10 °C), transfer of water from erythrocytes to extracellular areas (?9 to ?7 °C), and melting and hemolysis (?6 to ?2 °C).Freezing of blood at ?3 °C and subsequent thawing did not cause hemolysis of the red cells. In blood frozen at ?3 °C and cooled to ?20 °C or frozen by abrupt exposure to 20 °C the erythrocytes hemolyzed in 7/16–11/16 of a second, whereas in blood frozen at ?3 °C and cooled to ?10 °C the cells hemolyzed in 5–15 sec even though the mode if lysis (i.e., uniform seepage of hemoglobin from the surface of the cell) was similar in all cases. This indicates that the presence of intracellular ice does not seem to play a major role in the injury to the erythrocytes. The mechanism of cryoinjury demonstrated by hemolysis has been discussed.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were used to analyse changes in the physical state of water in wheat crowns during cold acclimation and during the freezing/thawing cycle. Spectroscopically measured average spin-spin relaxation times (T2) decreased during cold acclimation and increased when plants were grown at normal temperature. Spin-spin relaxation images whose contrast is proportional to T2, times were calculated allowing association of water relaxation with regions of tissue in spin-echo images during acclimation and freezing. Images taken during freezing revealed nonuniform freezing of tissue in crowns and roots. Acclimated and non-acclimated wheat crowns were imaged during freezing and after thawing. Spin-echo image signal intensity and T2 times decreased dramatically between -4°C and -8°C as a result of a decrease in water mobility during freezing. Images collected during thawing were diffuse with less structure and relaxation times were longer, consistent with water redistribution in tissue after membrane damage.  相似文献   

16.
Large numbers of European ash have died in Poland in all age classes during the last ten years. The characteristic symptom occurring on shoots of planted and self‐sown seedlings was bark necroses starting from the shoot apex, necrotic buds, or leaf and twig scars. The results showed that in the bud tissue of cold acclimated European ash extracellular and intracellular ice formation occurred at approximately ?9 and ?32°C, respectively. In deacclimated plants in spring water supercooling is limited by the heterogenous ice nucleation temperature and consequently the cold tolerance is ?9 to ?4°C for bud tissues and ?13 to ?9°C for shoots. Isolations of fungi were performed from dead buds and from necroses occurring on the main stem. Alternaria alternata, Fusarium lateritium and Phomopsis scobina were among the fungi occurring in both these organs at frequencies of more than 7%. Cylindrocarpon heteronemum, Diplodia mutila and Tubercularia vulgaris from necroses were only isolated in frequencies; 3.3, 1.2 and 5.4%, respectively. It seems likely that freezing injury is the inciting factor, which combined with fungal colonization manifests itself as fatal damage to European ash buds and shoots.  相似文献   

17.
《Cryobiology》1987,24(3):270-279
Rapid “low-temperature conditioning” and “solute conditioning” of the ice nucleation active bacterium Erwinia herbicola No. 26 are described. Conditioning is the process by which the ability to initiate ice at high temperatures is gained in these bacteria. The cumulative ice nucleator concentration, N[T], was used to measure the number of ice nucleators present in the bacterial systems. N[T] was determined at temperatures from −2 ° to −10 °C and was measured under varying conditioning temperature, time, and solute regimes. Values of N[T] increased rapidly on cooling samples from 30 to 5 °C. The optimum low temperature for conditioning was 5 °C. The conditioning process followed first-order reaction kinetics and time constants (1/rate constant) were between 43 and 62 min at 5 °C. Individual ice nucleators were isolated in droplets and were stable for at least 2 hr. Low-temperature conditioning did not occur when protein synthesis was inhibited by eliminating amino acids in the low-temperature conditioning media or by using the protein synthesis inhibitors chloramphenicol and streptomycin. Analysis of low-temperature conditioning, using heterogeneous ice nucleation theory predicted that ice nucleators are large and have diameters ranging from 80 Å (active at −8 °C) to 300 Å (active at −3 °C). In conclusion, it was predicted that conditioning resulted from growth of the nucleator from about 80 to 300 Å, from a change in the surface properties of 300 Å nucleator making it more similar to ice, or from a combination of these.  相似文献   

18.
Morphological and functional preservation of urinary bladder epithelium–urothelium after extirpation from an organism enables physiological studies of that tissue and provides the basis for successful organ transplantations. The aim of this study was to determine the optimal temperature for maintaining urothelium in ex vivo conditions. Mouse urinary bladders were kept at the three temperatures usually used for maintaining tissue during transportation: at the temperature of melting ice (1°C), at room temperature (22–24°C), and at the body temperature of most mammals (37°C). Autolytic structural changes were followed with electron microscopy, while destruction of cytoskeleton and intercellular junctions was observed by immunolabeling. The first ultrastructural changes, swelling of mitochondria and necrosis of individual cells, became evident 30 min after extirpation if the tissue was kept at 1°C. After 60 and 120 min in ex vivo conditions, the most severe changes with increasing plasma membrane ruptures were detected at 1°C, while at room temperature only mild changes were detected. At 37°C, the extent of ultrastructural changes was between those of the other two experimental temperatures. Autolytic destruction of cytoskeleton and intercellular junctions was not observed before 2 h after extirpation. After 4 h, severe degradation of cytokeratin 20 and microtubules were found at 1°C and 37°C, while being almost undisturbed at room temperature. On the other hand, the reduction of desmoplakin and ZO-1 labeling was more evident at 37°C than at 1°C and room temperature. These findings provide evidence that room temperature is most appropriate for short ex vivo preservation of urothelial tissue.  相似文献   

19.
Visualization of freezing damage. II. Structural alterations during warming   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
H Bank 《Cryobiology》1973,10(2):157-170
There is a growing amount of indirect evidence which suggests that the loss in viability of rapidly cooled cells is due to recrystallization of intracellular ice. This possibility was tested by an evaluation of the formation of morphological artifacts in rapidly cooled cells to determine whether this process can account for the loss in viability. Samples of the common yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae were frozen at 1.8 or 1500 °C/min, and the structure of the frozen cells was examined by the use of freeze-fracturing techniques. Other cells cooled at the same rate were warmed to temperatures ranging from ?20 ° to ?50 °C and then rapidly cooled to ?196 °C, a procedure that should cause small ice crystals to coalesce by the process of migratory recrystallization. Cells cooled at 1500 °C/min and then warmed to temperatures above ?40 °C formed large intracellular ice crystals within 30 min, and appreciable recrystallization occurred at temperatures as low as ?45 °C. Cells cooled at 1.8 °C/min and warmed to temperatures as high as ?20 °C underwent little structural alteration. These results demonstrate that intracellular ice can cause morphological artifacts. The correlation between the temperature at which rapid recrystallization begins and the temperature at which the cells are inactivated indicates that recrystallization is responsible for the death of rapidly cooled cells.  相似文献   

20.
G. Rapatz 《Cryobiology》1973,10(2):181-184
It has been shown that frog hearts, perfused with gradually increasing concentrations of ethylene glycol (to 11 m) as the temperature was gradually lowered to ?55 °C and then cooled abruptly to ?78 °C, resumed spontaneous contractions when rewarmed. The thin-walled sinus venosus and atria showed significantly better recovery than the thick-walled ventricle. It was suggested that the difference in recovery of the various parts of the heart might be related to the degree of penetration of the glycol into the tissue. In an attempt to achieve better penetration during perfusion, in particular at subzero temperatures, methanol was substituted for glycol in the perfusate. Hearts equilibrated at room temperature in nontoxic concentrations of methanol were perfused with gradually increasing concentrations as the specimen was gradually cooled to various temperatures. The hearts were gradually rewarmed, and during the rewarming the concentrations of methanol in the perfusate was gradually reduced. All hearts resumed spontaneous rhythmic contractions providing they were not cooled to below ?30 °C or perfused with methanol solutions exceeding 10 m concentration. Cooling to lower temperatures and exposure to higher concentrations of methanol did not permit recovery. These results show that at temperatures as low as ?30 °C methanol in concentrations up to 10 m is comparable to ethylene glycol in its ability to protect hearts from cryoinjury. Its failure to protect at lower temperatures may be related to the development of toxic concentrations when water is removed in the form of ice.  相似文献   

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