Devireddy R V, Li G, Leibo S P
Bioengineering Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803, USA.
Mol Reprod Dev. 2006 Mar;73(3):330-41. doi: 10.1002/mrd.20418.
To model the cryobiological responses of cells and tissues, permeability characteristics are often measured at suprazero temperatures and the measured values are used to predict the responses at subzero temperatures. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether the rate of cooling from +25 to +4 degrees C influenced the measured water transport response of ovarian tissue at subzero temperatures in the presence or absence of cryoprotective agents (CPAs). Sections of freshly collected equine ovarian tissue were first cooled either at 40 degrees C/min or at 0.5 degrees C/min from 25 to 4 degrees C, and then cooled to subzero temperatures. A shape-independent differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) technique was used to measure the volumetric shrinkage during freezing of equine ovarian tissue sections. After ice was induced to form in the extracellular fluid within the specimen, the sample was frozen from the phase change temperature to -50 degrees C at 5 degrees C/min. Replicate samples were frozen in isotonic medium alone or in medium containing 0.85 M glycerol or 0.85 M dimethylsulfoxide. The water transport response of ovarian tissue samples cooled at 40 degrees C/min from 25 to 4 degrees C was significantly different (confidence level >95%) from that of tissue samples cooled at 0.5 degrees C/min, whether in the presence or absence of CPAs. We fitted a model of water transport to the experimentally-derived volumetric shrinkage data and determined the best-fit membrane permeability parameters (L(pg) and E(Lp)) of equine ovarian tissue during freezing. Subzero water transport parameters of ovarian tissue samples cooled at 0.5 degrees C/min from 25 to 4 degrees C ranged from: L(pg) = 0.06 to 0.73 microm/min.atm and E(Lp) = 6.1 to 20.5 kcal/mol. The corresponding parameters of samples cooled at 40 degrees C/min from 25 to 4 degrees C ranged from: L(pg) = 0.04 to 0.61 microm/min.atm and E(Lp) = 8.2 to 54.2 kcal/mol. Calculations made of the theoretical response of tissue at subzero temperatures suggest that the optimal cooling rates to cryopreserve ovarian tissue are significantly dependent upon suprazero cooling conditions.
为了模拟细胞和组织的低温生物学反应,通常在高于零摄氏度的温度下测量渗透性特征,并将测量值用于预测零下温度时的反应。本研究的目的是确定在有或没有冷冻保护剂(CPA)的情况下,从+25℃冷却至+4℃的速率是否会影响卵巢组织在零下温度时测得的水运输反应。首先将新鲜采集的马卵巢组织切片以40℃/分钟或0.5℃/分钟的速率从25℃冷却至4℃,然后冷却至零下温度。使用一种与形状无关的差示扫描量热法(DSC)技术来测量马卵巢组织切片冷冻过程中的体积收缩。在标本的细胞外液中诱导冰形成后,将样品从相变温度以5℃/分钟的速率冷冻至-50℃。重复样品分别在等渗介质中或在含有0.85M甘油或0.85M二甲基亚砜的介质中冷冻。无论有无CPA,以40℃/分钟从25℃冷却至4℃的卵巢组织样品的水运输反应与以0.5℃/分钟冷却的组织样品的水运输反应均存在显著差异(置信水平>95%)。我们将水运输模型拟合到实验得出的体积收缩数据上,并确定了马卵巢组织在冷冻过程中的最佳拟合膜渗透参数(L(pg)和E(Lp))。以0.5℃/分钟从25℃冷却至4℃的卵巢组织样品的零下水运输参数范围为:L(pg)=0.06至0.73微米/分钟·大气压,E(Lp)=6.1至20.5千卡/摩尔。以40℃/分钟从25℃冷却至4℃的样品的相应参数范围为:L(pg)=0.04至0.61微米/分钟·大气压,E(Lp)=8.2至54.2千卡/摩尔。对组织在零下温度时的理论反应进行的计算表明,冷冻保存卵巢组织的最佳冷却速率显著取决于高于零摄氏度的冷却条件。