Literature DB >> 21055397

Survival of mouse oocytes after being cooled in a vitrification solution to -196°C at 95° to 70,000°C/min and warmed at 610° to 118,000°C/min: A new paradigm for cryopreservation by vitrification.

Peter Mazur1, Shinsuke Seki.   

Abstract

There is great interest in achieving reproducibly high survivals of mammalian oocytes (especially human) after cryopreservation, but the results to date have not matched the interest. A prime cause of cell death is the formation of more than trace amounts of intracellular ice, and one strategy to avoid it is vitrification. In vitrification procedures, cells are loaded with high concentrations of glass-inducing solutes and cooled to -196°C at rates high enough to presumably induce the glassy state. In the last decade, several devices have been developed to achieve very high cooling rates. Nearly all in the field have assumed that the cooling rate is the critical factor. The purpose of our study was to test that assumption by examining the consequences of cooling mouse oocytes in a vitrification solution at four rates ranging from 95 to 69,250°C/min to -196°C and for each cooling rate, subjecting them to five warming rates back above 0°C at rates ranging from 610 to 118,000°C/min. In samples warmed at the highest rate (118,000°C/min), survivals were 70% to 85% regardless of the prior cooling rate. In samples warmed at the lowest rate (610°C/min), survivals were low regardless of the prior cooling rate, but decreased from 25% to 0% as the cooling rate was increased from 95 to 69,000°C/min. Intermediate cooling and warming rates gave intermediate survivals. The especially high sensitivity of survival to warming rate suggests that either the crystallization of intracellular glass during warming or the growth by recrystallization of small intracellular ice crystals formed during cooling are responsible for the lethality of slow warming.
Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21055397      PMCID: PMC3041861          DOI: 10.1016/j.cryobiol.2010.10.159

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cryobiology        ISSN: 0011-2240            Impact factor:   2.487


  19 in total

1.  Freeze-etching: freezing velocity and crystal size at different locations in samples.

Authors:  G E Van Venrooij; A M Aertsen; W M Hax; P H Ververgaert; J J Verhoeven; H A Van der Vorst
Journal:  Cryobiology       Date:  1975-02       Impact factor: 2.487

Review 2.  Theoretical prediction of devitrification tendency: determination of critical warming rates without using finite expansions.

Authors:  P Boutron; P Mehl
Journal:  Cryobiology       Date:  1990-08       Impact factor: 2.487

3.  Simple, inexpensive attainment and measurement of very high cooling and warming rates.

Authors:  F W Kleinhans; Shinsuke Seki; Peter Mazur
Journal:  Cryobiology       Date:  2010-07-03       Impact factor: 2.487

4.  Effects of hypotonic stress on the survival of mouse oocytes and embryos at various stages.

Authors:  P B Pedro; S E Zhu; N Makino; T Sakurai; K Edashige; M Kasai
Journal:  Cryobiology       Date:  1997-09       Impact factor: 2.487

5.  Factors affecting the survival of mouse embryos cryopreserved by vitrification.

Authors:  W F Rall
Journal:  Cryobiology       Date:  1987-10       Impact factor: 2.487

Review 6.  Freezing of living cells: mechanisms and implications.

Authors:  P Mazur
Journal:  Am J Physiol       Date:  1984-09

7.  Depression of the ice-nucleation temperature of rapidly cooled mouse embryos by glycerol and dimethyl sulfoxide.

Authors:  W F Rall; P Mazur; J J McGrath
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  1983-01       Impact factor: 4.033

8.  Microscopic observation of intracellular ice formation in unfertilized mouse ova as a function of cooling rate.

Authors:  S P Leibo; J J McGrath; E G Cravalho
Journal:  Cryobiology       Date:  1978-06       Impact factor: 2.487

9.  Vitrification of mouse oocytes using a nylon loop.

Authors:  M Lane; D K Gardner
Journal:  Mol Reprod Dev       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 2.609

10.  Contributions of cooling and warming rate and developmental stage to the survival of Drosophila embryos cooled to -205 degrees C.

Authors:  P Mazur; K W Cole; P D Schreuders; A P Mahowald
Journal:  Cryobiology       Date:  1993-02       Impact factor: 2.487

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  39 in total

1.  Effect of common cryoprotectants on critical warming rates and ice formation in aqueous solutions.

Authors:  Jesse B Hopkins; Ryan Badeau; Matthew Warkentin; Robert E Thorne
Journal:  Cryobiology       Date:  2012-06-19       Impact factor: 2.487

2.  Physical parameters, modeling, and methodological details in using IR laser pulses to warm frozen or vitrified cells ultra-rapidly.

Authors:  F W Kleinhans; Peter Mazur
Journal:  Cryobiology       Date:  2015-02-24       Impact factor: 2.487

3.  Production of F₁ offspring with vitrified sperm from a live-bearing fish, the green swordtail Xiphophorus hellerii.

Authors:  Rafael Cuevas-Uribe; Huiping Yang; Jonathan Daly; Markita G Savage; Ronald B Walter; Terrence R Tiersch
Journal:  Zebrafish       Date:  2011-09-01       Impact factor: 1.985

4.  Large-volume vitrification of human biopsied and non-biopsied blastocysts: a simple, robust technique for cryopreservation.

Authors:  Michael L Reed; Al-Hasen Said; Douglas J Thompson; Charles L Caperton
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2014-12-03       Impact factor: 3.412

5.  Cryoprotectant-free cryopreservation of mammalian cells by superflash freezing.

Authors:  Yoshitake Akiyama; Masato Shinose; Hiroki Watanabe; Shigeru Yamada; Yasunari Kanda
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-04-01       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Characterization of Laser Gold Nanowarming: A Platform for Millimeter-Scale Cryopreservation.

Authors:  Kanav Khosla; Li Zhan; Aditya Bhati; Aiden Carley-Clopton; Mary Hagedorn; John Bischof
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2018-10-25       Impact factor: 3.882

7.  Photothermal conversion of gold nanoparticles for uniform pulsed laser warming of vitrified biomaterials.

Authors:  Yilin Liu; Joseph Kangas; Yiru Wang; Kanav Khosla; Jacqueline Pasek-Allen; Aaron Saunders; Steven Oldenburg; John Bischof
Journal:  Nanoscale       Date:  2020-06-03       Impact factor: 7.790

8.  Survival and post-warming in vitro competence of human oocytes after high security closed system vitrification.

Authors:  N De Munck; G Verheyen; L Van Landuyt; D Stoop; H Van de Velde
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2013-01-25       Impact factor: 3.412

Review 9.  Preserving human cells for regenerative, reproductive, and transfusion medicine.

Authors:  Waseem Asghar; Rami El Assal; Hadi Shafiee; Raymond M Anchan; Utkan Demirci
Journal:  Biotechnol J       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 4.677

10.  Clinical evaluation of two formulations of slow-freezing solutions for cleavage stage embryos.

Authors:  Li Fang; Liang Jin; Enshu Li; Long Cui; Yinghui Ye
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2016-07-27       Impact factor: 3.412

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