| Literature DB >> 23509810 |
Jason Pacchiarotti1, Thomas Ramos, Kyle Howerton, Scott Greilach, Karina Zaragoza, Marnie Olmstead, Fariborz Izadyar.
Abstract
Recent work in preservation of female fertility as well as new information on the nature of spermatogonial stem cells has prompted an investigation into the possibility of an effective clinical-grade procedure for the cryopreservation of testicular cells and/or tissue. Clinical-grade reagents, validated equipment, and protocols consistent with cGTP/cGMP standards were used in developing a procedure suitable for the safe and effective cryopreservation of human testicular cells and tissues. These procedures were designed to be compliant with the relevant FDA regulations. The procedure proved to effectively cryopreserve both testicular cells and tissue. The cryopreservation of testicular tissue was comparable in most aspects we measured to the cryopreservation of isolated cells, except that the viability of the cells from cryopreserved testicular tissue was found to be significantly higher. On the other hand, cryopreservation of cells is preferred for cell analysis, quality control, and sterility testing. This study demonstrates that testicular tissue and cells from sexual reassignment patients can be successfully cryopreserved with a clinical-grade procedure and important cell populations are not only preserved but also enriched by the process. Further studies will determine whether these findings from hormone-treated patients can be generalized to other patients.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23509810 PMCID: PMC3581100 DOI: 10.1155/2013/930962
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Viability of cells before and after cryopreservation.
| Patient | Viability of cells | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh cells | Frozen cells | Frozen tissue | |
| 1 | 84.9% | 38.1% | 70.1% |
| 2 | 91.9% | 64.1% | 81.8% |
| 3 | 93.0% | 53.8% | 68.9% |
| 4 | 90.6% | 53.3% | 75.9% |
| 5 | 90.2% | 52.8% | 73.5% |
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| Average | 90.1% | 52.4%a | 74.0%b |
| SEM | 1.3% | 3.9% | 2.2% |
The viability of each cell population was determined by dividing the number of viable cells counted with the number of total cells counted (viable + dead). Two sample t test was used for statistical analysis and P < 0.05 was considered as significant. ab P = 0.0019.
Number of viable cells per gram of tissue and recovery of cryopreserved cells.
| Patient | Viable cells per gram of tissue | Percent Recovery | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh cells | Frozen cells | Frozen tissue | Frozen cells | Frozen tissue | |
| 1 | 15,300,000 | 4,057,018 | 6,630,259 | 26.5% | 43.3% |
| 2 | 42,800,000 | 13,312,147 | 32,958,482 | 31.1% | 77.0% |
| 3 | 26,900,000 | 4,114,322 | 17,889,704 | 15.3% | 66.5% |
| 4 | 68,624,368 | 21,006,944 | 11,224,466 | 30.6% | 16.4% |
| 5 | 58,877,485 | 27,549,020 | 10,704,884 | 46.8% | 18.2% |
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| Average | 42,500,371 | 14,007,890 | 15,881,559 | 33.0% | 37.4% |
| SEM | 9,313,258 | 4,390,103 | 4,390,059 | 4.8% | 11.7% |
The number of cells calculated per gram of tissue is compared between isolating cells from fresh tissue, cryopreserved cells, and cryopreserved tissue. For fresh cells, the weight of the tissue of each enzymatic digestion was determined. For frozen cells, the number of cells recovered from each frozen vial was used to calculate how many cells would have been recovered had the cells from 1 gram of tissue been frozen. For frozen tissue, the number of cells isolated from each piece after thawing was used in conjunction with the weight of the tissue before freezing. For all three, only viable cells were used for the calculations. Cell recovery was calculated by dividing the number of viable cells per gram of tissue from either the cryopreserved cell or cryopreserved tissue with the viable cells from fresh tissue cell isolation.
Figure 1Immunolocalization of cell marker and representative images of testicular cross-sections from estrogen-treated patients. This figure shows localization of SSEA4 and VASA positive and various degrees of spermatogenesis in the human testicular tissue collected from sexual reassignment patients. SSEA4 only stains the cells along the basement membrane of the seminiferous tubules. VASA stains all the germ cells including those along the basement membrane and in the lumen of the seminiferous tubules. Note various degrees of spermatogenesis were found in testes collected from three sexual reassignment patients (HT-5, HT-6, and HT-7).
Recovery of viable cells positive for cell marker per gram of tissue.
| Patient | SSEA4+ | LHR+ | VASA+ | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh cells | Frozen cells | Frozen tissue | Fresh cells | Frozen cells | Frozen tissue | Fresh cells | Frozen cells | Frozen tissue | |
| 1 | 382,500 | 133,392 | 126,144 | 459,000 | 222,571 | 523,697 | 10,128,600 | 2,894,214 | 5,642,505 |
| 2 | 642,000 | 271,081 | 540,099 | 1,883,200 | 378,955 | 5,003,870 | 8,089,200 | 5,820,763 | 24,075,066 |
| 3 | 215,200 | 141,845 | 215,335 | 1,102,900 | 67,546 | 1,069,848 | 10,733,100 | 1,939,856 | 11,733,700 |
| 4 | 829,602 | 259,954 | 108,069 | 3,402,562 | 1,201,910 | 644,282 | 28,455,915 | 11,992,882 | 6,595,656 |
| 5 | 1,085,311 | 426,618 | 599,564 | 1,141,806 | 1,865,490 | 3,814,563 | 25,813,056 | 15,991,324 | 6,356,519 |
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| Average | 630,923 | 246,578 | 317,842 | 1,597,894 | 747,294 | 2,211,252 | 16,643,974 | 7,727,808 | 10,880,689 |
| SEM | 146,814 | 50,549 | 99,337 | 477,708 | 323,267 | 872,536 | 4,096,440 | 2,567,434 | 3,288,223 |
| Percent recovery | N/A | 39.1% | 50.4% | N/A | 46.8% | 138.4% | N/A | 46.4% | 65.4% |
The number of cells positive for each marker per gram of tissue isolated from fresh tissue cell isolation and recovered from either frozen cell or frozen tissue. Percent Recovery was calculated by dividing the average after cryopreservation by the average before cryopreservation. No significant differences were observed.
Figure 2Flow cytometry analysis of the enrichment of cells positive for each marker before and after cryopreservation. The numbers of viable cells positive for each marker were determined by flow cytometric analysis and are expressed as a percentage of the total viable cells in each condition. VASA positive cells were fixed before staining. VASA positive cells were counted without information about which ones were viable or dead. This graph shows that the average percentage of cells positive for each marker is higher after cryopreservation of cells and tissue. Two-sample t-test was used for statistical analysis and P < 0.05 was considered significant. ab P = 0.0188.
Pros and cons of cryopreservation of testicular cells and tissue for clinical application.
| Material to Freeze | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Tissue | (1) Requires less time and effort. | (1) Cells have to be isolated first before transplantation or other procedure. |
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| Cells | (1) A complete profile of the viability, sterility, and cellular composition has been collected before cryopreservation. | (1) Requires more time and effort for cell dissociation. |