| Literature DB >> 32996298 |
Kanav Khosla1, Joseph Kangas1, Yilin Liu1, Li Zhan1, Jonathan Daly2,3, Mary Hagedorn2,3, John Bischof4.
Abstract
This study shows for the first time the ability to rewarm cryopreserved zebrafish embryos that grow into adult fish capable of breeding normally. The protocol employs a single injection of cryoprotective agents (CPAs) and gold nanorods (GNRs) into the yolk and immersion in a precooling bath to dehydrate the perivitelline space. Then embryos are encapsulated within CPA and GNR droplets, plunged into liquid nitrogen, cryogenically stabilized, and rewarmed by a laser pulse. Postlaser nanowarming, embryos (n = 282) exhibit intact structure by 1 h (40%), continued development after 3 h (22%), movement after 24 h (11%), hatching after 48 h (9%), and swimming after Day 5 (3%). Finally, from fish that survives till Day 5, two larvae are grown to adulthood and spawned, yielding survival comparable to an unfrozen control. Future efforts will focus on improving the survival to adulthood and developing methods to cryopreserve large numbers of embryos for research, aquaculture, and biodiversity preservation.Entities:
Keywords: gold nanoparticles; photothermal heating; vitrification; zebrafish
Year: 2020 PMID: 32996298 DOI: 10.1002/adbi.202000138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Biosyst ISSN: 2366-7478