scholarly journals The effect of solution nonideality on modeling transmembrane water transport and diffusion-limited intracellular ice formation during cryopreservation

2014 ◽  
Vol 115 (14) ◽  
pp. 144701 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gang Zhao ◽  
Hiroshi Takamatsu ◽  
Xiaoming He
Author(s):  
Geer Yang ◽  
Aili Zhang ◽  
Lisa X. Xu ◽  
Xiaoming He

Modeling diffusion-limited intracellular ice formation (IIF) was first pioneered by Karlsson et al. [1]. The classical model in this work was further improved several studies later [2,3]. Nevertheless, as mentioned by Karlsson et al. in their original work [1], the approach used in the previous studies to estimate viscosity and mutual diffusion coefficient of intracellular solutions, the two most important properties that determine the rate of ice nucleation and crystal growth, is inaccurate. Moreover, the existing models are difficult to be used to study the intracellular ice nucleation and growth in different types of cells. In this study, the diffusion-limited IIF model was further improved with the capability to study the cell type dependence. The viscosity and diffusion coefficient of intracellular solution in the presence of glycerol during cryopreservation were estimated using free volume models reported in [4].


Author(s):  
Shoji Mori ◽  
Jeunghwan Choi ◽  
John Bischof

In cryopreservation protocols maximum survivability is achieved when cooling occurs slowly enough to avoid Intracellular ice formation (IIF) yet fast enough to avoid solute effects injury (1). IIF plays a significant role in cell damage during cryopreservation. IIF has been extensively studied using cryomicroscopy. This technique is a useful tool to understand the dynamic processes during cooling, i.e. volume change of cells and IIF occurrence associated with temperature. However it has some limitations in being applied to biological systems. The central assumption in cryomicroscopy is that the projected two-dimensional area of the cell can be extrapolated to a spherical three-dimensional volume. While reasonable for spherical cell systems, this assumption is inappropriate for obtaining quantitative volumetric information in nonspherical cell systems. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), however, can be applied to nonspherical cell systems. Thus, DSC exotherms during freezing needed to be compared with cryomicroscopy observations in simple spherical cell systems. Several studies related to IIF using DSC havebeen reported (2)–(5). Most of them, however, discussed only IIF peaks and/or Extracellular ice formation (EIF). In order to predict the optimum cooling rate from DSC results, it is important to quantify not only IIF and EIF but also water transport (WT) during cooling at various cooling rates.


2020 ◽  
Vol 93 ◽  
pp. 102689
Author(s):  
Zifei Li ◽  
Lingxiao Shen ◽  
Yu Huang ◽  
Xingxue Xiang ◽  
Gang Zhao ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Vladimir F. Bolyukh ◽  
Igor I. Katkov ◽  
Vsevolod Katkov ◽  
Ilya Yakhnenko

Kinetic (very rapid) vitrification (KVF) is a very promising approach in cryopreservation (CP) of biological materials as it is simple, avoids lethal intracellular ice formation (IIF) and minimizes damaging dehydration effects of extracellular crystallization. Moreover, achieving the ultra-high rates, which would prevent IIF during cooling and devitrification during resuscitation, and achieve KVF for practically any type of cells with one protocol of cooling and re-warming would be the “Holy Grail” of cell cryobiology [3]. However such hyperrapid rates currently require very small sample size which, however, is insufficient for many applications such as stem cells, blood or sperm. As the result, even smallest droplets of 0.25 microliters cannot be vitrified sufficiently fast to avoid the use of potentially toxic external vitrification agents such as DMSO or EG due to the Leidenfrost effect (LFE). In this presentation, we describe an entirely new system for hyperfast cooling of one-two order of magnitude larger samples that we call “KrioBlastTM”, which completely eliminates LFE. We have successfully vitrified up to 4,000 microliters of 15% glycerol solutions, which theoretically corresponds to the critical cooling rate of hundreds of thousands °C/min. We believe that such a system can revolutionize the future cryobiological paradigm.


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