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1.
Cryobiology ; 115: 104893, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38609033

RESUMEN

Organs cryopreserved by vitrification are exposed to the lowest possible concentration of cryoprotectants for the least time necessary to successfully avoid ice formation. Faster cooling and warming rates enable lower concentrations and perfusion times, reducing toxicity. Since warming rates necessary to avoid ice formation during recovery from vitrification are typically faster than cooling rates necessary for vitrification, warming speed is a major determining factor for successful vitrification. Dielectric warming uses an oscillating electric field to directly heat water and cryoprotectant molecules inside organs to achieve warming that's faster and more uniform than can be achieved by heat conduction from the organ surface. This work studied 27 MHz dielectric warming of rabbit kidneys perfused with M22 vitrification solution. The 27 MHz frequency was chosen because its long wavelength and penetration depth are suitable for human organs, because it had an anticipated favorable temperature of maximum dielectric absorption in M22, and because it's an allocated frequency for industrial and amateur use with inexpensive amplifiers available. Previously vitrified kidneys were warmed from -100 °C by placement in a 27 MHz electric field formed between parallel capacitor plates in a resonant circuit. Power was varied during warming to maintain constant electric field amplitude between the plates. Maximum power absorption occurred near -70 °C, with a peak warming rate near 150 °C/min in 50 mL total volume with approximately 500 W power. After some optimization, it was possible to warm ∼13 g vitrified kidneys with unprecedentedly little injury from medullary ice formation and a favorable serum creatinine trend after transplant. Distinct behaviors of power absorption and system tuning observed as a function of temperature during warming are promising for non-invasive thermometry and future automated control of the warming process at even faster rates with user-defined temperature dependence.


Asunto(s)
Criopreservación , Crioprotectores , Riñón , Vitrificación , Animales , Conejos , Criopreservación/métodos , Crioprotectores/química , Calor , Preservación de Órganos/métodos , Preservación de Órganos/instrumentación
2.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 8(19): e2101691, 2021 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34382371

RESUMEN

Vitrification can dramatically increase the storage of viable biomaterials in the cryogenic state for years. Unfortunately, vitrified systems ≥3 mL like large tissues and organs, cannot currently be rewarmed sufficiently rapidly or uniformly by convective approaches to avoid ice crystallization or cracking failures. A new volumetric rewarming technology entitled "nanowarming" addresses this problem by using radiofrequency excited iron oxide nanoparticles to rewarm vitrified systems rapidly and uniformly. Here, for the first time, successful recovery of a rat kidney from the vitrified state using nanowarming, is shown. First, kidneys are perfused via the renal artery with a cryoprotective cocktail (CPA) and silica-coated iron oxide nanoparticles (sIONPs). After cooling at -40 °C min-1 in a controlled rate freezer, microcomputed tomography (µCT) imaging is used to verify the distribution of the sIONPs and the vitrified state of the kidneys. By applying a radiofrequency field to excite the distributed sIONPs, the vitrified kidneys are nanowarmed at a mean rate of 63.7 °C min-1 . Experiments and modeling show the avoidance of both ice crystallization and cracking during these processes. Histology and confocal imaging show that nanowarmed kidneys are dramatically better than convective rewarming controls. This work suggests that kidney nanowarming holds tremendous promise for transplantation.


Asunto(s)
Criopreservación/métodos , Riñón/fisiología , Nanopartículas , Recalentamiento/métodos , Vitrificación , Animales , Compuestos Férricos , Riñón/anatomía & histología , Masculino , Modelos Animales , Ratas , Ratas Sprague-Dawley , Microtomografía por Rayos X/métodos
3.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2180: 27-97, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32797408

RESUMEN

Vitrification is an alternative to cryopreservation by freezing that enables hydrated living cells to be cooled to cryogenic temperatures in the absence of ice. Vitrification simplifies and frequently improves cryopreservation because it eliminates mechanical injury from ice, eliminates the need to find optimal cooling and warming rates, eliminates the importance of differing optimal cooling and warming rates for cells in mixed cell type populations, eliminates the need to find a frequently imperfect compromise between solution effects injury and intracellular ice formation, and can enable chilling injury to be "outrun" by using rapid cooling without a risk of intracellular ice formation. On the other hand, vitrification requires much higher concentrations of cryoprotectants than cryopreservation by freezing, which introduces greater risks of both osmotic damage and cryoprotectant toxicity. Fortunately, a large number of remedies for the latter problem have been discovered over the past 35 years, and osmotic damage can in most cases be eliminated or adequately controlled by paying careful attention to cryoprotectant introduction and washout techniques. Vitrification therefore has the potential to enable the superior and convenient cryopreservation of a wide range of biological systems (including molecules, cells, tissues, organs, and even some whole organisms), and it is also increasingly recognized as a successful strategy for surviving harsh environmental conditions in nature. But the potential of vitrification is sometimes limited by an insufficient understanding of the complex physical and biological principles involved, and therefore a better understanding may not only help to improve present outcomes but may also point the way to new strategies that may be yet more successful in the future. This chapter accordingly describes the basic principles of vitrification and indicates the broad potential biological relevance of this alternative method of cryopreservation.


Asunto(s)
Permeabilidad de la Membrana Celular , Criopreservación/métodos , Crioprotectores/farmacología , Liofilización/métodos , Vitrificación , Animales , Supervivencia Celular , Humanos
4.
Magn Reson Med ; 83(5): 1750-1759, 2020 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31815324

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Herein, we evaluate the use of MRI as a tool for assessing iron oxide nanoparticle (IONP) distribution within IONP perfused organs and vascularized composite allografts (VCAs) (i.e., hindlimbs) prepared for cryopreservation. METHODS: Magnetic resonance imaging was performed on room-temperature organs and VCAs perfused with IONPs and were assessed at 9.4 T. Quantitative T1 mapping and T2∗ -weighted images were acquired using sweep imaging with Fourier transformation and gradient-echo sequences, respectively. Verification of IONP localization was performed through histological assessment and microcomputer tomography. RESULTS: Quantitative imaging was achieved for organs and VCAs perfused with up to 642 mMFe (36 mgFe /mL), which is above previous demonstrations of upper limit detection in agarose (35.7mMFe [2 mgFe /mL]). The stability of IONPs in the perfusate had an effect on the quality of distribution and imaging within organs or VCA. Finally, MRI provided more accurate IONP localization than Prussian blue histological staining in this system, wherein IONPs remain primarily in the vasculature. CONCLUSION: Using MRI, we were able to assess the distribution of IONPs throughout organs and VCAs varying in complexity. Additional studies are necessary to better understand this system and validate the calibration between T1 measurements and IONP concentration.


Asunto(s)
Nanopartículas de Magnetita , Nanopartículas , Animales , Compuestos Férricos , Nanopartículas Magnéticas de Óxido de Hierro , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Coloración y Etiquetado
5.
Cryobiology ; 82: 70-77, 2018 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29660316

RESUMEN

Vitrification tendency and stability of the amorphous state were analyzed by means of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) for the vitrification solution DP6, with and without additional solutes to enhance ice suppression. This study is a part of an ongoing research effort to characterize the thermophysical and mechanical properties of DP6 and its derivatives, and their qualities as cryoprotective solutions. DP6 was determined to have a critical cooling rate necessary to ensure vitrification of 2.7 °C/min. The following additional solutions were tested: DP6 + 6% (2R, 3R) 2,3-butanediol, DP6 + 6% 1,3-cyclohexanediol, DP6 + 6% (0.175M) sucrose, DP6 + 12% PEG 400, and DP6 + 17.1% (0.5 M) sucrose. The additives decreased the critical cooling rate of the DP6 solution to rates below 1 °C/min that were not quantifiable by the DSC techniques used. The following critical warming rates necessary to avoid devitrification were identified for DP6 and the modified solutions, respectively: 189 °C/min, 5 °C/min, ≈ 1 °C/min, 15 °C/min, <1 °C/min, and <1 °C/min. Glass transition temperatures and melting temperatures were also measured. Sucrose was the least effective additive on a per mass basis, with 1,3-cyclohexanediol appearing to be the most effective additive for suppressing ice formation in DP6.


Asunto(s)
Butileno Glicoles/química , Criopreservación/métodos , Crioprotectores/química , Ciclohexanoles/química , Dimetilsulfóxido/química , HEPES/química , Polietilenglicoles/química , Glicoles de Propileno/química , Sacarosa/química , Vitrificación , Animales , Rastreo Diferencial de Calorimetría , Frío , Transición de Fase , Temperatura de Transición
6.
J Biomech Eng ; 140(1)2018 Jan 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28753690

RESUMEN

This study focuses on thermal analysis of the problem of scaling up from the vitrification of rabbit kidneys to the vitrification of human kidneys, where vitrification is the preservation of biological material in the glassy state. The basis for this study is a successful cryopreservation protocol for a rabbit kidney model, based on using a proprietary vitrification solution known as M22. Using the finite element analysis (FEA) commercial code ANSYS, heat transfer simulations suggest that indeed the rabbit kidney unquestionably cools rapidly enough to be vitrified based on known intrarenal concentrations of M22. Scaling up 21-fold, computer simulations suggest less favorable conditions for human kidney vitrification. In this case, cooling rates below -100 °C are sometimes slower than 1 °C/min, a rate that provides a clear-cut margin of safety at all temperatures based on the stability of rabbit kidneys in past studies. Nevertheless, it is concluded in this study that vitrifying human kidneys is possible without significant ice damage, assuming that human kidneys can be perfused with M22 as effectively as rabbit kidneys. The thermal analysis suggests that cooling rates can be further increased by a careful design of the cryogenic protocol and by tailoring the container to the shape of the kidney, in contrast to the present cylindrical container. This study demonstrates the critical need for the thermal analysis of experimental cryopreservation and highlights the unmet need for measuring the thermophysical properties of cryoprotective solutions under conditions relevant to realistic thermal histories.


Asunto(s)
Criopreservación , Riñón , Temperatura , Vitrificación , Animales , Análisis de Elementos Finitos , Humanos , Conejos
7.
Cryobiology ; 72(2): 169-82, 2016 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26687388

RESUMEN

The first Organ Banking Summit was convened from Feb. 27 - March 1, 2015 in Palo Alto, CA, with events at Stanford University, NASA Research Park, and Lawrence Berkeley National Labs. Experts at the summit outlined the potential public health impact of organ banking, discussed the major remaining scientific challenges that need to be overcome in order to bank organs, and identified key opportunities to accelerate progress toward this goal. Many areas of public health could be revolutionized by the banking of organs and other complex tissues, including transplantation, oncofertility, tissue engineering, trauma medicine and emergency preparedness, basic biomedical research and drug discovery - and even space travel. Key remaining scientific sub-challenges were discussed including ice nucleation and growth, cryoprotectant and osmotic toxicities, chilling injury, thermo-mechanical stress, the need for rapid and uniform rewarming, and ischemia/reperfusion injury. A variety of opportunities to overcome these challenge areas were discussed, i.e. preconditioning for enhanced stress tolerance, nanoparticle rewarming, cyroprotectant screening strategies, and the use of cryoprotectant cocktails including ice binding agents.


Asunto(s)
Bancos de Muestras Biológicas , Criopreservación/métodos , Crioprotectores/farmacología , Preservación de Órganos/métodos , Vitrificación , Humanos , Trasplante de Órganos
8.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1257: 21-82, 2015.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25428002

RESUMEN

Vitrification is an alternative approach to cryopreservation that enables hydrated living cells to be cooled to cryogenic temperatures in the absence of ice. Vitrification simplifies and frequently improves cryopreservation because it eliminates mechanical injury from ice, eliminates the need to find optimal cooling and warming rates, eliminates the importance of differing optimal cooling and warming rates for cells in mixed cell type populations, eliminates the need to find a frequently imperfect compromise between solution effects injury and intracellular ice formation, and enables cooling to be rapid enough to "outrun" chilling injury, but it complicates the osmotic effects of adding and removing cryoprotective agents and introduces a greater risk of cryoprotectant toxicity during the addition and removal of cryoprotectants. Fortunately, a large number of remedies for the latter problem have been discovered over the past 30+ years, and the former problem can in most cases be eliminated or adequately controlled by careful attention to technique. Vitrification is therefore beginning to realize its potential for enabling the superior and convenient cryopreservation of most types of biological systems (including molecules, cells, tissues, organs, and even some whole organisms), and vitrification is even beginning to be recognized as a successful strategy of nature for surviving harsh environmental conditions. However, many investigators who employ vitrification or what they incorrectly imagine to be vitrification have only a rudimentary understanding of the basic principles of this relatively new and emerging approach to cryopreservation, and this often limits the practical results that can be achieved. A better understanding may therefore help to improve present results while pointing the way to new strategies that may be yet more successful in the future. To assist this understanding, this chapter describes the basic principles of vitrification and indicates the broad potential biological relevance of vitrification.


Asunto(s)
Criopreservación/métodos , Vitrificación , Animales , Supervivencia Celular , Crioprotectores/química , Crioprotectores/toxicidad , Humanos , Hielo/análisis , Ósmosis , Estabilidad Proteica , Proteínas/química
10.
Cryobiology ; 64(3): 301-3; author reply 304-5, 2012 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22330639

RESUMEN

Electromagnetic warming has a long history in cryobiology as a preferred method for recovering large tissue masses from cryopreservation, especially from cryopreservation by vitrification. It is less well-known that electromagnetic fields may be able to influence ice formation during cryopreservation by non-thermal mechanisms. Both theory and published data suggest that static and oscillating electric fields can respectively promote or inhibit ice formation under certain conditions. Evidence is less persuasive for magnetic fields. Recent claims that static magnetic fields smaller than 1 mT can improve cryopreservation by freezing are specifically questioned.


Asunto(s)
Criopreservación/métodos , Crioprotectores/farmacología , Pulpa Dental/citología , Pulpa Dental/metabolismo , Campos Electromagnéticos , Magnetismo/instrumentación , Ligamento Periodontal/citología , Ligamento Periodontal/metabolismo , Bancos de Tejidos , Humanos
11.
Cryobiology ; 60(1): 11-22, 2010 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19538955

RESUMEN

Vitrification is a process in which a liquid begins to behave as a solid during cooling without any substantial change in molecular arrangement or thermodynamic state variables. The physical phenomenon of vitrification is relevant to both cryopreservation by freezing, in which cells survive in glass between ice crystals, and cryopreservation by vitrification in which a whole sample is vitrified. The change from liquid to solid behavior is called the glass transition. It is coincident with liquid viscosity reaching 10(13) Poise during cooling, which corresponds to a shear stress relaxation time of several minutes. The glass transition can be understood on a molecular level as a loss of rotational and translational degrees of freedom over a particular measurement timescale, leaving only bond vibration within a fixed molecular structure. Reduced freedom of molecular movement results in decreased heat capacity and thermal expansivity in glass relative to the liquid state. In cryoprotectant solutions, the change from liquid to solid properties happens over a approximately 10 degrees C temperature interval centered on a glass transition temperature, typically near -120 degrees C (+/-10 degrees C) for solutions used for vitrification. Loss of freedom to quickly rearrange molecular position causes liquids to depart from thermodynamic equilibrium as they turn into a glass during vitrification. Residual molecular mobility below the glass transition temperature allows glass to very slowly contract, release heat, and decrease entropy during relaxation toward equilibrium. Although diffusion is practically non-existent below the glass transition temperature, small local movements of molecules related to relaxation have consequences for cryobiology. In particular, ice nucleation in supercooled vitrification solutions occurs at remarkable speed until at least 15 degrees C below the glass transition temperature.


Asunto(s)
Criopreservación/métodos , Animales , Crioprotectores/química , Relación Dosis-Respuesta a Droga , Congelación , Vidrio , Glicerol/química , Humanos , Hielo , Modelos Biológicos , Física/métodos , Temperatura , Termodinámica , Factores de Tiempo , Viscosidad
12.
Cryobiology ; 2009 Jun 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19501080

RESUMEN

The Publisher regrets that this article is an accidental duplication of an article that has already been published, doi:10.1016/j.cryobiol.2009.05.007. The duplicate article has therefore been withdrawn.

13.
Organogenesis ; 5(3): 167-75, 2009 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20046680

RESUMEN

Cryopreservation would potentially very much facilitate the inventory control and distribution of laboratory-produced organs and tissues. Although simple freezing methods are effective for many simple tissues, bioartificial organs and complex tissue constructs may be unacceptably altered by ice formation and dissolution. Vitrification, in which the liquids in a living system are converted into the glassy state at low temperatures, provides a potential alternative to freezing that can in principle avoid ice formation altogether. The present report provides a brief overview of the problem of renal vitrification. We report here the detailed case history of a rabbit kidney that survived vitrification and subsequent transplantation, a case that demonstrates both the fundamental feasibility of complex system vitrification and the obstacles that must still be overcome, of which the chief one in the case of the kidney is adequate distribution of cryoprotectant to the renal medulla. Medullary equilibration can be monitored by monitoring urine concentrations of cryoprotectant, and urine flow rate correlates with vitrification solution viscosity and the speed of equilibration. By taking these factors into account and by using higher perfusion pressures as per the case of the kidney that survived vitrification, it is becoming possible to design protocols for equilibrating kidneys that protect against both devitrification and excessive cryoprotectant toxicity.

14.
Rejuvenation Res ; 9(2): 279-91, 2006.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16706656

RESUMEN

Transplantation can be regarded as one form of "antiaging medicine" that is widely accepted as being effective in extending human life. The current number of organ transplants in the United States is on the order of 20,000 per year, but the need may be closer to 900,000 per year. Cadaveric and living-related donor sources are unlikely to be able to provide all of the transplants required, but the gap between supply and demand can be eliminated in principle by the field of regenerative medicine, including the present field of tissue engineering through which cell, tissue, and even organ replacements are being created in the laboratory. If so, it could allow over 30% of all deaths in the United States to be substantially postponed, raising the probability of living to the age of 80 by a factor of two and the odds of living to 90 by more than a factor of 10. This promise, however, depends on the ability to physically distribute the products of regenerative medicine to patients in need and to produce these products in a way that allows for adequate inventory control and quality assurance. For this purpose, the ability to cryogenically preserve (cryopreserve) cells, tissues, and even whole laboratory-produced organs may be indispensable. Until recently, the cryopreservation of organs has seemed a remote prospect to most observers, but developments over the past few years are rapidly changing the scientific basis for preserving even the most difficult and delicate organs for unlimited periods of time. Animal intestines and ovaries have been frozen, thawed, and shown to function after transplantation, but the preservation of vital organs will most likely require vitrification. With vitrification, all ice formation is prevented and the organ is preserved in the glassy state below the glass transition temperature (T(G)). Vitrification has been successful for many tissues such as veins, arteries, cartilage, and heart valves, and success has even been claimed for whole ovaries. For vital organs, a significant recent milestone for vitrification has been the ability to routinely recover rabbit kidneys after cooling to a mean intrarenal temperature of about -45 degrees C, as verified by life support function after transplantation. This temperature is not low enough for long-term banking, but research continues on preservation below -45 degrees C, and some encouraging preliminary evidence has been obtained indicating that kidneys can support life after vitrification. Full development of tissue engineering and organ generation from stem cells, when combined with the ability to bank these laboratory-produced products, in theory could dramatically increase median life expectancy even in the absence of any improvements in mitigating aging processes on a fundamental level.


Asunto(s)
Criopreservación/métodos , Preservación de Órganos/métodos , Trasplante de Órganos , Animales , Trasplante de Corazón , Humanos , Trasplante de Riñón , Trasplante de Hígado , Trasplante de Pulmón , Rejuvenecimiento , Temperatura , Supervivencia Tisular
15.
Cryobiology ; 50(3): 325-31, 2005 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15904915

RESUMEN

Low molecular weight copolymers of polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) are known to be potent inhibitors of ice formation in solutions used for cryopreservation by vitrification, even at concentrations as low as one part per million. Concentrated aqueous solutions of these polymers tend to become turbid after preparation. Condensed particles causing turbidity were isolated from a commercially available PVA-based ice blocker (X-1000) and found to consist of a polymer subfraction that is especially effective at ice blocking. Fifty seven percentage (w/w) of ethylene glycol (EG) in distilled water and 0.025% of the condensate polymer showed similar stability against devitrification as 57% EG+0.1% ordinary X-1000. At higher concentrations, 56.9% EG+0.1% condensate polymer was as effective as 56% EG+1% ordinary X-1000. All solutions containing ice blocker showed much less devitrification during warming than a 57% EG control solution. The condensate polymer was found to be strongly self-associating and less water soluble than ordinary X-1000. The mean molecular weight of the condensate polymer was approximately 1400 compared to 2100 for ordinary X-1000. Proton NMR revealed no large chemical differences. Subtle differences in composition or stereochemistry, perhaps in local regions of molecules, must be responsible for the dramatic differences in physical behavior and ice blocking effectiveness of the condensate polymer.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas Anticongelantes/química , Crioprotectores/química , Alcohol Polivinílico/química , Criopreservación , Congelación , Hielo , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética
16.
Cryobiology ; 48(2): 157-78, 2004 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15094092

RESUMEN

The cryopreservation of organs became an active area of research in the 1950s as a result of the rediscovery of the cryoprotective properties of glycerol by Polge, Smith, and Parkes in 1949. Over the ensuing four decades of research in this area, the advantages of vitrification, or ice-free cryopreservation, have become apparent. To date, experimental attempts to apply vitrification methods to vascularized whole organs have been confined almost entirely to the rabbit kidney. Using techniques available as of 1997, it was possible to vitrify blood vessels and smaller systems with reasonable success, but not whole organs. Beginning in 1998, a series of novel advances involving the control of cryoprotectant toxicity, nucleation, crystal growth, and chilling injury began to provide the tools needed to achieve success. Based on these new findings, we were first able to show that an 8.4M solution (VMP) designed to prevent chilling injury at -22 degrees C was entirely non-toxic to rabbit kidneys when perfused at -3 degrees C and permitted perfusion-cooling to -22 degrees C with only mild additional damage. We next investigated the ability of the kidney to tolerate a 9.3M solution known as M22, which does not devitrify when warmed from below -150 degrees C at 1 degrees C/min. When M22 was added and removed at -22 degrees C, it was sometimes [corrected] fatal, but when it was perfused for 25min at -22 degrees C and washed out simultaneously with warming, postoperative renal function recovered fully. When kidneys loaded with M22 at -22 degrees C were further cooled to an average intrarenal temperature of about -45 degrees C (about halfway through the putative temperature zone of increasing vulnerability to chilling injury), all kidneys supported life after transplantation and returned creatinine values to baseline, though after a higher transient creatinine peak. However, medullary, papillary, and pelvic biopsies taken from kidneys perfused with M22 for 25min at -22 degrees C were found to devitrify when vitrified and rewarmed at 20 degrees C/min in a differential scanning calorimeter. It remains to be determined whether this devitrification is seriously damaging and whether it can be suppressed by improving cryoprotectant distribution to more weakly perfused regions of the kidney or by rewarming at higher rates. In conclusion, although the goal of organ vitrification remains elusive, the prospects for success have never been more promising.


Asunto(s)
Criopreservación/métodos , Crioprotectores , Riñón , Preservación de Órganos/métodos , Supervivencia Tisular , Animales , Criopreservación/historia , Criopreservación/tendencias , Historia del Siglo XX , Trasplante de Riñón , Preservación de Órganos/tendencias , Perfusión , Conejos , Temperatura , Factores de Tiempo
17.
Cryobiology ; 48(1): 22-35, 2004 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14969679

RESUMEN

Long-term preservation of complex engineered tissues and organs at cryogenic temperatures in the absence of ice has been prevented to date by the difficulty of discovering combinations of cryoprotectants that are both sufficiently non-toxic and sufficiently stable to allow viability to be maintained and ice formation to be avoided during slow cooling to the glass transition temperature and subsequent slow rewarming. A new theory of the origin of non-specific cryoprotectant toxicity was shown to account, in a rabbit renal cortical slice model, for the toxicities of 20 vitrification solutions and to permit the design of new solutions that are dramatically less toxic than previously known solutions for diverse biological systems. Unfertilized mouse ova vitrified with one of the new solutions were successfully fertilized and regained 80% of the absolute control (untreated) rate of development to blastocysts, whereas ova vitrified in VSDP, the best previous solution, developed to blastocysts at a rate only 30% of that of controls. Whole rabbit kidneys perfused at -3 degrees C with another new solution at a concentration of cryoprotectant (8.4M) that was previously 100% lethal at this temperature exhibited no damage after transplantation and immediate contralateral nephrectomy. It appears that cryoprotectant solutions that are composed to be at the minimum concentrations needed for vitrification at moderate cooling rates are toxic in direct proportion to the average strength of water hydrogen bonding by the polar groups on the permeating cryoprotectants in the solution. Vitrification solutions that are based on minimal perturbation of intracellular water appear to be superior and provide new hope that the successful vitrification of natural organs as well as tissue engineered or clonally produced organ and tissue replacements can be achieved.


Asunto(s)
Criopreservación/métodos , Crioprotectores/toxicidad , Preservación de Órganos/métodos , Conservación de Tejido/métodos , Animales , Creatinina/sangre , Femenino , Fertilización In Vitro , Técnicas In Vitro , Riñón/fisiología , Corteza Renal , Trasplante de Riñón/fisiología , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Ratones Endogámicos CBA , Modelos Biológicos , Óvulo , Conejos , Soluciones
18.
Cryobiology ; 44(1): 14-23, 2002 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12061844

RESUMEN

The simple linear polymer polyglycerol (PGL) was found to apparently bind and inhibit the ice nucleating activity of proteins from the ice nucleating bacterium Pseudomonas syringae. PGL of molecular mass 750 Da was added to a solution consisting of 1 ppm freeze-dried P. syringae 31A in water. Differential ice nucleator spectra were determined by measuring the distribution of freezing temperatures in a population of 98 drops of 1 microL volume. The mean freezing temperature was lowered from -6.8 degrees C (control) to -8.0,-9.4,-12.5, and -13.4 degrees C for 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, and 1% w/w PGL concentrations, respectively (SE < 0.2 degrees C). PGL was found to be an ineffective inhibitor of seven defined organic ice nucleating agents, whereas the general ice nucleation inhibitor polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) was found to be effective against five of the seven. The activity of PGL therefore seems to be specific against bacterial ice nucleating protein. PGL alone was an ineffective inhibitor of ice nucleation in small volumes of environmental or laboratory water samples, suggesting that the numerical majority of ice nucleating contaminants in nature may be of nonbacterial origin. However, PGL was more effective than PVA at suppressing initial ice nucleation events in large volumes, suggesting a ubiquitous sparse background of bacterial ice nucleating proteins with high nucleation efficiency. The combination of PGL and PVA was particularly effective for reducing ice formation in solutions used for cryopreservation by vitrification.


Asunto(s)
Crioprotectores/farmacología , Glicerol/farmacología , Hielo , Polímeros/farmacología , Pseudomonas/efectos de los fármacos , Pseudomonas/metabolismo , Proteínas de la Membrana Bacteriana Externa/antagonistas & inhibidores , Proteínas de la Membrana Bacteriana Externa/efectos de los fármacos , Proteínas de la Membrana Bacteriana Externa/metabolismo , Crioprotectores/metabolismo , Congelación , Agua Dulce , Glicerol/metabolismo , Polímeros/metabolismo , Unión Proteica , Soluciones
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