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1.
Cryobiology ; 56(1): 28-35, 2008 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18045585

ABSTRACT

The effect of IIF in Pacific oyster oocytes was studied using cryo and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The viability of oocytes at each step of a published cryopreservation protocol was assessed in an initial experiment. Two major viability losses were identified; one when oocytes were cooled to -35 degrees C and the other when oocytes were plunged in liquid nitrogen. Although the cryomicroscope showed no evidence of IIF in oocytes cooled with this protocol, TEM revealed that these oocytes contained ice crystals and were at two developmental stages when frozen, prophase and metaphase I. To reduce IIF, the effect of seven cooling programmes involving cooling to -35 or -60 degrees C at 0.1 or 0.3 degrees C min(-1) and holding for 0 or 30 min at -35 or -60 degrees C was evaluated on post-thaw fertilization rate of oocytes. Regardless of the cooling rate or holding time, the fertilization rate of oocytes cooled to -60 degrees C was significantly lower than that of oocytes cooled to -35 degrees C. The overall results indicated that observations of IIF obtained from cryomicroscopy are limited to detection of larger amounts of ice within the cells. Although the amount of cellular ice may have been reduced by one of the programmes, fertilization was reduced significantly; suggesting that there is no correlation between the presence of intracellular ice and post-thaw fertilization rate. Therefore, oyster oocytes may be more susceptible to the effect of high solute concentrations and cell shrinkage than intracellular ice under the studied conditions.


Subject(s)
Crassostrea/physiology , Ice/adverse effects , Oocytes/physiology , Animals , Cell Survival , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Cryopreservation/methods , Female , Fertilization , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission
2.
Cryobiology ; 50(1): 21-8, 2005 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15710366

ABSTRACT

The pattern of ice formation during the freezing of Panagrolaimus davidi, an Antarctic nematode that can survive intracellular ice formation, was visualised using a freeze substitution technique and transmission electron microscopy. Nematodes plunged directly into liquid nitrogen had small ice crystals throughout their tissues, including nuclei and organelles, but did not survive. Those frozen at high subzero temperatures showed three patterns of ice formation: no ice, extracellular ice, and intracellular ice. Nematodes subjected to a slow-freezing regime (at -1 degrees C) had mainly extracellular ice (70.4%), with the bulk of the ice in the pseudocoel. Some (24.8%) had no ice within their bodies, due to cryoprotective dehydration. Nematodes subjected to a fast-freezing regime (at -4 degrees C) had intracellular (54%) and extracellular (42%) ice. Intracellular ice was confined to the cytoplasm of cells, with organelles in the spaces in between ice crystals. The survival of nematodes subjected to the fast-freezing regime (53%) was less than those subjected to the slow-freezing regime (92%).


Subject(s)
Cryopreservation/methods , Cryoprotective Agents/pharmacology , Acclimatization/physiology , Animals , Antarctic Regions , Body Water/metabolism , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Cytoplasm/metabolism , Dehydration , Freezing , Ice , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Rhabditida , Temperature , Time Factors
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