Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8464141 | Cryobiology | 2018 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Preventing intracellular ice formation is essential to cryopreserve cells. Prevention can be achieved by converting cell water into a non-crystalline glass, that is, to vitrify. The prevailing belief is that to achieve vitrification, cells must be suspended in a solution containing a high concentration of glass-inducing solutes and cooled rapidly. In this study, we vitrified 1-cell mouse embryos and examined the effect of the cooling rate, the warming rate, and the concentration of cryoprotectant on cell survival. Embryos were vitrified in cryotubes. The vitrification solutions used were EFS20, EFS30, and EFS40, which contained ethylene glycol (20, 30 and 40% v/v, respectively), Ficoll (24%, 21%, and 18% w/v, respectively) and sucrose (0.4 0.35, and 0.3â¯M, respectively). A 5-μl EFS solution suspended with 1-cell embryos was placed in a cryotube. After 2â¯min in an EFS solution at 23â¯Â°C, embryos were vitrified by direct immersion into liquid nitrogen. The sample was warmed at 34â¯Â°C/min, 4,600â¯Â°C/min and 6,600â¯Â°C/min. With EFS40, the survival was low regardless of the warming rate. With EFS30 and EFS20, survival was also low when the warming rate was low, but increased with higher warming rates, likely due to prevention of intracellular ice formation. When 1-cell embryos were vitrified with EFS20 and warmed rapidly, almost all of the embryos developed to blastocysts in vitro. Moreover, when vitrified 1-cell embryos were transferred to recipients at the 2-cell stage, 43% of them developed to term. In conclusion, we developed a vitrification method for 1-cell mouse embryos by rapid warming using cryotubes.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences (General)
Authors
Shinsuke Seki, Keita Basaki, Yukie Komatsu, Yasuyoshi Fukuda, Megumi Yano, Yuhei Matsuo, Takahiro Obata, Yukihisa Matsuda, Kazutoshi Nishijima,