I am Md. Ali Haidar student at faculty of Agriculture, EXIM Bank Agricultural University Bangladesh. I am a future Agriculturist. I published my Presentation for helping other student.
3. What is Cryopreservation ?
Cryopreservation comes from the Greek word
“krayos” which means “frost”. Literally
cryopreservation is the preservation in
“frozen state”.
In Other sense, Cryopreservation is the
technique of freezing cells and tissues at very
low temperatures (sub-zero temperatures,
typically -196oC) at which the biological
material remains genetically stable and
metabolically inert, while minimizing ice
crystal formation.
6-Jul-17 3
4. History
Ernest John Christopher Polge, an English biologist, was
the first person to solve the mystery of how to preserve
living cells at very low temperatures in 1949.
During early 1950s, James E. Lovelock suggested that
increasing salt concentrations in a cell as it dehydrates to
lose water to the external ice might cause damage to the
cell.
6-Jul-17 4
5. In 1953, the research work of Jerome K.
Sherman led him to successfully freeze and
thaw human sperm.
In 1983, Alan Trounson, was credited for
successfully achieving a pregnancy after
freezing early human embryos one to three
days after fertilization.
6-Jul-17 5
History
6. Applications of cryopreservation
It is ideal method for long term conservation
of material.
Disease free plants can be conserved and
propagated.
Recalcitrant seeds can be maintained for long
time.
Endangered species can be maintained.
Pollens can be maintained to increase
longitivity.
Rare germplasm and other genetic
manipulations can be stored.
6-Jul-17 6
7. Equipment Require for Cryopreservation:
A reliable source of liquid nitrogen
Safety equipment ( gloves, apron, face shield, pumps
for dispensing liquid nitrogen from a large storage
dewars, trolleys for the transport of dewars).
Small (1-2 litre) liquid nitrogen resistant dewar(s).
Dewar(s) for the routine storage of liquid nitrogen.
Dewar(s) for the long term storage of spicemens.
Cryovilas, straws, boxes, canes, racks.
A refrigerent (-20 degree).
A programmable feezer with dewar and pump.
A water bath for thawing at 40 to 50 degree.
6-Jul-17 7
8. Why Liquid nitrogen is use?
Chemically inert
Relatively low cost
Non toxic
Non flammable
Readily available
6-Jul-17 8
10. Steps involved in cryopreservation
Selection of plant material
Morphological and physiological conditions of plant
material influence the ability of explants to survive
during cryopreservation. e.g. Ovules, pollen, Embryos,
Endosperm, Protoplast, etc.
Pregrowth
Pregrowth treatment protect the plant tissues against
exposure to liquid nitrogen. e.g. abscisic acid, praline
etc.
Addition of Cryoprotechtants
A cryoprotectant is a substance that is used to
protect biological tissue from freezing damage.
6-Jul-17 10
11. Vitrification
The term “vitrification” refers to any process resulting in
“glass formation”, the transformation from a liquid to a
solid in the absence of crystallization.
Cryprotective Dehydration
Dehydration can be achieved by growth in presence of
high concentration of osmotically active compounds like
sugars.
Encapsulation and Dehydration
This involves the encapsulation of tissues in calcium
alginate beads. Which are pre-grown in liquid culture
media containing high concentration of sucrose.
6-Jul-17 11
Steps involved in cryopreservation
12. Freezing
The plant material is placed in vials and plunged into liquid
nitrogen and decrease of -300 to -10000c or more occurs.
Slow Freezing
Tissue is slowly frozen with decrease in temperature from -0.1 to
10°c/min. Slow cooling permits the flow of water from the cells to
the outside, thereby promoting extracellular ice formation
instead of lethal intracellular freezing.
Stepwise Freezing
In this method slow freezing down to -20 to 40c. A stop for a
period of approximately 30 min and then additional rapid freezing
to -196c is done by plunging in liquid nitrogen.
6-Jul-17 12
Steps involved in cryopreservation
13. Storage
Storage of frozen material at correct temperature is as
important as freezing. The frozen cells/tissues are kept for
storage at temperature ranging from -70 to -196°c.
Thawing
It is done by putting ampoule containing the sample in a
warm water bath (35 to 40°c).
Determination of Survival or viability
Regrowth of the plants from stored tissues or cells is the
only test of survival of plant materials. Various viability
tests include Fluorescien diacetate (FDA) staining, growth
measurement by cell number , dry and fresh weight.
6-Jul-17 13
Steps involved in cryopreservation
14. Risks involved in cryopreservation techniques
Solution effects: As ice crystals grow in freezing water,
solutes are excluded, causing them to become
concentrated in the remaining liquid water. High
concentrations of some solutes can be very damaging.
Extracellular ice formation: When tissues are cooled
slowly, water migrates out of cells and ice forms in the
extracellular space. Too much extracellular ice can cause
mechanical damage to the cell membrane due to crushing.
6-Jul-17 14
15. Dehydration: Migration of water, causing
extracellular ice formation, can also cause cellular
dehydration. The associated stresses on the cell can
cause damage directly.
Intracellular ice formation: While
some organisms and tissues can tolerate some
extracellular ice, any appreciable intracellular ice is
almost always fatal to cells.
6-Jul-17 15
Risks involved in cryopreservation techniques
16. Main methods to prevent risks
Slow programmable freezing
The first step of the slow-freeze procedure is to expose the cell
to cryprotectant in a gradual step-wise fashion to slowly allow
equilibrium of the cell with the cryoprotectant while releasing
water. Once the cells have been cleared of the majority of
cellular water, they are placed in a container of some kind, such
as plastic or straw, a glass ampoule or a plastic vial.
The volume of the liquid surrounding the cells for slow freezing
is typically less than a teaspoon and may only be a few drops.
The pre-labeled container is filled, sealed and put away in a
programmable freezer, which slowly decreases the temperature
of the container over a period of minutes or hours to very low
temperatures.
When the container reaches temperatures between -30oC and -
85oC, the container holding the cells can be directly plunged
into liquid nitrogen to complete the cooling to -196oC.
6-Jul-17 16
17. Vitrification
This procedure uses higher concentrations of
cryoprotectants coupled with an almost instantaneous
freezing rate achieved by plunging cells directly into liquid
nitrogen.
Vitrification by passes the ice-crystal formation phase and
moves the water directly into a glass-like phase.
For vitrification, the cells are usually placed on the tip of a
straw and excess cryoprotectant is removed, leaving just
enough so that the cell clings to the container by surface
tension, prior to plunging in liquid nitrogen.
Because of the rapid freezing, the duration of exposure to
cryoprotectants is much less.
Warming of the cell to return it to normal metabolic
functioning must also be incredibly rapid.
6-Jul-17 17
Main methods to prevent risks
19. Freezable tissues
Semen
Blood
Special cells for transfusion
Stem cells
Tissue
Eggs (oocytes) in oocyte cryopreservation
Embryos
Ovarian tissue
Plant seeds or shoots
6-Jul-17 19
20. Preservation of Microbiology Cultures
Fungi
Fungi, notably zygomycetes, ascomycetes
and higher basidiomycetes, regardless of
sporulation, are able to be stored in liquid
nitrogen or deep-frozen. Crypreservation is a
hallmark method for fungi that do not
sporulate (otherwise other preservation
methods for spores can be used at lower
costs and ease), sporulate but have delicate
spores (large or freeze-dry sensitive), are
pathogenic (dangerous to keep metabolically
active fungus) or are to be used for genetic
stocks (ideally to have identical composition
as the original deposit).
6-Jul-17 20
21. Bacteria
Many common cultural laboratory strains are
deep-frozen to preserve genetically and
phenotypically stable, long-term stocks. Sub-
culturing and prolonged refrigerated samples
may lead to loss of plasmid(s) or mutations.
From a fresh culture plate, one single colony of
interest is chosen and liquid culture is made.
From the liquid culture, the medium is directly
mixed with equal amount of glycerol; the colony
should be checked for any defects like
mutations. All antibiotics should be washed from
the culture before long-term storage.
6-Jul-17 21
Preservation of Microbiology Cultures
22. Conclusion
Today, by the help of progressing biotechnology, it is
more often that we apply cryopreservation. While,
there are still insufficient researches especially for the
oocytes, studies on the cryopreservation of
immunological memory lymphoid cells, aortic root
allografts and osteoblasts for bone banking, are going
on. An updated, but discursive subject is postmortem
human reproduction; and it currently has many ethical
and legal problems a waiting to be solved. Recently, it
can be seen that vitrification is more preferable than
slow cooling as it is cheaper and easier to handle.
Cryopreservation of cornea, umbilical cord and
hematopoietic cells and sperm banking procedures
are performed routinely.
6-Jul-17 22