Survival of Plant Tissue at Super-Low Temperatures. IV. Cell Survival with Rapid Cooling and Rewarming
- 1 June 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 41 (6) , 1050-1054
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.41.6.1050
Abstract
Tissue sections of cortical cells from winter tree [Morus bombyeis] mounted between coverglasses with water were extracellulary prefrozen at the temperatures below-20[degree]C. Sufficiently prefrozen cells could survive immersion in liquid N2, irrespective of rewarming rate. In insufficiently prefrozen cells at temperatures (-5[degree] to -15[degree]), the rewarming rate seriously influenced the survival value. Slow rewarming in air destroyed all of the cells, while rapid rewarming in water at 30[degree] had no effect. An abrupt decrease in the survival of insufficiently prefrozen cells during rewarming following removal from liguid N2 was observed at temperatures above -60[degree]. Tissue sections immersed directly in isopentane bath below -60[degree] for 10 min. following prefreezing at -5[degree] or -10[degree] could survive subsequent rapid rewarming in water at 30[degree]. Thin unmounted tissue sections held with thin forceps and rapidly immersed in isopentane bath kept at various temperature from -5[degree] to 100[degree] from room temperature without prefreezing gave comparable results. It is necessary to go through rapidly a 0[degree] to -60[degree] temperature range in which the growth rate of intracellular crystalization nuclei are great inorder to maintain viability at super-low temperatures.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- 50 Years of Lithium Treatment of Bipolar Disorder: Taking on New ChallengesNeuropsychobiology, 2000
- Survival of Plant Tissue at Super-Low Temperature III. Relation between Effective Prefreezing Temperatures and the Degree of Front HardinessPlant Physiology, 1965
- EFFECTS OF FREEZING VELOCITIES IN CAUSING OR PREVENTING HEMOLYSIS.1963
- EFFECTS OF COOLING RATES ON THE PRESERVATION OF ERYTHROCYTES IN FROZEN GLYCEROLATED BLOOD.1963
- ON VARIOUS PHASE TRANSITIONS OCCURRING IN AQUEOUS SOLUTIONS AT LOW TEMPERATURESAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1960
- Effect of the rewarming velocity on the survival of embryonic tissues frozen after treatment in ethylene glycol.1954
- The protective action of neutral solutes against haemolysis by freezing and thawingBiochemical Journal, 1954