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Title:
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Cryopreservation of hippocampal slices by vitrification
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Author: |
Y. Pichugin, G.M. Fahy, R. Morin
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Citation: |
Cryobiology 52 (2006) 228-240
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Abstract: |
Although much interest has attended the cryopreservation of immature neurons for subsequent therapeutic intracerebral transplantation, there are no reports on the cryopreservation of organized adult cerebral tissue slices of potential interest for pharmaceutical drug development. We report here the first experiments on cryopreservation of mature rat transverse hippocampal slices. Freezing at 1.2 oC/min to -20 oC or below using 10 or 30% v/v glycerol or 20% v/v dimethyl sulfoxide yielded extremely poor results. Hippocampal slices were also rapidly inactivated by simple exposure to a temperature of 0 oC in artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF). This effect was mitigated somewhat by 0.8 mM vitamin C, the use of a more "intracellular" version of aCSF having reduced sodium and calcium levels and higher potassium levels, and the presence of a 25% w/v mixture of dimethyl sulfoxide, formamide, and ethylene glycol ("VEG solutes"; Cryobiology 48, pp.22-35, 2004). It was not mitigated by glycerol, aspirin, indomethacin, or mannitol addition to aCSF. When RPS-2 (Cryobiology 21, pp. 260-273, 1984) was used as a carrier solution for up to 50% w/v VEG solutes, 0 oC was more protective than 10 oC. Raising VEG concentration to 53% w/v allowed slice vitrification without injury from vitrification and rewarming per se, but was much more damaging than exposure to 50% w/v VEG. This problem was overcome by using the analogous 61% w/v VM3 vitrification solution (Cryobiology 48, pp. 157-178, 2004) containing polyvinylpyrrolidone and two extracellular "ice blockers". With VM3, it was possible to attain a tissue K+/Na+ ratio after vitrification ranging from 91 to 108% of that obtained with untreated control slices. Microscopic examination showed severe damage in frozen-thawed slices, but generally good to excellent ultrastructural and histological preservation after vitrification. Our results provide the first demonstration that both the viability and the structure of mature organized, complex neural networks can be well preserved by vitrification. These results may assist neuropsychiatric drug evaluation and development and the transplantation of integrated brain regions to correct brain disease or injury.
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Article Link |
Http://www.21CMPublications.com/PubFiles/23/hippo_published.pdf
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