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Molecular and Histological Evaluation of Sheep Ovarian Tissue Subjected to Lyophilization

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Freeze-drying (or lyophilization) is a method to preserve cells and tissues in which frozen material is dried by sublimation of ice. One of the main advantages is that nitrogen and dry ice are no longer required for the storage and shipment of biological material, which can be kept a...

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Autores principales: Bebbere, Daniela, Arav, Amir, Nieddu, Stefano Mario, Burrai, Giovanni Pietro, Succu, Sara, Patrizio, Pasquale, Ledda, Sergio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8697944/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34944182
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11123407
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author Bebbere, Daniela
Arav, Amir
Nieddu, Stefano Mario
Burrai, Giovanni Pietro
Succu, Sara
Patrizio, Pasquale
Ledda, Sergio
author_facet Bebbere, Daniela
Arav, Amir
Nieddu, Stefano Mario
Burrai, Giovanni Pietro
Succu, Sara
Patrizio, Pasquale
Ledda, Sergio
author_sort Bebbere, Daniela
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Freeze-drying (or lyophilization) is a method to preserve cells and tissues in which frozen material is dried by sublimation of ice. One of the main advantages is that nitrogen and dry ice are no longer required for the storage and shipment of biological material, which can be kept at room temperature or 4 °C, resulting in enormous reductions in costs. Although widely used to preserve biomolecules and macromolecular assemblies, freeze-drying of cells and tissues is currently experimental. Here, we lyophilized sheep ovarian tissue with a novel device named Darya and assessed effects on tissue integrity and gene expression. We show that ovarian tissue survives lyophilization procedures, maintaining its general structure and reacting to the different experimental steps by regulation of specific genes. Our results contribute to the optimization of protocols to freeze-dry ovarian tissues and may find application in programs of animal and human reproductive tissue preservation. ABSTRACT: Cryopreservation is routinely used to preserve cells and tissues; however, long time storage brings many inconveniences including the use of liquid nitrogen. Freeze-drying could enable higher shelf-life stability at ambient temperatures and facilitate transport and storage. Currently, the possibility to freeze-dry reproductive tissues maintaining vitality and functions is still under optimization. Here, we lyophilized sheep ovarian tissue with a novel device named Darya and a new vitrification and drying protocol and assessed effects on tissue integrity and gene expression. The evaluation was performed immediately after lyophilization (Lio), after rehydration (LR0h) or after two hours of in vitro culture (IVC; LR2h). The tissue survived lyophilization procedures and maintained its general structure, including intact follicles at different stages of development, however morphological and cytoplasmic modifications were noticed. Lyophilization, rehydration and further IVC increasingly affected RNA integrity and caused progressive morphological alterations. Nevertheless, analysis of a panel of eight genes showed tissue survival and reaction to the different procedures by regulation of specific gene expression. Results show that sheep ovarian tissue can tolerate the applied vitrification and drying protocol and constitute a valid basis for further improvements of the procedures, with the ultimate goal of optimizing tissue viability after rehydration.
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spelling pubmed-86979442021-12-24 Molecular and Histological Evaluation of Sheep Ovarian Tissue Subjected to Lyophilization Bebbere, Daniela Arav, Amir Nieddu, Stefano Mario Burrai, Giovanni Pietro Succu, Sara Patrizio, Pasquale Ledda, Sergio Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Freeze-drying (or lyophilization) is a method to preserve cells and tissues in which frozen material is dried by sublimation of ice. One of the main advantages is that nitrogen and dry ice are no longer required for the storage and shipment of biological material, which can be kept at room temperature or 4 °C, resulting in enormous reductions in costs. Although widely used to preserve biomolecules and macromolecular assemblies, freeze-drying of cells and tissues is currently experimental. Here, we lyophilized sheep ovarian tissue with a novel device named Darya and assessed effects on tissue integrity and gene expression. We show that ovarian tissue survives lyophilization procedures, maintaining its general structure and reacting to the different experimental steps by regulation of specific genes. Our results contribute to the optimization of protocols to freeze-dry ovarian tissues and may find application in programs of animal and human reproductive tissue preservation. ABSTRACT: Cryopreservation is routinely used to preserve cells and tissues; however, long time storage brings many inconveniences including the use of liquid nitrogen. Freeze-drying could enable higher shelf-life stability at ambient temperatures and facilitate transport and storage. Currently, the possibility to freeze-dry reproductive tissues maintaining vitality and functions is still under optimization. Here, we lyophilized sheep ovarian tissue with a novel device named Darya and a new vitrification and drying protocol and assessed effects on tissue integrity and gene expression. The evaluation was performed immediately after lyophilization (Lio), after rehydration (LR0h) or after two hours of in vitro culture (IVC; LR2h). The tissue survived lyophilization procedures and maintained its general structure, including intact follicles at different stages of development, however morphological and cytoplasmic modifications were noticed. Lyophilization, rehydration and further IVC increasingly affected RNA integrity and caused progressive morphological alterations. Nevertheless, analysis of a panel of eight genes showed tissue survival and reaction to the different procedures by regulation of specific gene expression. Results show that sheep ovarian tissue can tolerate the applied vitrification and drying protocol and constitute a valid basis for further improvements of the procedures, with the ultimate goal of optimizing tissue viability after rehydration. MDPI 2021-11-29 /pmc/articles/PMC8697944/ /pubmed/34944182 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11123407 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bebbere, Daniela
Arav, Amir
Nieddu, Stefano Mario
Burrai, Giovanni Pietro
Succu, Sara
Patrizio, Pasquale
Ledda, Sergio
Molecular and Histological Evaluation of Sheep Ovarian Tissue Subjected to Lyophilization
title Molecular and Histological Evaluation of Sheep Ovarian Tissue Subjected to Lyophilization
title_full Molecular and Histological Evaluation of Sheep Ovarian Tissue Subjected to Lyophilization
title_fullStr Molecular and Histological Evaluation of Sheep Ovarian Tissue Subjected to Lyophilization
title_full_unstemmed Molecular and Histological Evaluation of Sheep Ovarian Tissue Subjected to Lyophilization
title_short Molecular and Histological Evaluation of Sheep Ovarian Tissue Subjected to Lyophilization
title_sort molecular and histological evaluation of sheep ovarian tissue subjected to lyophilization
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8697944/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34944182
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11123407
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