Abstract

Electron microscopic examination of Chinese hamster tissue-culture cells showed that freezing and thawing result in structural alterations, the type and magnitude of which depend on the cooling and warming velocities used. Cells suspended in Hanks balanced salt solution and cooled to −196 °C at rates exceeding the survival optimum exhibit different patterns and extents of ultrastructural alterations than do cells cooled or warmed at rates lower than optimum. Even though the addition of 0.4 M dimethyl sulfoxide confers some protection, in terms of survival, it does not prevent structural alterations. The types of alterations, however, differ from those found in cells frozen in Hanks alone. Freeze-thaw treatments producing similar percentages of cell survival do not necessarily cause similar structural alterations, nor is there a simple correlation between structural alterations and survival.

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