Abstract

Abstract The ultrastructure of neonatal rat heart cells in suspension and in tissue culture after freezing at optimal, suboptimal, and supraoptimal cooling rates with 2.5, 5, 7.5, and 10% DMSO was investigated. The effect of DMSO treatment only on the structure of the cells was also studied. A comparison was made with the survival in culture. Without freezing, increasing DMSO concentrations caused an increase of morphological damage, correlating with a decrease of the survival in culture. With 2.5% DMSO there was no difference with untreated cells. At higher DMSO concentrations, the ultrastructural damage increased from spaces between cell membrane and cytoplasm at 5% DMSO to interrupted cell membranes, swollen or destroyed mitochondria, and nuclei with clumped chromatin at 10% DMSO. After freezing at optimal or nonoptimal cooling rates with 5 or 7.5% DMSO, the ultrastructure correlated well with the survival. After freezing with 2.5 or 10% DMSO at optimal or nonoptimal cooling rates, differences in survival were found, which were not reflected in the ultrastructure of the cell. After 8 days of culturing, cells which were frozen at all the different cooling rates and DMSO concentrations appeared to have a normal structure.

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