• DocumentCode
    1151644
  • Title

    First steps of an interdisciplinary approach towards miniaturised cryopreservation for cellular nanobiotechnology

  • Author

    Zimmermann, H. ; Katsen, A.D. ; Ihmig, F.R. ; Durst, C.H.P. ; Shirley, S.G. ; Fuhr, G.R.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. for Cryobiophysics & Cryotechnology, Fraunhofer-Inst. fur Biomedizinische Technik, St. Ingbert, Germany
  • Volume
    151
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2004
  • Firstpage
    134
  • Lastpage
    138
  • Abstract
    The only widely used and accepted method for long-term cell preservation is storage below -130°C. The biosciences will make increasing use of preservation and place new demands on it. Currently, cells are frozen in volumes greater than 1 ml but the new cell and implantation therapies (particularly those using stem cells) will require accurately defined freezing and storage conditions for each single cell. Broadly-based, routine freezing of biological samples allows the advantage of retrospective analysis and the possibility of saving genetic rights. For such applications, one billion is a modest estimation for the number of samples. Current cryotechniques cannot handle so many samples in an efficient and economic way, and the need for new cryotechnology is evident. The interdisciplinary approach presented here should lead to a new sample storage and operating strategy that fulfils the needs mentioned above. Fundamental principles of this new kind of smart sample storage are: (i) miniaturisation; (ii) modularisation; (iii) information/sample integration, i.e. freezing memory chips with samples; and (iv) physical and logical access to samples and information without thawing the samples. In contrast to current sample systems, the prototyped family of intelligent cryosubstrates allows the recovery of single wells (parts) of the substrate without thawing the rest of the sample. The development of intelligent cryosubstrates is linked to developments in high throughput freezing, high packing density storage and minimisation of cytotoxic protective agents.
  • Keywords
    biological techniques; biotechnology; biothermics; cellular biophysics; freezing; nanotechnology; cellular nanobiotechnology; cryotechnology; cytotoxic protective agents; high packing density storage; high throughput freezing; information/sample integration; intelligent cryosubstrates; long-term cell preservation; memory chips; miniaturised cryopreservation; modularisation; operating strategy; sample storage;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Nanobiotechnology, IEE Proceedings -
  • Publisher
    iet
  • ISSN
    1478-1581
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1049/ip-nbt:20040908
  • Filename
    1352833