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Article Dans Une Revue Cryobiology Année : 2003

Influence of cooling rate on Saccharomyces cerevisiae destruction during freezing: unexpected viability at ultra‐rapid cooling rates

Résumé

The purpose of this work was to study cell viability as a function of cooling rate during freezing. Cooling rate strongly influences the viability of cells during cold thermal stress. One of the particularities of this study was to investigate a large range of cooling rates and particularly very rapid cooling rates (i.e., faster than 20000 degrees C min (-1)). Four distinct ranges of cooling rates were identified. The first range (A(')) corresponds to very slow cooling rates (less than 5 degrees C min (-1)), and results in high cell mortality. The second range (A) corresponds to low cooling rates (5-100 degrees C min (-1)), at which cell water outflow occurs slowly and does not damage the cells. The third range (B) corresponds to rapid cooling rates (100-2000 degrees C min (-1)), at which there is competition between heat flow and water flow. In this case, massive water outflow, which is related to the increase in extracellular osmotic pressure and the membrane-lipid phase transition, can cause cell death. The fourth range (C) corresponds to very high cooling rates (more than 5000 degrees C min (-1)), at which the heat flow is very rapid and partially prevents water exit, which seems to preserve cell viability.

Dates et versions

hal-01668042 , version 1 (19-12-2017)

Identifiants

Citer

Frédéric Dumont, Pierre-André Marechal, Patrick Gervais. Influence of cooling rate on Saccharomyces cerevisiae destruction during freezing: unexpected viability at ultra‐rapid cooling rates. Cryobiology, 2003, 46 (1), pp.33--42. ⟨10.1016/s0011-2240(02)00161-x⟩. ⟨hal-01668042⟩
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