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      Development of a new rapid measurement technique for fish embryo membrane permeability studies using impedance spectroscopy

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          Abstract

          Information on fish embryo membrane permeability is vital in their cryopreservation. Whilst conventional volumetric measurement based assessment methods have been widely used in fish embryo membrane permeability studies, they are lengthy and reduce the capacity for multi-embryo measurement during an experimental run. A new rapid ‘real-time’ measurement technique is required to determine membrane permeability during cryoprotectant treatment. In this study, zebrafish ( Danio rerio) embryo membrane permeability to cryoprotectants was investigated using impedance spectroscopy. An embryo holding cell, capable of holding up to 10 zebrafish embryos was built incorporating the original system electrods for measuring the impedance spectra. The holding cell was tested with deionised water and a series of KCl solutions with known conductance values to confirm the performance of the modified system. Untreated intact embryos were then tested to optimise the loading capacity and sensitivity of the system. To study the impedance changes of zebrafish embryos during cryoprotectant exposure, three, six or nine embryos at 50% epiboly stage were loaded into the holding cell in egg water, which was then removed and replaced by 0.5, 1.0, 2.0 or 3 M methanol or dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). The impedance changes of the loaded embryos in different cryoprotectant solutions were monitored over 30 min at 22 °C, immediately following embryo exposure to cryoprotectants, at the frequency range of 10–10 6 Hz. The impedance changes of the embryos in egg water were used as controls. Results from this study showed that the optimum embryo loading level was six embryos per cell for each experimental run. The optimum frequency was identified at 10 3.14 or 1380 Hz which provided good sensitivity and reproducibility. Significant impedance changes were detected after embryos were exposed to different concentrations of cryoprotectants. The results agreed well with those obtained from conventional volumetric based studies.

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          Electrophysiological model of intact and processed plant tissues: cell disintegration criteria.

          Frequency versus conductivity relationships of food cell system, based on impedance measurements as characterized by polarization effects of the Maxwell-Wagner type at intact membrane interfaces, are presented. The electrical properties of a biological membrane (represented as a resistor and capacitor) are responsible for the dependence of the total conductivity of the cell system on the alternating current frequency. Based on an equivalent circuit model of a single plant cell, the electrical conductivity spectrum of the cell system in intact plant tissue (potato, carrot, banana, and apple) was determined in a frequency range between 3 kHz and 50 MHz. The electrical properties of a cell system with different ratios of intact/ruptured cells could also be predicted on the basis of a description of a cell system consisting of elementary layers with regularly distributed intact and ruptured cells as well as of extracellular compartments. This simple determination of the degree of cell permeabilization (cell disintegration index, p(o)) is based upon electric conductivity changes in the cell sample. For accurate calculations of p(o), the sample conductivities before and after treatment, obtained at low- (f(l)) and high-frequency (f(h)) ranges of the so-called beta-dispersion, were used. In this study with plant cell systems, characteristic conductivities used were measured at frequencies f(l) = 3 kHz and f(h) = 12.5 MHz. The disintegration index was used to analyze the degree of cell disruption after different treatments (such as mechanical disruption, heating, freeze-thaw cycles, application of electric field pulses, and enzymatic treatment) of the plant tissues.
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            Life in the Frozen State

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              Impedance microbiology: quantification of bacterial content in milk by means of capacitance growth curves.

              The impedancimetric method is a technique for the rapid evaluation of milk bacterial content and also of its subproducts. Several authors have made use of culture conductance changes during bacterial growth for quantitative and qualitative assessments of microbial growth. However, interface capacitance curves, Ci, have not been used. In this paper, we quantify bacteria in cow raw milk by following their growth as the above-mentioned capacitance change time course event. With it, bigger growth variations, shorter detection times and a better coefficient of correlation with the plate count method were obtained than those yielded by conductance curves. Calibration was performed by plotting initial known concentrations, IC (CFU/ml), as a function of the time detection theshold (TDT).
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Theriogenology
                Theriogenology
                Elsevier
                0093-691X
                1879-3231
                01 September 2006
                01 September 2006
                : 66
                : 4
                : 982-988
                Affiliations
                Luton Institute of Research in the Applied Natural Sciences, University of Luton, The Spires, 2 Adelaide Street, Luton, Bedfordshire LU1 5DU, UK
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author. Tel.: +44 1582 743 729; fax: +44 1582 743 701. tiantian.zhang@ 123456luton.ac.uk
                Article
                THE9924
                10.1016/j.theriogenology.2006.02.038
                1851733
                16580717
                85815d76-1aa7-4024-aa09-9c0983274309
                © 2006 Elsevier Inc.

                This document may be redistributed and reused, subject to certain conditions.

                History
                : 25 October 2005
                : 20 February 2006
                : 26 February 2006
                Categories
                Article

                Animal science & Zoology
                impedance spectroscopy,membrane permeability,zebrafish (danio rerio),cryoprotectant,embryos,cryopreservation

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