2010
DOI: 10.1002/bit.22690
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Collapse temperature of solutions important for lyopreservation of living cells at ambient temperature

Abstract: In this study, the collapse temperature was determined using the freeze-drying microscopy (FDM) method for a variety of cell culture medium-based solutions (with 0.05-0.8 M trehalose) that are important for long-term stabilization of living cells in the dry state at ambient temperature (lyopreservation) by freeze-drying. Being consistent with what has been reported in the literature, the collapse temperature of binary water-trehalose solutions was found to be similar to the glass transition temperature (T'(g) … Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Consequently, the biostability of the freeze-dried biologicals could be significantly compromised (Hancock et al 1995;He et al 2008a;He et al 2006b). More importantly, a recent study reported that the collapse temperature of cell culture medium-based trehalose solutions important for freeze-drying mammalian cells can be much lower than that of a simple binary trehalose-water solution (T C = ~ -30 o C) and trehalose solutions used for freeze-drying pharmaceuticals and prokaryotes (Yang et al 2010a), as shown in Fig. 7E.…”
Section: Freeze-dryingmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Consequently, the biostability of the freeze-dried biologicals could be significantly compromised (Hancock et al 1995;He et al 2008a;He et al 2006b). More importantly, a recent study reported that the collapse temperature of cell culture medium-based trehalose solutions important for freeze-drying mammalian cells can be much lower than that of a simple binary trehalose-water solution (T C = ~ -30 o C) and trehalose solutions used for freeze-drying pharmaceuticals and prokaryotes (Yang et al 2010a), as shown in Fig. 7E.…”
Section: Freeze-dryingmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Pharmaceutical applications include the freeze-drying of living cells, vaccines, enzymes, and biological media. In the food industry, freeze-drying is applied to the manufacture of products such as coffee, milk powder and infant formula (Chow et al, 2008;Fonseca et al, 2004;Nasirpour et al, 2007;Pardo et al, 2002;Thomas et al, 2004;Yang et al, 2010). The process involves freezing the desired product solution, followed by sublimation and secondary drying (Oetjen, 1999).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are many reports in the literature regarding the use of FDM to determine the T c of various products, for which it is now a well-established technique (Adams and Ramsay, 1996;Meister and Gieseler, 2009;Meister et al, 2009;Yang et al, 2010;Zhai et al, 2003).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Otherwise, the sample may collapse (can’t maintain the morphology of the frozen sample) resulting in incomplete drying and heterogeneity in the freeze-dried product, which could significantly decrease the biostability of the freeze-dried biologicals [107-109]. More importantly, a recent study reported that the collapse temperature of cell culture medium-based trehalose solutions important for freeze-drying mammalian cells can be much lower than that of a simple binary trehalose-water solution and trehalose solutions used for freeze-drying pharmaceuticals and prokaryotes [110]. …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%