“…Intracellular freezing and any resulting irreparable damage to cellular contents is prevented by natural cryoprotection; liver glycogen stores undergo extensive hydrolysis (causing a decrease in liver mass by approximately 45%), and glucose is exported and systemically distributed, accumulating in some tissues at levels up to 40–60 times higher than euglycemic levels (Storey & Storey, 1985; Costanzo, Lee & Lortz, 1993). Such a broad reorganization requires numerous modulations at several levels of the signaling and metabolic hierarchy of glucose metabolism, including: (1) phosphorylation and sustained activation of liver glycogen phosphorylase (Crerar, David & Storey, 1988; Mommsen & Storey, 1992); (2) adaptations to plasma membranes in order to facilitate glucose transport and distribution (King, Rosholt & Storey, 1993); (3) tissue-specific adjustment of anabolic and catabolic signaling pathways (e.g., the insulin/Akt pathway, and the adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase or AMPK pathway) to optimize glucose production, distribution, uptake, and utilization as a cryoprotectant (Rider et al, 2006; Dieni, Bouffard & Storey, 2012; Zhang & Storey, 2013; do Amaral, Lee & Costanzo, 2013), and; (4) suppression of metabolic pathways that would otherwise divert glucose away from cryoprotection (e.g., pentose phosphate pathway, glycolysis; Dieni & Storey, 2010; Dieni & Storey, 2011), among others. Following the return of warmer temperatures and the arrival of spring, frogs thaw and resume their natural life cycle with no apparent debilitating results of the freeze-thaw process.…”