Estefania Paredes
University of Tennessee
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Estefania Paredes.
Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2016
Peter Mazur; Estefania Paredes
Mazur and collaborators began examining the validity of initial views regarding mouse oocyte and embryo vitrification and found that most are partially or fully wrong. First, the relative effects of warming and cooling rates on the survival of mouse oocytes subjected to a vitrification procedure were determined. The high sensitivity to warming rate strongly suggests that the lethality of slow warming is a consequence of either the crystallisation of intracellular glassy water during warming or the recrystallisation during slow warming of small intracellular crystals that had formed during cooling. Warming rates of 107°C min-1 were achieved in 0.1-µL drops of ethylene glycol-acetamide-Ficoll-sucrose (EAFS) solution plus a small amount of India ink on Cryotops warmed using an infrared laser pulse. Under these conditions, survival rates of 90% were obtained even when mouse oocytes were suspended in 0.3× EAFS, a concentration that falls in the range that many cells can tolerate. A second important finding was that the survival of oocytes is more dependent on the osmotic withdrawal of much of the intracellular water before vitrification than it is on the penetration of cryoprotective solutes into the cells. Herein we review the roles of internal ice formation, vitrification and recrystallisation. It remains to be seen how widely these findings will be applicable to other types of cells and tissues from other species.
Cryobiology | 2015
Estefania Paredes
Lanan (1971) working on oyster sperm and Asahina and Takahashi (1977) on sea urchin sperm and embryos can be considered the pioneers in marine invertebrate cryopreservation. It was from the 90s onwards when the number of references began to increase and diversify not only the range of species of interest but also in the cell types and fields of application. This work is an attempt to summarize the research published on marine invertebrates in a wide variety of journals regarding the development and the applications of marine invertebrate cryopreservation protocols. This paper reviews factors and trends, the obtained results, remaining technical constraints and the immediate future of marine invertebrate cryopreservation.
Cryobiology | 2013
Estefania Paredes; Peter Mazur
As survival of mouse oocytes subjected to vitrification depends far more on the warming rate than on the cooling rate, we wished to determine whether the lack of correlation between survival and cooling rate was mirrored by a lack of correlation between cooling rate and vitrification of the medium (EAFS), and between survival and the vitrification of the medium. The morphological and functional survival of the oocytes showed little or no relation to whether or not the EAFS medium vitrified or froze. We studied if the droplet size and the elapsed time (between placing the droplet on the Cryotop and the start of cooling) affects the result through modification of the cooling rate and solute concentration. Dehydration was rapid; consequently, the time between the placing the droplets into a Cryotop and cooling must be held to a minimum. The size of the EAFS droplet that is being cooled does not seem to affect vitrification. Finally, the degree to which samples of EAFS vitrify is firmly dependent on both its solute concentration and the cooling rate.
Cryobiology | 2016
Bo Jin; Shinsuke Seki; Estefania Paredes; Juan Qiu; Yanbin Shi; Zhenqiang Zhang; Chao Ma; Shuyan Jiang; Jiaqi Li; Feng Yuan; Shu Wang; Xiaoguang Shao; Peter Mazur
In this study, mature female mice of the ICR strain were induced to superovultate, mated, and collected at either zygote or early morula stages. Embryos suspended in 1 M ethylene glycol in PBS containing 10 mg/L Snomax for 15 min, then transferred in sample holder to Linkam cryostage, cooled to and seeded at 7 °C, and then observed and photographed while being cooled to −70 °C at 0.5–20 °C/min. Intracellular ice formation (IIF) was observed as abrupt ‘‘flashing’’. Two types of flashing or IIF were observed in this study. Extracellular freezing occurred at a mean of −7.7 °C. In morulae, about 25% turned dark within ±1 °C of extracellular ice formation (EIF). These we refer to as “high temperature’’ flashers. In zygotes, there were no high temperature flashers. All the zygotes flashed at temperatures well below the temperature for EIF. Presumably high temperature flashers were a consequence of membrane damage prior to EIF or damage from EIF. We shall not discuss them further. In the majority of cases, IIF occurred well below −7.7 °C; these we call ‘‘low temperature’’ flashers. None flashed with cooling rate (CR) of 0.5 °C/min in either zygotes or morulae. Nearly all flashed with CR of 4 °C/min or higher, but the distribution of temperatures is much broader with morulae than with zygotes. Also, the mean flashing temperature is much higher with morulae (−20.9 °C) than with zygotes (−40.3 °C). We computed the kinetics of water loss with respect to CR and temperature in both mouse zygotes and in morulae based on published estimates of Lp and it is Ea. The resulting dehydration curves combined with knowledge of the embryo nucleation temperature permits an estimate of the likelihood of IIF as a function of CR and subzero temperature. The agreement between these computed probabilities and the observed values are good.
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering | 2016
Estefania Paredes
Cryobiology | 2017
Michelle H. Connolly; Estefania Paredes; Peter Mazur
Cryobiology | 2016
Michelle H. Connolly; Estefania Paredes; Peter Mazur; Mary Hagedorn
Cryobiology | 2015
Estefania Paredes; J. Bellas
Cryobiology | 2015
Estefania Paredes
Cryobiology | 2013
Estefania Paredes; Peter Mazur