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EtOH-LN cryoembedding workflow to minimize freezing artifact in frozen tissues: A pilot study in preparing tissues compatible with mass spectrometry-based spatial proteomics application

  • Yong Chiang Tan
  • , Muaatamarulain Mustangin
  • , Nurwahyuna Rosli
  • , Wan Syahira Ellani Wan Ahmad Kammal
  • , Nurismah Md Isa
  • , Teck Yew Low
  • , Pey Yee Lee
  • , Dinesh Kumar Chellappan
  • , Razman Jarmin
  • , Zamri Zuhdi
  • , Azlanudin Azman
  • , Chik Ian
  • , Nursuhadah Mohamed Yusof
  • , Lay Cheng Lim
  • International Medical University
  • Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Coolant-assisted liquid nitrogen (LN) flash freezing of frozen tissues has been widely adopted to preserve tissue morphology for histopathological annotations in mass spectrometry-based spatial proteomics techniques. However, existing coolants pose health risks upon inhalation and are expensive. To overcome this challenge, we present our pilot study by introducing the EtOH-LN workflow, which demonstrates the feasibility of using 95 % ethanol as a safer and easily accessible alternative to existing coolants for LN-based cryoembedding of frozen tissues. Our study reveals that both the EtOH-LN and LN-only cryoembedding workflows exhibit significantly reduced freezing artifacts compared to cryoembedding in cryostat (p < 0.005), while EtOH-LN (SD = 0.56) generates more consistent results compared to LN-only (SD = 1.29). We have modified a previously reported morphology restoration method to incorporate the EtOH-LN workflow, which successfully restored the tissue architecture from freezing artifacts (p < 0.05). Additional studies are required to validate the impact of the EtOH-LN workflow on the molecular profiles of tissues.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104843
JournalCryobiology
Volume114
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cryoembedding
  • Ethanol
  • Flash freezing
  • Freezing artifact
  • Frozen tissue
  • Histology
  • Liquid nitrogen

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