This is a page describing data taken during an experiment at the ISIS Neutron and Muon Source. Information about the ISIS Neutron and Muon Source can be found at https://www.isis.stfc.ac.uk.
Cryopreservation of liver cell spheroids used in artificial liver bio-transplant: QENS study.
Abstract: The development of new cryopreservation strategies has major potential in medicine, in particular for storage of biological matter. The detailed characteristics of the cooling and thawing processes has proven crucial for the survival of liver bio-transplant cells in research being done at UCL's Royal Free Hospital Liver Group. A specially designed protocol ensures that more than 75% of cells survive cooling followed by thawing. Currently there is no clear explanation as to why this happens, the hypothesis being that it relates to the formation of glass pockets within an ice matrix. Previous measurement at ISIS have allowed us to prove the existence of a larger glass to ice ratio with the special protocol that when quench. We ask to continue the study by a detailed structural (diffraction) and dynamical (QENS) characterisations of the ice formation and the glassy pockets respectively.
Principal Investigator: Professor Barry Fuller
Experimenter: Dr Victoria Garcia Sakai
Experimenter: Dr Oleg Kirichek
Experimenter: Professor clare selden
Experimenter: Mr Maooz Awan
DOI: 10.5286/ISIS.E.RB1910585
ISIS Experiment Number: RB1910585
Part DOI | Instrument | Public release date | Download Link |
---|---|---|---|
10.5286/ISIS.E.101137019 | IRIS | 01 March 2022 | Download |
Publisher: STFC ISIS Neutron and Muon Source
Data format: RAW/Nexus
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Data Citation
The recommended format for citing this dataset in a research
publication is as:
[author], [date], [title], [publisher],
[doi]
For Example:
Professor Barry Fuller et al; (2019): Cryopreservation of liver cell spheroids used in artificial liver bio-transplant: QENS study., STFC ISIS Neutron and Muon Source, https://doi.org/10.5286/ISIS.E.RB1910585
Data is released under the CC-BY-4.0 license.