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#1 Lazarus Long

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Posted 14 August 2006 - 10:46 PM


OK so the basics of this article are not particularly new to anyone paying attention it is important I suspect because of the findings about technique. The basics of storing sperm in this case may parallel the storage of Stem Cells and I think being able to accumulate and store viable genetically matched stem cells for potential later in life need is a technology that would be much more profitable than merely offering whole body or neuro cryo alone. IN fact technologies like stem cell, ovum and sperm storage are technologies that have market appeal to the living that may be more attractive than just an insurance policy against death.

Sperm from ordinary frozen mice yield offspring

By Tan Ee Lyn
29 minutes ago

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Sperm extracted from mice and testes that have been frozen for as long as 15 years have yielded normal, healthy offspring in a study which researchers say heralds fresh hopes for bringing back extinct species.

Frozen sperm is now preserved with cryoprotectants, substances that protect it from freezing damage. However, defrosted sperm is not always capable of fertilising an egg. But researchers from Japan, Britain and Hawaii have found that sperm can be frozen safely for much longer than previously thought, so long as they are kept in organs or whole carcasses and cooled slowly to minus-20 degrees Celsius or lower.

Using sperm from whole mice and testes that had been frozen for between one week and 15 years, they were able to fertilize eggs via microinsemination and obtain healthy offspring. "Many people thought that sperm integrity could be retained for several months at most ... but the sperm nucleus is stronger than we expected," Atsuo Ogura of the Japanese government-funded Riken Bioresource Center told Reuters by telephone.

"It (sperm nucleus) is good for at least 15 years," he said, adding that offspring of the mouse that had been frozen for 15 years did not appear any different from the others.


GOOD NEWS: ANYONE CAN DO IT

The scientists used very simple freezing methods. The mouse that was frozen whole for 15 years was merely kept in a conventional freezer at minus-20 degrees C, Ogura said.

"This cryopreservation (freezing) technique is probably the simplest and anyone can do it. Liquid nitrogen is not necessary. Any conventional freezer or dry ice will work very well."

He said this method of freezing would work for many other mammals because mammalian sperm has a special DNA that "retains nucleic activity and keeps the nucleus alive."

"We can apply this method to many other mammals, it is very simple. Just put the testes or dead body into a freezer."

But he cautioned that carcasses must be allowed to cool slowly, or about two to three hours to reach minus-20 degrees C. Sperm frozen at lower temperatures would be better preserved.

"Degradation is minimal in liquid nitrogen (minus-196 degrees C). Molecules in the cells stay still in this condition, so the degradation will be minimal," he said.

The experiment, to be published online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, may begin to change a long-standing reluctance to use frozen sperm in in vitro fertilization.

"This experiment proves that immotile sperm (which does not move) is just as good if frozen in good condition," Ogura said.

Looking ahead, Ogura said this breakthrough gives fresh hopes that extinct species may roam the earth again.

"Restoration of extinct species could be possible if male individuals are found in permafrost" he said, through injecting the sperm into eggs from females of closely related species.

#2 Centurion

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Posted 15 August 2006 - 01:45 PM

Found its way onto BBC today:

http://news.bbc.co.u...ech/4793915.stm

Mice kept in the deep freeze for 15 years have fathered healthy offspring, say scientists in Japan and Hawaii.

One in five female mice undergoing IVF with sperm extracted from the dead mice had healthy, fertile pups.

It offers hope to those trying to bring extinct animals back from the dead, they report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

One idea would be to inject frozen mammoth sperm recovered from the ice into the eggs of female elephants.

The researchers wrote: "If spermatozoa of extinct mammalian species (eg woolly mammoths) can be retrieved from animal bodies that were kept frozen for millions of years in permanent frost, live animals might be restored by injecting them into oocytes from females of closely related species."

Ice Age

The team, led by Atsuo Ogura of the Institute of Physical and Chemical Research Bioresource Center in Tsukuba, Japan, harvested sperm from intact testes and, in some cases, the entire mouse, of specimens stored at -20C for up to 15 years.

They did not use hi-tech cryo-protection techniques, simply storing whole testes or bodies in a freezer.

The sperm appeared lifeless when thawed out but researchers were surprised to find that they produced viable offspring.

However, the chances of being able to recreate a woolly mammoth - or at least, an elephant with a woolly mammoth father, are thought to be slim.

Any mammoth recovered from the permafrost would have spent more than 10,000 years in a frozen state.

It would also have been frozen relatively slowly, making it liable to damage from bacteria and other micro-organisms.

#3 Live Forever

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Posted 15 August 2006 - 07:11 PM

OK so the basics of this article are not particularly new to anyone paying attention it is important I suspect because of the findings about technique.  The basics of storing sperm in this case may parallel the storage of Stem Cells and I think being able to accumulate and store viable genetically matched stem cells for potential later in life need is a technology that would be much more profitable than merely offering whole body or neuro cryo alone. IN fact technologies like stem cell, ovum and sperm storage are technologies that have market appeal to the living that may be more attractive than just an insurance policy against death.

There was an interesting thread about this over at Alcor United. (well, having to do with embryos, not sperm) There are a number of problems when you start getting outside of what your core business are. It would be a shame to put the cryonics patients at further risk (legally) than they already might be at in the future with storing other things. Also, as Dr. Wowk points out in that thread, there is almost nothing the same between cryonics and embryo storage, besides the liquid nitrogen. Perhaps sperm and egg storage, but not embryo storage, would be a bit safer on legal grounds, but I would think cryonics organizations would still be leary of getting too far outside of their core business. Perhaps a seperate company that someone started could indeed capitalize on this market segment, much like the fertility clinics currently do. (but, then of course you would be competing against the fertility clinics, and would in essence be one as well)




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