DNA preservation at home
Danail Bulgaria
14 Nov 2014
While digging in internet for vitrification procedures, I stumbled upon a technique, that those, who want to preserve tissues of themselvs or their relatives can use at home conditions. It is literary holding a skin tissue for a while in a room temperature in a specific solution, and then directly placing it in liquid nitrogen. Fast and easy, without rocket science. Easy to be done at home.
http://www.ncbi.nlm....pubmed/10935811
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The vitrification technique was applied to the preservation of human skin. This technique was simple, and no expensive equipment was needed. Split-thickness human skins from 8 patients were immersed in vitrification solution for 10 minutes at room temperature, immediately plunged into a liquid nitrogen tank, and cryopreserved for 3 weeks. The vitrification solution consisted of 40% ethylene glycol (vol/vol) and phosphate buffered saline solution that contained 30% Ficoll 70 (vol/vol; Wako Junyaku, Co, Tokyo, Japan) and 0.5 mol/L sucrose. The viability of vitrified and cryopreserved skin was evaluated with the trypan blue dye exclusion test, the methyl-thiazoldiphenyl-tetrazolium (MTT) colorimetric assay, and a culture test of the keratinocytes obtained from vitrified skin. The results of the trypan blue dye exclusion test showed 87.4% of viable cells, and MTT developed an average 0.817 absorbance. When vitrified skin was compared with 4 degrees C refrigerated skins after 3 weeks of storage, the difference of viability was significant both on the trypan blue dye exclusion test (P < .05) and on the MTT assay (P < .01). However, there was no significant difference in the viability of vitrified skins compared with fresh skin. Furthermore, keratinocytes from vitrified skin grew uneventfully in culture test. We used these vitrified skin allografts for patients with flame burns and electric burns. These allografts took well in both cases and promoted wound healing. We concluded that the vitrification method for skin preservation is simple and reliable, and this method could contribute to skin banking.
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Edited by seivtcho, 14 November 2014 - 05:12 PM.
ceridwen
14 Nov 2014
Danail Bulgaria
15 Nov 2014
Yup. As far as I know, the majority of the people, who want to preserve their DNA is to clone themselvs some day, but preserving cells for making stem cells is an awesome idea You never know what you'll need after many years.
Antonio2014
15 Nov 2014
Why will you want to make stem cells from your old cells instead of your present cells? I understand wanting to freeze eggs or embryos, but skin cells?
Edited by Antonio2014, 15 November 2014 - 10:39 AM.
Danail Bulgaria
15 Nov 2014
Well... the stem cells produced from older cells are supposed not to be as good, as those, produced from a younger tissue. So, freezing skin, and making stem cells from it later in your life, may appear to be the correct way for receiving younger stem cells genetically identical to your body. Plus there are some people, who want to clone themselvs, or to clone their relatives in the future, and some sort of genetic material is needed for this purpose.
Danail Bulgaria
17 Nov 2014
I wonder if other people have been thinking about preserving their own, or their relatives DNA in home conditions. If you want, you may share opinions and techniques.
Danail
23 Nov 2014
chubtoad
23 Nov 2014
Wait... How am I supposed to get the skin off I want to store? This does not sound like a pleasent experiment.
Danail Bulgaria
24 Nov 2014
Don't you cut small pieces of skin from your fingers, after cutting your nails ? Is this skin good enough for storing DNA ?
Danail
24 Nov 2014
Antonio2014
25 Nov 2014
You don't need an expert. DNA is routinely freezed and used after unfrozen (for example, in IVF clinics).
ceridwen
26 Nov 2014
Kalliste
27 Nov 2014
I wonder if there is a bank-like service that would allow one to store samples of cells and DNA, that might give one an advantage when/if repair technology starts coming online.
John Schloendorn
29 Nov 2014
DNA in home conditions. If you want, you may share opinions and techniques.
If you want just DNA, you don't need to freeze it. This kind of system will preserve it at room temp essentially forever http://www.amazon.co...r/dp/B00394FISS. If you don't feel like dropping $100s on the brand name version, you can do the same thing with a $1 sheet of silica paper.
Danail Bulgaria
19 Jan 2015
DNA in home conditions. If you want, you may share opinions and techniques.
If you want just DNA, you don't need to freeze it. This kind of system will preserve it at room temp essentially forever http://www.amazon.co...r/dp/B00394FISS. If you don't feel like dropping $100s on the brand name version, you can do the same thing with a $1 sheet of silica paper.
Have you tried silica paper for DNA preservation at room temperature?