Cryopreserved Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cultures remained
viable when frozen by cooling slowly to −55°C, then plunging
into liquid
nitrogen for at least 1 day of storage. High viability (>40%) was retained
when cultures contained 2–10% (v/v) methanol as a
cryoprotective agent prior to freezing, while dimethyl sulphoxide was ineffective.
However, methanol was lethal to cells in the presence
of light. Frozen cultures became non-viable within 24 h when stored at
−80°C, whereas those stored below −130°C remained viable
for at least several months. Highest viability was attained in cultures
that were frozen and stored at a low cell density. High viability also
required that frozen cultures be warmed rapidly and the cryoprotective
agent removed immediately thereafter in preparation for culturing
in liquid or on solid medium. Individual cell viability was determined
by measurements of colony counts after cell plating and by the
penetration of Evans blue dye into non-viable cells. Viability in bulk
culture was conveniently measured by comparing the rates of
photosynthetic oxygen evolution, corrected for dark respiration, in previously
frozen cultures with the corresponding rates in unfrozen
controls. Cultures that had lost viability as measured by a decline in
whole-cell photosynthetic oxygen evolution after freezing and
thawing retained functional Photosystem II activity for some time thereafter,
indicating that the loss in photosynthetic activity was due to
some process other than photoinhibition of Photosystem II.