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2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC) is a dye largely used for determination of microbiological activity in soil samples by dehydrogenase assay. TTC is colourless in the oxidised form and red when reduced, due to formation of the product 1,3,5-triphenyl formazan (TPF). In this study, different doses of TTC ranging from 0.2 to 3.0% were added to six different soil types with the aim to verify the effect of chemical TTC reduction and to optimise the substrate dose in order to prevent a toxic effect on microorganisms. Regarding the technical simplicity and cost-effectiveness, the TTC assay is commonly recommended as an efficient method for determination of soil biological activity, provided that an appropriate concentration is applied, depending on the soil type. The lowest TTC levels of 0.2 and 0.5% are recommended for Albic Luvisol and Eutric Fluvisol, respectively, and the highest (2%) for Brunic Arenosol and Haplic Luvisol soils. It has also been demonstrated that DHA has biological origin in more than 90%, whilst chemical TTC reduction accounts for less than 10%, and therefore does not interfere with the correctness of the results obtained.
This study was aimed at improving the 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazoliumchloride (TTC) reduction test for initial assessment of cell survival after cryopreservation. Experiments were carried out on three embryogenic cell suspensions of different ages: 9-year-old Gentiana tibetica (King ex Hook. F.), 2-year-old G. kurroo (Royle), and 1-year-old G. cruciata (L.). The suspensions were maintained in MS medium supplef mented with 1.0 mgl-1 3,6-dichloro-o-anisic acid, 0.1 mgl-1 naphthaleneacetic acid, 2.0 mgl-1 6-benzylaminopurine, 80.0 mg l-1 adenine sulphate and 0.09 M sucrose. Four weeks before freezing, part of the tissue was subcultured to the same medium with sucrose concentrations elevated from 0.09 M (3%sMS) to 0.175 M (6%sMS) or 0.26 M (9%sMS). In freezing treatments without cryoprotection, tissue was plunged directly into liquid nitrogen (LN) or cooled gradually. In freezing treatments with cryoprotection, the cells were pretreated with 1 M sucrose, or with 0.4 M sorbitol + 0.25 M pro line or + 0.08 M DMSO, or with vitrification solufion (PVS2). Encapsulation was another variant. TTC reduction activity was spectrophotometrically assessed immediately, 1,3,5,24 and 48 h after thawing. Cells without cryoprotection were lethally damaged, but TTC reduction activity in those cells ranged from 6.5 % (tissue from 3%sMS) to 73 % (tissue from 9%sMS) directly after thawing. Formazan production was reduced to zero afier 24 h. The TTC test showed 50 % formazan content immediately after thawing of DMSO-protected G. tibetica tissue, but only 22.47 % after 24 h and 2.9 % afier 48 h. Ultrastructural analysis of those cells showed lethal damage in many of them. For the PVS2 treatment, the formazan confent was similar in samples analyzed directly after thawing and 24 h later. Cells treated with PVS2 did not show structural disturbances. Encapsulated cell aggregates of G. cruciata treated with concentrations of sucrose increasing up to 1 M produced 2.6 times more formazan. When applied at least 48 h after thawing, the TTC test can reflect cell viability and can be used to compare the effectiveness of cryoprotectant performance and freezing protocols, but it must be carefully evaluated, with appropriate controls.
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