Australian frog cells have been
successfully frozen and re-grown in culture, offering hope of a new technique
to safeguard endangered amphibians. Credit: University of Melbourne
For the first time, Australian
frog cells have been successfully frozen and re-grown in culture, offering hope
of a new technique to safeguard endangered amphibians.
Around the world and in Australia
around 32 per cent of amphibians, including frogs, toads and salamanders, are
classed as being under immediate threat from extinction. The main drivers of
this crisis are reported as human activity and spread of the chytrid fungus.
University of Melbourne
researcher Richard Mollard, from the Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural
Sciences, conducted the work and said freezing tissue, or cryobanking, offers a
new technique to
safeguard endangered species.
"Amphibian cell culture has
only been achieved a handful of times in the world, with most cell culture
focussing on mammalian
cells. Freezing and subsequent culture of frog cells is even rarer," Dr.
Mollard said.
"We now have proof of
principle that frog cells can be frozen, thawed and re-grown, while maintaining
the structure of their chromosomes.
"This is important because
maintaining these genetic structures allows the cells to be used for assisted
reproduction techniques if needed. That is, the cells can be used for exploring
somatic cell nuclear transfer, or cloning, and gamete production for IVF.”
Dr. Mollard said there are
currently 950 amphibian
species at immediate risk of extinction. "Conservation programs
involving habitat conservation, assisted reproduction and breeding programs
have all demonstrated success, protecting many threatened species from
extinction," he said.
"Unfortunately, there are
currently only enough resources for captive breeding programs for 50 species.
So cryobanking cells from the remaining 900 species could safeguard them before
it is too late."
Dr. Mollard used tissue from
non-endangered frog species in a proof-of-principle study to freeze them with
liquid nitrogen, thaw and re-culture them for at least two weeks to confirm that
chromosomes had not degraded during this process.
"The benefit of this
technique is that it doesn't need whole frogs from the wild to do the
cultures," Dr. Mollard said.
"Small toe clippings are
often already taken to track important amphibians in the wild. So we can use
tissue taken for this purpose to cryobank endangered species. We can also take
tissue from frogs that will be euthanised due to sickness or injury.”
Dr. Mollard said this technique
would be used to safeguard the cells of
frogs under environmental pressures from increasing urbanisation, and logging
and mining zones. "It will hopefully be beneficial for researchers, Zoos
and conservationists."
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