SCIENCE IN THE NEWS DAILY
Freeze-Tolerant Flies
from the Scientist (Registration Required)
Organisms that live at the frigid poles of our planet have evolved strategies to withstand
temperatures that would kill most species instantly. Some secrete ice-nucleating substances that
control the freezing process, for example, while others accumulate anti-freeze proteins that
allow their cells to remain unfrozen even at subzero temperatures, a phenomenon known as
supercooling.
Now, researchers in the Czech Republic have shown that some of these strategies can be
conferred upon species that would otherwise succumb to the cold, like the temperate-adapted
Drosophila melanogaster.
The results, published today (February 13) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, could have implications for tissue storage and cyropreservation strategies for
more complex organisms.
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