Libre Biotech

Preparing a Glycerol Stock for Long-term Strain Storage

Cryopreservation method for bacterial strains using glycerol as a cryoprotectant, producing indefinitely-storable frozen stocks at −80°C. Critical for preserving verified transformant lineages so that every future reagent-production batch starts from identical genetic material rather than fresh unverified transformants. Written for a novice-to-intermediate audience.

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Procedure Details
Safety & Hazards
  • PC1 / CL1 containment required for GMO strains.
  • BSL-1 host (for standard lab E. coli strains). Autoclave all liquid and solid culture waste.
  • Glycerol is non-toxic at the concentrations used here but is a skin irritant in pure form. Gloves when preparing the 50% stock.
  • Liquid nitrogen (optional snap-freeze step). If used: insulated gloves, face shield, well-ventilated room. Never in a sealed container.
  • −80°C freezer. Avoid prolonged skin contact with stored vials. Label everything — frostbitten eyes can't read faded Sharpie.
Preparation Notes

What you need ready before starting:

  • Saturated overnight culture of the strain you want to preserve, in selective liquid media, grown 14–16 h. Typical starting point: pick a single well-isolated colony from a fresh transformation plate into 5 mL selective media and incubate at 37°C, 225 rpm overnight.
  • Sterile 50% (v/v) glycerol in water. Prepare by mixing 50 mL glycerol + 50 mL water, autoclaving 121°C × 20 min liquid cycle, and cooling. Store at room temperature; stable for months.
  • Sterile cryovials (2 mL screw-cap, with internal thread if available — external thread risks contamination during removal). Pre-label with: strain identifier + plasmid + date + your initials + batch lot number. Use a cryo-safe marker (Sharpie industrial, not normal Sharpie — fades at −80°C).
  • Ice bucket or dry-ice / liquid nitrogen dewar for snap freezing (optional but recommended).
  • Biosafety cabinet with fresh alcohol spray.

Mental model: glycerol prevents ice crystals from physically destroying cell membranes during freezing. Slow freezing = big crystals = dead cells; fast freezing + cryoprotectant = small crystals = viable cells. You can revive a glycerol stock years later (10+ years documented in the literature) if the freezer held its temperature.

Timing
  • Overnight (hands-off): grow the overnight culture.
  • Prep (5 min): label vials, set up workspace.
  • Mixing (2 min per stock): combine culture and glycerol.
  • Freezing (2 min): snap-freeze or direct placement at −80°C.
  • Total hands-on time: ~15 min for a batch of 5–10 stocks.
Equipment (Catalog) 5
  • Micropipette Liquid handling
    Specs: P200, P1000
    Filter tips
  • Vortex mixer Mixing
    Specs: Standard
    For mixing glycerol/water stock only — NOT for mixing culture/glycerol
  • Biosafety cabinet Safety
    Specs: Class II Type A2 or equivalent
    All culture handling
  • Freezer (−80 °C) Storage
    Specs: Ultra-low temperature freezer
    Long-term storage
  • Shaking incubator Thermal regulation
    Specs: 37°C, 225 rpm
    For overnight culture growth
Materials (Catalog) 3
  • E. coli BL21(DE3) (NEB) C2527I Bacterial strain
    Qty: 500 µL saturated culture per vial
    Or any transformant strain you wish to preserve
  • Ampicillin Antibiotic
    Qty: 100 µg/mL final
    Match plasmid's resistance marker
  • Superior Broth (Athena Enzyme Systems) 0105 Growth media
    Qty: 5 mL for overnight
    Use the same selective media as the plate the colony came from
Protocol Parameters Captured per-assay on each run; exported as ISA-Tab Parameter Value columns
Name Type Required Default Unit Description
final_glycerol_concentration_pct number 25 Final glycerol concentration in the cryovial. 15–50% all work; 25% is standard. Higher glycerol reduces osmotic damage but increases viscosity.
freezing_method text snap_freeze_ln2 Method for initial freeze: 'snap_freeze_ln2' (liquid nitrogen, best), 'snap_freeze_dry_ice' (good), or 'direct_minus80' (acceptable).
storage_temp_c number -80 degree Celsius (UO:0000027) Long-term storage temperature. −80°C standard; −20°C reduces viability over weeks-to-months.
vials_per_strain number 5 Redundancy factor. Minimum 5 vials: 1 primary archive + 4+ working stocks.
Procedure Steps (Version 0.1.1)

Verify your overnight culture is saturated and free of contamination. Visual check: uniform cloudiness, no film or flakes on the surface, no pigmented colonies (white E. coli becomes yellow/pink if contaminated with Pseudomonas or Serratia respectively).

In the biosafety cabinet, arrange labelled cryovials in a rack in the order you will fill them.

Verify your 50% glycerol stock is sterile and at room temperature. If previously autoclaved and stored, inspect briefly for cloudiness (should be clear).

For each cryovial: pipette 500 µL of the saturated overnight culture into the vial using a filter tip.

Pipette 500 µL of sterile 50% glycerol into the same vial. This brings the final glycerol concentration to 25% — suitable for long-term −80°C storage.

Cap the vial firmly. Invert gently 5–6 times to mix. Do NOT vortex — shear stress from vortex damages cells before freezing and reduces revival viability.

Optional but recommended: snap-freeze by placing vials into liquid nitrogen for 30 s, or into a dry-ice ethanol/isopropanol bath for 1 min. Faster freezing = smaller ice crystals = higher viability.

Transfer frozen vials to the −80°C freezer. Place in the designated storage box/rack for your strain archive.

Record the Sample in LibreBiotech: one Sample record per vial, with annotations for lot number, strain, plasmid, production date, storage box/rack/position, glycerol concentration, and any QC data.

If possible, perform viability QC: after 24 hours at −80°C, revive one vial by scraping a small quantity onto a selection plate; record colony yield as a Sample annotation.

Prepare redundant stocks. Make at least 5 vials per strain — one 'primary archive' never to be opened except to make secondary working stocks, and 4+ secondary working stocks for daily use.

Completion Notes

Expected outcome. Cryovials of cloudy frozen culture at −80°C. Final glycerol concentration 15–25% in the vial (depending on culture density and glycerol stock concentration). Viability on revival: >99% for routine lab strains, often >10 years shelf life at −80°C.

Storage location. −80°C freezer, in a labelled box. Record the box / rack / position in the LibreBiotech Sample record's storage annotation so anyone on the team can find it.

Reviving a glycerol stock. Do NOT thaw. Scrape a small quantity of frozen culture with a sterile pipette tip or inoculation loop directly into fresh selective liquid media OR streak onto a selective plate. Return the stock to −80°C immediately — repeated freeze-thaw reduces viability over generations.

Batch records. Each glycerol stock lot should have:

  • Sample record in LibreBiotech for each vial (lot number, contents, storage location, production date).
  • Process record linking back to the originating colony / transformation.
  • Viability QC annotation after revival (record how many colonies are seen on revival from 1:1000 dilution).

Troubleshooting.

Symptom Likely cause Fix
Vial has no colonies on revival Stock glycerol not sterile or culture was dead at time of freezing Restream from original transformation plate; regenerate glycerol stock from a fresh overnight
Contaminant colonies on revival Non-sterile vials or work surface Remake with freshly autoclaved vials and stricter biosafety cabinet hygiene
Slow growth on revival Frost damage from repeated freeze-thaw Prepare redundant stocks; never thaw the primary archive vial; work from a secondary "working stock"
References
  1. Hubálek Z (2003). Protectants used in the cryopreservation of microorganisms. Cryobiology 46(3):205–29. DOI paper
  2. Standard microbiology practice; see standard molecular biology references (e.g. Green & Sambrook, Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, 4th ed, CSHL Press 2012). book