Targeted Application

Biobanking Cryopreservation for Long-Term Sample Stability and Post-Thaw Recovery.

Assess whether engineered ice-binding proteins can reduce preservation loss, limit freeze-thaw degradation, and protect the integrity of critical research, diagnostic, and archived biological samples.

Focused feasibility pilots for core facilities, diagnostic laboratories, and biobank workflows

Facility focus Biobanking, diagnostics, and research archives seeking to reduce long-term preservation loss
Technical question Can interfacial ice control protect sample integrity during storage fluctuations, thaw, and retrieval?
Commercial output Evidence to support stronger assay reliability and better recovery from archived biological assets
The Storage Bottleneck

Long-term storage is rarely as static as it appears.

Cryopreservation underpins modern biobanking by enabling primary cells, rare tissues, diagnostic materials, and other valuable biological samples to be archived for long periods. However, frozen storage does not necessarily mean perfect long-term stability.

Freezer access, rack transfer, transport events, and other handling steps can introduce transient temperature excursions. These small fluctuations may be enough to support ice recrystallisation, where smaller ice crystals gradually fuse into larger, more damaging structures that disrupt membranes, tissue architecture, and downstream sample quality over time.

For biobank managers, diagnostic teams, and researchers, this hidden degradation can translate into weaker downstream assays, compromised reproducibility, and the avoidable loss of rare or expensive biological assets.

The Engineering Approach

Stabilising the ice interface.

IBP Ventures evaluates ice-binding proteins that act directly at the ice-water interface, with the aim of reducing the slow cumulative damage associated with storage fluctuations and thaw.

Arresting recrystallisation Candidate proteins are assessed for their ability to reduce crystal growth during transient temperature excursions and retrieval.
Protecting structural integrity By limiting ice-related mechanical damage, the objective is to preserve cellular and tissue architecture for downstream analytical use.
Supporting post-thaw recovery The aim is to assess whether rare and valuable samples can retain stronger functional or analytical quality when finally withdrawn for use.
Why It Matters

Protecting the value of the archive.

The real value of a biobank lies not only in the number of samples stored, but in the quality, interpretability, and recoverability of those samples when they are used. Even a small degree of cumulative degradation can reduce confidence in downstream assays, affect diagnostic interpretation, or weaken the value of a rare cohort.

Improving cryopreservation performance is therefore not just about storage conditions. It is about preserving the long-term usefulness of biological material as a dependable research, clinical, or commercial resource.

Commercial Relevance

A focused evaluation pathway.

IBP Ventures offers defined feasibility pilots to assess whether ice-binding proteins can integrate into and improve specific biobanking, research preservation, or diagnostic storage workflows.

Biobanking and diagnostics focus Evaluate workflows where preservation loss, variable recovery, or structural decline may be jeopardising sample value.
Decision-oriented output Generate specific data on sample integrity, post-thaw recovery, and downstream workflow relevance.
Protocol compatibility Assess technical fit within existing collection, freezing, storage, and retrieval practices.
Why This Matters in Practice

Preservation quality affects downstream confidence.

In biobanking and research preservation, the value of a stored sample depends on what can still be measured, recovered, or interpreted when that sample is eventually used. Freeze-thaw damage, structural disruption, or cumulative storage-related decline can reduce confidence in downstream assays and compromise the long-term value of archived material.

For facilities managing rare, expensive, or clinically important material, even modest improvements in stability, recovery, or consistency may have significant research and operational value.

Feasibility Logic

A practical first step before protocol change.

The purpose of a feasibility pilot is to determine whether the ice-binding protein approach merits further work in a defined preservation workflow before broader implementation.

Defined scope Focus on one sample class, one storage question, and one practical performance measure at a time.
Evidence before adoption Use early technical evidence to support a clearer go / no-go decision.
Protocol relevance Assess fit within real collection, freezing, storage, and retrieval workflows rather than a purely abstract screening exercise.
Wider Cryopreservation Context

Where this fits within our broader cryopreservation capabilities.

While this page focuses on biobanking and research preservation, the same underlying challenge of freeze damage, recrystallisation, and post-thaw recovery also appears across other high-value biological systems.

Biobanking and research preservation

Sample storage workflows where reduced preservation loss and improved long-term consistency may be valuable.

Cell therapy and biologics

Sensitive therapeutic cells and formulations where freeze-thaw recovery, viability, and handling robustness are commercially important.

IVF and reproductive workflows

Embryo and oocyte cryopreservation where post-thaw survival and warming-stage damage are critical constraints.

Start the Conversation

Let’s map your workflow.

Are you encountering preservation loss, poor downstream assay performance, or storage-related instability in your biobank or core facility?

We offer tightly scoped feasibility pilots to evaluate whether ice-binding proteins can improve sample integrity and long-term stability in your specific preservation workflow.

Best suited for Biobank managers, core facility directors, diagnostic teams, and researchers managing critical biological archives
Typical first step A short discussion to assess technical fit, workflow relevance, and whether a feasibility pilot is justified
Company IBP Ventures Ltd
Applied Protein Engineering for Cryobiology
York, United Kingdom