Identification of early‐responsive genes correlated to valproic acid–induced neural tube defects in micePresented at the: 44th Annual Meeting of the Teratology Society, June 26–July 1, 2004, Vancouver, Canada; 31st Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Toxicology, July 6–8, 2004, Osaka, Japan; and 44th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Teratology Society, July 15–17, 2004. Saga, Japan.

Autor: Okada, Akinobu, Kushima, Kiyoshi, Aoki, Yoshinobu, Bialer, Meir, Fujiwara, Michio
Zdroj: Birth Defects Research Part A: Clinical and Molecular Teratology; April 2005, Vol. 73 Issue: 4 p229-238, 10p
Abstrakt: Valproic acid (VPA) causes the failure of neural tube closure in newborn mice. However, the molecular mechanism of its teratogenesis is unknown. This study was conducted to investigate the genomewide effects of VPA disruption of normal neural tube development in mice.Microarray analysis was performed on the head part of NMRI mouse embryos treated for 1 hr with VPA on gestational day (GD) 8. Subsequently, we attempted to isolate genes that changed in correlation with the teratogenic action of VPA by employing reduced teratogenic VPA analogs, valpromide (VPD) and valnoctamide (VCD), in a real‐time PCR study.Microarray results demonstrated that during neurulation, many genes, some of whose functions are known and some unknown, were either increased or decreased after VPA injection. Some genes were affected by VPD or VCD in the same way as VPA, but others were not changed by the analogs. In this way, our system identified 11 increased and 20 decreased genes. Annotation analysis revealed that the increased genes included gadd45b, ier5, per1, phfl3, pou3f1, and sox4, and the decreased genes included ccne2, ccnl, gas5, egr2, sirt1, and zfp105.These findings demonstrate that expression changes in genes having roles in the cell cycle and apoptosis pathways of neural tube cells were strongly expected to relate to the teratogenic, but not antiepileptic, activity of VPA. Our approach has allowed the expansion of the catalog of molecules immediately affected by VPA in the developing neural tube. Birth Defects Research (Part A), 2005. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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