Lack of concordance between heat shock proteins and the development of tolerance to teratogen-induced neural tube defects
Autor: | James Eberwine, Michael Van Waes, Richard H. Finnell, Gregory D. Bennett |
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Rok vydání: | 1993 |
Předmět: |
Hyperthermia
Hot Temperature Transcription Genetic Gene Expression Mice Inbred Strains Biology Andrology Mice Pregnancy Stress Physiological In vivo Heat shock protein Genetics medicine Animals RNA Antisense Neural Tube Defects Heat shock Heat-Shock Proteins Valproic Acid Fetus Neural tube RNA Probes Cell Biology medicine.disease Teratology Disease Models Animal Teratogens medicine.anatomical_structure Gene Expression Regulation embryonic structures Electrophoresis Polyacrylamide Gel Female Developmental Biology medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Developmental Genetics. 14:137-147 |
ISSN: | 1520-6408 0192-253X |
DOI: | 10.1002/dvg.1020140208 |
Popis: | The present study was undertaken to examine the role of heat shock response in the development of tolerance and cross-tolerance in an in vivo murine model of teratogen-induced neural tube defects. The experimental paradigm designed to address this question was to utilize inbred mouse strains that differed in their sensitivity to hyperthermia and valproic acid induced neural tube defects, subjecting the dams to subteratogenic pretreatments with either heat or valproic acid at two different timepoints during development prior to the administration of the teratogenic insult. A statistically significant reduction in the frequency of neural tube defects and/or embryolethality following a pretreatment in dams subsequently exposed to a teratogenic treatment was considered evidence for the induction of tolerance. This was observed in the SWV embryos exposed to the 38 degrees C pretreatment at 8:06 and to embryos exposed to either pretreatment temperature at 8:10 prior to a teratogenic heat shock at 8:12. In the LM/Bc embryos, only the 41 degrees C pretreatment at 8:06 induced thermotolerance. There was no evidence of tolerance induced in either mouse strain using valproic acid. On the other hand, cross-tolerance was clearly demonstrated in this study, with a low temperature (41 degrees C) pretreatment successfully protecting SWV fetuses from a subsequent teratogenic treatment with valproic acid, while valproic acid (200 mg/kg) was effective in reducing the risk of hyperthermia-induced neural tube defects in the LM/Bc fetuses. In all instances, tolerance was induced in the absence of significant induction of hsp synthesis. The lack of concordance between hsps and thermotolerance suggests that some other factor(s) is involved in conferring thermotolerance on developing murine embryos. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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