Publication | Closed Access
Comparative studies of embryotoxic action of ethylenethiourea in rat whole embryo and embryonic cell culture
13
Citations
14
References
1991
Year
The effects of ethylenethiourea (ETU) were investigated using rat (Wistar-imamichi) embryos cultured from days 11 to 13 of gestation or cultured rat embryonic cells extracted on day 11. Malformations in cultured embryos at the concentration of 30 micrograms/ml of ETU were found in the head and tail, which were severely affected, as well as the limb and face. All embryos exposed to 150 and 300 micrograms/ml of ETU had malformed heads, tails, limbs, and facial configurations. Protein contents of the cultured embryos were decreased dose-dependently at the concentrations ranging from 30 to 300 micrograms/ml. In the histological studies of the cultured embryos with ETU, thinner neuroepithelium in head was observed. In the embryonic cells extracted on day 11 of gestation, ETU dose-dependently inhibited the differentiation of midbrain (MB) cells into neurons and that of limb bud (LB) cells into chondrocytes at the concentrations ranging from 30 to 600 micrograms/ml of ETU. The concentrations of ETU that inhibited the production of differentiated foci by 50% (IC50) were 170 micrograms/ml in LB cells of day 11, and greater than 600 micrograms/ml in LB cells on day 12 of development. Therefore, differentiation of MB cells was more sensitive to ETU than the differentiation of LB cells. These results indicated that there was a reasonable correlation of ETU induced changes in cultured whole embryos and embryonic cells.
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