PMID: 9184344Apr 1, 1997Paper

Hyperthermia, teratogenesis and the heat shock response in mammalian embryos in culture

The International Journal of Developmental Biology
M J EdwardsZ Li

Abstract

Hyperthermia is a recognized teratogen in animals and there is strong evidence that it also causes significant damage to human embryos. Studies with induced hyperthermia in pregnant animals defined the defects which are produced, the susceptible stages of development, and threshold doses of heat required to cause defects. The in vivo experiments lacked precision because of variability of embryonic development at a given conceptual age, varying maternal responses to agents causing temperature elevations, the difficulty in measuring embryonic temperature and the possibility that defects were caused by toxic changes in maternal metabolism. These variables were eliminated by the use of postimplantation whole rat and mouse embryo cultures, which were exposed to various doses of heat at closely defined stages of development. The studies showed that heat acts directly on embryos and that elevations of 2 degrees C and greater sustained over early rat organogenesis cause defects mainly by causing apoptotic cell death especially in the developing central nervous system. A moderate, non damaging exposure is followed within 15 min by protection for up to 8 h against a more severe and otherwise teratogenic exposure. The protective heat shoc...Continue Reading

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Apoptosis

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