Accumulation of heat shock protein 72 (hsp 72) in postimplantation rat embryos after exposure to various periods of hyperthermia (40°–43°c) in vitro: Evidence that heat shock protein 72 is a biomarker of heat‐induced embryotoxicity
- 1 September 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Teratology
- Vol. 46 (3), 301-309
- https://doi.org/10.1002/tera.1420460315
Abstract
A monoclonal antibody to the 72 kDa heat shock protein and Western blot analysis blot analysis were used to determine the induction, accumulation and turnover of hsp 72 after day 10 rat embryos were exposed to elevated temperatures (40°–43°C) for various lengths of time (2.5 minutes to 18 hours). Embryos exposed to temperatures that exceed the normal culture temperature (37°C) by 4°C or more for as little as 2.5 minutes (43°C) or 15 minutes (41, 42°C) synthesized and accumulated detectable amounts of heat-inducible hsp 72. Hsp 72 could not be detected by Western blot analysis of proteins from embryos cultured at 40°C or below. Once induced, hsp 72 can be detected in embryos for 24–48 hours after they are removed from the hyperthermic conditions and returned to normothermic conditions. Our results also indicate that hsp 72 is induced by all hyperthermic exposures that induce alterations in rat embryo growth and development; therefore, hsp 72 is a potential biomarker for heat-induced embryotoxicity.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Role of glutathione and hsp 70 in the acquisition of thermotolerance in postimplantation rat embryosTeratology, 1991
- Regulation of the inducible heat shock 71 genes in early neural development of cultured rat embryosTeratology, 1989
- Heat shock and thermotolerance during early rat embryo developmentTeratology, 1987
- Hyperthermia-induced heat shock response and thermotolerance in postimplantation rat embryosDevelopmental Biology, 1987
- Hyperthermia as a teratogen: A review of experimental studies and their clinical significanceTeratogenesis, Carcinogenesis, and Mutagenesis, 1986
- Hyperthermia as a teratogen: Parameters determining hyperthermia‐induced head defects in the ratTeratology, 1985
- The induction of microphthalmia, encephalocele, and other head defects following hyperthermia during the gastrulation process in the ratTeratology, 1985
- Role of acrolein in cyclophosphamide teratogenicity in rat embryos in vitroToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1984
- Abnormalities induced in cultured rat embryos by hyperthermiaTeratology, 1978
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970