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The effects of ethanol at
different treatment times Only 2 of the 6 51-hour and 7 of the
15 27-hour treated eggs survived, suggesting that ethanol at
15% can cause sufficient disruptions in the Shh signaling
pathway or elsewhere in the embryo such that development is
terminated. Other mechanisms such as alcohol competition
with retinol to bind with Class IV alcohol dehydrogenase
(ADH), which leads to retinoic acid deficiency and and
craniofacial defects, may also be a factor in the
termination of embryos (Chen and Sulik, 1996; Deltour et
al., 1996). However, only 3 of the 5 51-hour and 1
of 8 27-hour control eggs also survived, suggesting that
ethanol may not have been the cause of death. The
malformations were consistent with the previous findings in
this survey, and we conclude that effects on beak length and
head diameter are in fact due to ethanol. When injecting the
eggs, there was no consideration as to where the blastodisc
may be located, leading to the hypothesis that perhaps
needles were inserted directly into the blastodisc,
disrupting and terminating development. Within the set of harvested embryos
there were notable differences in mass between the control
and treated embryos in mass, head diameter, and beak length,
consistent with Lawrence and Yoder's data (Figure
1, Figure
2, Figure
3, Table
3, Table
4). The presence of embryos
with severe malformations including missing beaks suggests
that ethanol does have a teratogenic effect, especially in
the craniofacial region (Figure
8). Neutral Red vital dye staining revealed that NCC death
occured to varying degrees when ethanol was injected at different times
during development. Since chick development occurs in an anterior to posterior
fashion, the most posterior cells are less mature than those in the anterior
region. Early exposure to alcohol results in cell death in the head region,
whereas later exposure would affect more caudal regions (Smith, 1997).
Thus, the older embryo showed little to no apoptosis in the craniofacial
region but some apoptosis in the more posterior regions in the spine (Figure
9). The embryo injected with 15% ethanol
at 27 hours exhibited much staining in the craniofacial region, most prominently
in the midbrain and down the spine (Figure
8). The control embryo displayed no staining
(Figure 10). Trunk NCC are precursors for the
peripheral nervous system, ganglia, and glial cells. They
are determined relatively late in migration and thus are
multipotent and can compensate for some cell death. Alcohol
did not seem to affect these cells and their future
structures to the same degree as the cranial structures. In
contrast, the cranial NCC are determined at emigration and
there seems to be a critical window of 18-36 hours of
incubation where these cells are most sensitive to alcohol
(Smith, 1997). Our embryos treated at 27 hours fit into this
critical window and we see much neural crest apoptosis
(Figure
8). Distinctive facial features
characterize FAS in humans and individuals exhibit
neurodevelopmental deficits (Smith, 1997). Understanding
mechanisms involved in FAS may help to control or limit
alcohol-induced damage to the fetus, as well as propose
methods to prevent or repair damage done to the prain and
central nervous system later in life, an issue of great
public health importance. |
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Embryonic viability. |
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Eggs which were discarded were not
counted due to a lack of viability or a lethal fungal
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Last Modified: 10 May 2004
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