TY - JOUR
T1 - A chick model for the mechanisms of mustard gas neurobehavioral teratogenicity
AU - Wormser, Uri
AU - Izrael, Michal
AU - Van Der Zee, Eddy A.
AU - Brodsky, Berta
AU - Yanai, Joseph
PY - 2005/1
Y1 - 2005/1
N2 - The chemical warfare blistering agent, sulfur mustard (SM), is a powerful mutagen and carcinogen. Due to its similarity to the related chemotherapy agents nitrogen mustard (mechlorethamine), it is expected to act as a developmental neurotoxicant. The present study was designed to establish a chick model for the mechanisms of SM on neurobehavioral teratogenicity, free of confounds related to mammalian maternal effects. Chicken eggs were injected with SM at a dose range of 0.0017-17.0 μg/kg of egg, which is below the threshold for dysmorphology, on incubation days (ID) 2 and 7, and then tests were conducted posthatching. Exposure to SM elicited significant deficits in the intermedial part of the hyperstriatum ventrale (IMHV)-related imprinting behavior. Parallel decreases were found in the level of membrane PKCγ in the IMHV, while eliciting no net change in cytosolic PKCγ. The chick, thus, provides a suitable model for the rapid evaluation of SM behavioral teratogenicity and elucidation of the mechanisms underlying behavioral anomalies. The results obtained, using a model that controls for confounding maternal effects, may be replicated in the mammalian model and provide the groundwork for studies designed to offset or reverse the SM-induced neurobehavioral defects in both avian and mammals.
AB - The chemical warfare blistering agent, sulfur mustard (SM), is a powerful mutagen and carcinogen. Due to its similarity to the related chemotherapy agents nitrogen mustard (mechlorethamine), it is expected to act as a developmental neurotoxicant. The present study was designed to establish a chick model for the mechanisms of SM on neurobehavioral teratogenicity, free of confounds related to mammalian maternal effects. Chicken eggs were injected with SM at a dose range of 0.0017-17.0 μg/kg of egg, which is below the threshold for dysmorphology, on incubation days (ID) 2 and 7, and then tests were conducted posthatching. Exposure to SM elicited significant deficits in the intermedial part of the hyperstriatum ventrale (IMHV)-related imprinting behavior. Parallel decreases were found in the level of membrane PKCγ in the IMHV, while eliciting no net change in cytosolic PKCγ. The chick, thus, provides a suitable model for the rapid evaluation of SM behavioral teratogenicity and elucidation of the mechanisms underlying behavioral anomalies. The results obtained, using a model that controls for confounding maternal effects, may be replicated in the mammalian model and provide the groundwork for studies designed to offset or reverse the SM-induced neurobehavioral defects in both avian and mammals.
KW - Chick
KW - IMHV
KW - Imprinting
KW - Mustard gas
KW - PKCγ
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=12844286933&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ntt.2004.09.006
DO - 10.1016/j.ntt.2004.09.006
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
C2 - 15681122
AN - SCOPUS:12844286933
SN - 0892-0362
VL - 27
SP - 65
EP - 71
JO - Neurotoxicology and Teratology
JF - Neurotoxicology and Teratology
IS - 1
ER -