Mercuric mercury (Hg2+), when injected IV into the pregnant Wistar rat, is retained mainly in the maternal compartment and uptake by the conceptuses is small. Thus if the dose is based on total body weight, the maternal body burden, particularly in late gestation, is greater than the whole body burd
Comparison of some biochemical effects of teratogenic doses of mercuric mercury and cadmium in the pregnant rat
β Scribed by Daphne Holt; M. Webb
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 640 KB
- Volume
- 58
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-5761
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Mercuric mercury (Hg2+), like cadmium (Cd2+), interferes with the transport of certain essential metals to the conceptus in the pregnant Wistar rat and, at 48 h after the IV injection of a teratogenic dose (0.79 mg Hg2+/kg body weight) on day 12 of gestation, the foetal concentrations of Zn2+, Cu2+ and Fe3+, but not of Mg2+, are reduced significantly. Both Hg2+ and Cd2+, at teratogenic dose levels, inhibit the placental and foetal uptake of 65Zn2+ and 67Cu2+, but possibly by different mechanisms. In addition, the effects of Hg2+, at different times after dosing, on the uptake of these labelled tracers and of 59Fe3+, administered as 15-min pulses, do not parallel the changes in the placental and foetal concentrations and contents of the endogenous, stable metallic ions. The teratogenic dose of Hg2+ inhibits the placental and foetal uptake of L-[4,5-3H]-leucine, but not the incorporation of the labelled amino acid into foetal protein. In contrast, the corresponding dose of Cd2+ inhibits both leucine uptake and protein synthesis in the placenta and foetus. Similarly, Cd2+ inhibits the uptake of [2-14C]-thymidine and its incorporation into foetal DNA, whereas Hg2+ reduces the placental and foetal uptake, but has little or no effect on the utilization of the nucleoside. Since both Cd2+ and Hg2+ reduce the foetal uptake of 65Zn and the foetal concentration of Zn, but only Cd2+ interferes with DNA synthesis, it is unlikely that the inhibition of the metabolism of thymidine can be attributed to reduction in thymidine kinase activity in consequence of foetal Zn deficiency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Until the 16th day of gestation the intravenous LD~50~ of Cd^2+^ in the pregnant WistarβPorton rat is higher, but not significantly different from that (1.8 mg Cd^2+^ per kg body weight) in nulliparous females. At 20 days it is 1.1 mg Cd^2+^ kg per body weight. This decrease is related
## Abstract Administration of Cd^2+^ to the 12βday pregnant rat caused a doseβdependent inhibition of placental ^65^Zn^2+^ transport. At 4 h after the injection of the teratogenic dose (1.25 mg Cd^2+^ per kg body weight), transport of ^65^Zn^2+^ to the embryo was inhibited by 75%. This inhibition d
Ethanol (1, 2 or 5 g kg-') and lead (0.55 g I-' in drinking water) were given either alone or in combination for 4 months to rats. The uptake of lead in tissues, some lead-sensitive variables, the levels of biogenic amines in different brain regions, hepatic lipid peroxidation, glycogen and blood gl