| Literature DB >> 25730462 |
Fang Ding1, Li Chen1, Yong Liu2, Feng-Rui Wu2, Biao Ding2, Wen-Yong Li3, Rong Wang4.
Abstract
It is well known that excessive long-term alcohol consumption is harmful, especially in pregnant women. In the present study, the Kunming white mouse was used as an animal model and indirect immunofluorescence was performed to analyze the toxic effects of alcohol on early pre-implantation embryos. H3K9 acetylation immunofluorescence could not be detected in MII oocytes. H3K9 acetylation levels in the treatment group were higher than in the control group during the morula stage, and contrary to results during the blastocyst stage. Other stages showed no obvious differences for in vivo embryos. For in vitro embryos, almost no difference was found between the two experimental groups across all stages, and both groups showed increasing H3K9 acetylation levels (except at the 2-cell stage). This study shows that H3K9 acetylation levels in early pre-implantation embryos are notably impacted by excessive alcohol ingestion by females. These data are the first step in understanding the epigenetic mechanism of alcohol toxicity in early pre-implantation mouse embryos.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol intake; Embryo development; H3K9 acetylation; Mice; Pre-implantation embryos
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25730462 PMCID: PMC4871221 DOI: 10.13918/j.issn.2095-8137.2015.1.54
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dongwuxue Yanjiu ISSN: 0254-5853