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      Prevention of neural tube defects by and toxicity of L-homocysteine in cultured postimplantation rat embryos.

      Teratology
      Adenosylhomocysteinase, Animals, Catalase, pharmacology, Copper, Copper Sulfate, Culture Techniques, Drug Interactions, Embryonic Development, Embryonic and Fetal Development, drug effects, Female, Homocysteine, metabolism, toxicity, Homocystine, Hydrolases, Methionine, Neural Tube Defects, prevention & control, Oxidation-Reduction, Pregnancy, Rats, S-Adenosylhomocysteine, S-Adenosylmethionine, Stereoisomerism, Teratogens, Vitamin B 12

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          Abstract

          Mild hyperhomocysteinemia is frequently observed in mothers who gave birth to a child with a neural tube defect (NTD). In a previous study we showed L-homocysteine was embryotoxic to gestational day 10 (GD10) rat embryos in culture, however, no NTDs were observed. We therefore investigated the effect of L-homocysteine on the development of neural plate stage (GD9.5) rat embryos. Other objectives of this study were investigation into whether the embryotoxicity of L-homocysteine could be attenuated by compounds related to its metabolism and clarification of the mechanism of L-homocysteine embryotoxicity. In GD9.5 rat embryos L-homocysteine was not toxic at 1- and 2-mM concentrations. Rather at these concentrations it promoted development of the rat embryos in serum that without supplementation caused NTDs in the embryos. L-Methionine had the same preventive effect at even lower concentrations, but folinic acid (1 mM) did not improve embryonic development. N5-Methyltetrahydrofolate (5-CH3-THF) (100 microM), L-serine (6 mM), and L-methionine (6 and 12 mM) attenuated the embryotoxicity of L-homocysteine (6 mM) in GD10 rat embryos. Vitamin B12 (10 microM) completely abolished the embryotoxicity of L-homocysteine, which was shown to be mediated by catalysis of the spontaneous oxidation of L-homocysteine to the less toxic L-homocystine. In GD11 rat embryos, both L- and D-homocysteine were readily taken up when added to the culture (3 mM) and increased embryonic S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH) levels 14- and 3-fold, respectively. This difference was shown to be caused by the stereospecific preference of SAH hydrolase. We propose the basis for L-homocysteine embryotoxicity is an inhibition of transmethylation reactions by increased embryonic SAH levels.

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