SUMMARY:Flunitrazepam (FNZ) is a minor tranquillizer involving allosteric modulation of the GABA receptor complex. It is a ligand of the peripheral benzodiazepine receptor (PBR) that participates in cholesterol transport in steroidogenic organs. The purpose was to investigate whether a single oral dose of FNZ of 2.5 mg/kg of body weight (bw), administered on day 6 of gestation, alters the structure of the adult ovary of mouse offsprings at 2 months of age. The mouse offsprings of the in utero FNZ-treated group and those of the control group (C) were killed. Ovaries were obtained in early estrous, fixed in Zenker solution, and processed by routine histological techniques. Serial sections were observed under light microscopy to determine the characteristics and quantity of follicles in different stages of development and of the corpus luteum. The ovarian tissues from the FNZ group depicted a great staining affinity, enlarged nuclei with abundant heterochromatin clumps. The quantity of primordial, primary and secondary normal follicles in the FNZ group decreased significantly (p< 0.01). The number of primary atretic follicles increased (p<0.01) and the secondary ones remained constant as in group C. Histological changes and statistical data suggest that FNZ produces long-lasting epigenetic or genotoxic effects in follicular and corpus luteum cells of the ovary of prenatally FNZ-treated mice.
SUMMARY:Diazepam (DZ) is a benzodiazepine that belongs to the group of minor tranquilizers with myo-relaxing and anticonvulsant properties. DZ and its metabolites cross the placental barrier in human, monkey, hamster, and mouse, and accumulate in the placenta. Our aim was to investigate, through histological techniques, and semifine sections if DZ induces morphological changes in the placenta. Twenty female mice of the ICR strain were distributed randomly in two groups. One group (DZ) was treated from days 6 to 17 of gestation with a single daily subcutaneous (sc) dose of DZ of 2.7 mg/kg/ (bw); the second, control group (C) was treated with saline solution. All females (10 DZ and 10 C) were killed by decapitation. Placentas were extracted and fixed in phosphates-buffered 10% formaldehyde, pH 7.3, dehydrated, and embedded in paraffin to obtain 3 µm thick sections or fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde, post-fixed in 1% OsO 4 , embedded in epoxy resin. Histological sections were stained with hematoxylin-eosin or Weigert´s iron hematoxylin. Semifine sections were stained with toluidine blue. All sections were observed under comparative light microscopy. The DZ-group showed thinned placental barrier with multiple vacuoles. Nuclei of trophoblast cells (TCs) and trophoblast giant cells (TGCs) presented heterochromatin in coarse granules, atypically distributed in the karyolymph and conspicuous nucleoli. The cytoplasm of the TGCs was vacuolated and chromatin had a similar appearance to that observed in TCs. The total area of the placental barrier was measured in µm 2 /µm 2 ; the area in the DZ group was reduced as compared with the C group (P<0.001). Alterations of TGCs could be due to an interaction of DZ with peripheral type benzodiazepine receptors involved in progesterone biosynthesis. Administration of DZ in mice alters the placental barrier and TGCs which could affect their physiology and causes teratogenic effects on the ovary and testis involved in steroid hormones biosynthesis.
MÁRQUEZ-OROZCO, M. C.; DE LA FUENTE-JUÁREZ, G. & MÁRQUEZ-OROZCO, A.Ultrastructure of fetal mice hepatocytes exposed in utero to diazepam. Int. J. Morphol., 33(4):1436-1440, 2015. SUMMARY:Previous research has shown that fetal mice hepatic cells from females treated with diazepam (Valium) during pregnancy depict cytoplasmic and nuclear modifications when observed with photonic microscope. The purpose of this work is to investigate if diazepam administered subcutaneously (SC) to pregnant mice females induces ultraestructural alterations in the cytoplasmic organelles and nucleus to fetal hepatocytes. Transmission electron microscopy observations of fetal hepatocytes from pregnant females treated with a single daily dose of diazepam 2.7 mg/kg/bw/SC administered from 6 th to 15 th days of gestation revealed that they frequently presented disorganized and dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum cisterns, membranous elements, abundant Golgi complex and glycogen granules, around large vacuoles. The voluminous nucleus shows atypical distribution of chromatin. These alterations could modify the hepatocyte's physiology and probably persist after birth.
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