Anomalous coronary arteries in the bis-diamine-treated embryos are induced by the disruption of epicardial-mesenchymal transformation and subsequent poor development of coronary vasculature. Incomplete hatching of the coronary ostium is associated with abnormal truncal division.
These results suggest that bis-diamine induces cardiac anomalies by delaying the migration of neural crest cells into the heart and by disturbing the proliferation of pericardial precursor during early cardiac development.
It is known that animals show different responses to the same teratogen between different strains. We examined cardiac malformations in Sprague-Dawley (SD) and Wistar rats induced by bis-diamine, which produced conotruncal anomalies and aortic arch malformations in embryos when administered to the dams, to elucidate the morphological differences and pathogenesis in the two strains. Two hundred milligrams of bis-diamine dissolved in 1% gum-tragacanth was administered to pregnant rats on embryonic day (ED) 9.5, 10.5 and 11.5 in each strain. The embryos were removed on ED 20.5. External appearances, cardiovascular morphology and associated anomalies were examined under a dissecting microscope. An immunohistological study with an anti-N-CAM antibody, an excellent marker for neural crest cells, was performed on ED 12.5 embryos. Isolated aortic arch anomalies were common features of malformations induced by bis-diamine in SD rats and intracardiac defects were found in a small number of the embryos. Wistar rats showed more serious cardiovascular anomalies, such as persistent truncus arteriosus and tetralogy of Fallot, especially when dams were treated on ED 10.5 and isolated arch anomalies were significantly less prevalent than in SD rats. Immunohistology demonstrated that there were fewer N-CAM positive cells in the conotruncal region in Wistar rats than in SD rats. Bis-diamine induced more critical cardiovascular malformations in Wistar rats because neural crest cells, which play an important role in conotruncal septation, were more extensively damaged. Different susceptibility to bis-diamine and/or different time of neural crest cell emigration from the hindbrain might explain those morphological differences.
Bis-diamine disturbed the normal development of gap junctions and apoptosis of myofibroblasts around the HNK-1-positive conduction tissue through overall poor myocardial proliferation and growth.
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