1973
DOI: 10.1002/tera.1420070310
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Limb development in mouse embryos. I. Analysis of teratogenic effects of retinoic acid

Abstract: Retinoic (vitamin A) acid produced phocomelia and micromelia in DBA/2J fetuses when administered to pregnant mice on the 12th or 13th day of gestation. The incidence of forelimb defects was higher after 12th-(in embryos having 3 3 4 1 somite pairs) than 13th-day treatment (40-51 somite pairs); the reverse was true for hindlimb defects. Hindlimb digits continued to be highly susceptible on the 14th day. Limb defects were not accompanied by body growth retardation or other skeletal malformations except cleft pal… Show more

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Cited by 271 publications
(100 citation statements)
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“…In the mouse fetus, the types of limb defects are variable and dependent on the exposure time and the stage of limb development. Types of defects can be from longbone deficiencies to deficiencies of digits (Kochhar, 1973;Sulik and Dehart, 1988). In regenerating axolotl limbs, administration of RA either too soon, before cells are dedifferentiated, or too late, after cells have redifferentiated, results in little or no pattern duplication (Thorns and Stocum, 1984;Maden et al, 1985;Niazi et al, 1985;Scadding and Maden, 1986a).…”
Section: Effects Of Ra On Regeneration Are Stage-dependentmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the mouse fetus, the types of limb defects are variable and dependent on the exposure time and the stage of limb development. Types of defects can be from longbone deficiencies to deficiencies of digits (Kochhar, 1973;Sulik and Dehart, 1988). In regenerating axolotl limbs, administration of RA either too soon, before cells are dedifferentiated, or too late, after cells have redifferentiated, results in little or no pattern duplication (Thorns and Stocum, 1984;Maden et al, 1985;Niazi et al, 1985;Scadding and Maden, 1986a).…”
Section: Effects Of Ra On Regeneration Are Stage-dependentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, in excess, retinoids act as potent teratogenic agents in many developing systems. For example, excess retinoic acid (RA) can lead to craniofacial abnormalities, limb reduction, and digit deletion in mouse embryos (Kochhar, 1973;. In the developing chick wingbuds and regenerating amphibian limbs, RA causes an alteration of skeletal pattern including duplication and hypomorphism (Maden, 1982;Tickle et al, 1982;Kim and Stocum, 1986a;Lee and Kim, 1990).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…defects in the CNS, eye, face, dentition, ear, limb, urogenital system, cardiovascular system and the vertebrae and ribs (Knudsen, 1966;Shenfelt, 1972;Kochhar, 1973;Fantel et al 1977;Lammer et al 1985;Rosa et al 1986). Thus, we may reasonably conclude that since either too much or too little RA is harmful to the embryo, embryonic cells must strictly regulate the levels of endogenous RA so that the correct balance is obtained.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both high and low levels of retinoic acid have been implicated in a wide range of developmental abnormalities [31,32], and control of concentrations of RA is finely controlled in vivo. Retinoic acid signalling is implicated in chrondroblast differentiation and chondrocyte hypertrophy [27].…”
Section: The Role Of Retinoids and Retinoic Acidmentioning
confidence: 99%