Carney Edward W, Scialli Anthony R, Watson Rebecca E, DeSesso John M
Toxicology & Environmental Research and Consulting, The Dow Chemical Company, Midland, Michigan 48674, USA.
Birth Defects Res C Embryo Today. 2004 Dec;72(4):345-60. doi: 10.1002/bdrc.20027.
The dose of toxicant reaching the embryo is a critical determinant of developmental toxicity, and is likely to be a key factor responsible for interspecies variability in response to many test agents. This review compares the mechanisms regulating disposition of toxicants from the maternal circulation to the embryo during organogenesis in humans and the two species used predominantly in regulatory developmental toxicity testing, rats and rabbits. These three species utilize fundamentally different strategies for maternal-embryonic exchange during early pregnancy. Early postimplantation rat embryos rely on the inverted visceral yolk sac placenta, which is in intimate contact with the uterine epithelium and is equipped with an extensive repertoire of transport mechanisms, such as pinocytosis, endocytosis, and specific transporter proteins. Also, the rat yolk sac completely surrounds the embryo, such that the fluid-filled exocoelom survives through most of the period of organogenesis, and can concentrate compounds such as certain weak acids due to pH differences between maternal blood and exocelomic fluid. The early postimplantation rabbit conceptus differs from the rat in that the yolk sac is not closely apposed to the uterus during early organogenesis and does not completely enclose the embryo until relatively later in development (approximately GD13). This suggests that the early rabbit yolk sac might be a relatively inefficient transporter, a conclusion supported by limited data with ethylene glycol and one of its predominant metabolites, glycolic acid, given to GD9 rabbits. In humans, maternal-embryo exchange is thought to occur via the chorioallantoic placenta, although it has recently been conjectured that a supplemental route of transfer could occur via absorption into the yolk sac. Knowledge of the mechanisms underlying species-specific embryonic disposition, factored together with other pharmacokinetic characteristics of the test compound and knowledge of critical periods of susceptibility, can be used on a case-by-case basis to make more accurate extrapolations of test animal data to the human.
到达胚胎的毒物剂量是发育毒性的关键决定因素,并且可能是导致对许多测试剂反应存在种间差异的关键因素。本综述比较了在人类以及主要用于监管发育毒性测试的两种物种(大鼠和兔子)器官形成期间,调节毒物从母体循环到胚胎的处置机制。这三个物种在妊娠早期利用根本不同的母体 - 胚胎交换策略。植入后早期的大鼠胚胎依赖倒置的内脏卵黄囊胎盘,它与子宫上皮紧密接触,并配备了广泛的转运机制,如胞饮作用、内吞作用和特定的转运蛋白。此外,大鼠卵黄囊完全包围胚胎,使得充满液体的外体腔在大部分器官形成期都存在,并且由于母体血液和外体腔液之间的pH差异,可以浓缩某些弱酸等化合物。植入后早期的兔子概念与大鼠不同,在于在早期器官形成期间卵黄囊与子宫不紧密相邻,并且直到发育相对较晚(约妊娠第13天)才完全包围胚胎。这表明早期兔子卵黄囊可能是相对低效的转运体,给予妊娠第9天兔子的乙二醇及其主要代谢物之一乙醇酸的有限数据支持了这一结论。在人类中,母体 - 胚胎交换被认为是通过绒毛膜尿囊胎盘发生的,尽管最近有人推测可能存在通过吸收进入卵黄囊的补充转移途径。了解物种特异性胚胎处置的潜在机制,结合测试化合物的其他药代动力学特征以及易感性关键期的知识,可以逐案用于更准确地将测试动物数据外推至人类。