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Collimated Microbeam Reveals that the Proportion of Non-Damaged Cells in Irradiated Blastoderm Determines the Success of Development in Medaka ( Oryzias latipes ) Embryos

It has been widely accepted that prenatal exposure to ionizing radiation (IR) can affect embryonic and fetal development in mammals, depending on dose and gestational age of the exposure, however, the precise machinery underlying the IR-induced disturbance of embryonic development is still remained...

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Published in:Biology (Basel, Switzerland) Switzerland), 2020-12, Vol.9 (12), p.447
Main Authors: Yasuda, Takako, Funayama, Tomoo, Nagata, Kento, Li, Duolin, Endo, Takuya, Jia, Qihui, Suzuki, Michiyo, Ishikawa, Yuji, Mitani, Hiroshi, Oda, Shoji
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container_issue 12
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container_title Biology (Basel, Switzerland)
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creator Yasuda, Takako
Funayama, Tomoo
Nagata, Kento
Li, Duolin
Endo, Takuya
Jia, Qihui
Suzuki, Michiyo
Ishikawa, Yuji
Mitani, Hiroshi
Oda, Shoji
description It has been widely accepted that prenatal exposure to ionizing radiation (IR) can affect embryonic and fetal development in mammals, depending on dose and gestational age of the exposure, however, the precise machinery underlying the IR-induced disturbance of embryonic development is still remained elusive. In this study, we examined the effects of gamma-ray irradiation on blastula embryos of medaka and found transient delay of brain development even when they hatched normally with low dose irradiation (2 and 5 Gy). In contrast, irradiation of higher dose of gamma-rays (10 Gy) killed the embryos with malformations before hatching. We then conducted targeted irradiation of blastoderm with a collimated carbon-ion microbeam. When a part (about 4, 10 and 25%) of blastoderm cells were injured by lethal dose (50 Gy) of carbon-ion microbeam irradiation, loss of about 10% or less of blastoderm cells induced only the transient delay of brain development and the embryos hatched normally, whereas embryos with about 25% of their blastoderm cells were irradiated stopped development at neurula stage and died. These findings strongly suggest that the developmental disturbance in the IR irradiated embryos is determined by the proportion of severely injured cells in the blastoderm.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/biology9120447
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subjects Blastoderm
Blastula
brain damage
Brain research
Carbon
Developmental stages
Eggs
Embryogenesis
Embryos
Fetuses
Gene expression
Gestational age
Hatching
Ion beams
Ionizing radiation
Lethal dose
medaka
microbeam irradiation
Prenatal experience
teratogenesis
title Collimated Microbeam Reveals that the Proportion of Non-Damaged Cells in Irradiated Blastoderm Determines the Success of Development in Medaka ( Oryzias latipes ) Embryos
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