Abstract

Investigations were conducted to test the effects of cordycepin, a naturally-occurring analog of adenosine, on gene activity in preimplantation mouse embryos. Embryos were explanted into culture at the 2-cell, morula and blastocyst stages, and incubated in the absence or presence of cordycepin (5–100 μg/ml) to determine the effects of the drug on continued development and macromolecular synthesis. Cordycepin at concentrations exceeding 10 μg/ml caused a dose-responsive inhibition of cleavage and blastulation of embryos in culture. Exposure of morulae and blastocysts to cordycepin concentrations of 10–100 μg/ml produced a dose- and time-dependent suppression of RNA synthesis as measured by incorporation of [ 3H]uridine. Suppression in blastocyst-stage embryos was enhanced by preincubation, and reached 70% after 4 h at 100 μg/ml. Cordycepin (50–100 μg/ml) reduced synthesis of major RNA components detected by electrophoresis, blocked incorporation of radioactivity into fractions bound by olido(dT)-cellulose, and produced a time- and dose-dependent reduction of protein synthesis in blastocysts, causing a maximum inhibition of 25% after 4 h of preincubation at 50 μg/ml.

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