The mechanisms underlying the teratogen-induced apoptotic process leading to anomaly formation are not as yet understood. Therefore, we tried to evaluate possible changes in the expression of molecules regulating the apoptotic process induced in the embryo and placenta by exposure to cyclophosphamide (CP). Exposure to CP resulted in clear growth retardation that was accompanied by a time-dependent increase in cellular damage and an appearance of apoptotic cells in the embryonic brain and limbs as well as a decrease in cell proliferation. Western blot analysis demonstrated an increase in the level of Bax and a decrease in the expression of the p65 subunit of NF-kappaB and IkappaB alpha in the embryo and placenta. Immunohistochemical analysis localized cells expressing those molecules to the areas that exhibited CP-induced cellular damage, while in the placenta they were revealed mainly in the luminal and glandular epithelium. Our results suggest a possible involvement of Bax, p65 and IkappaB alpha in the response of the embryo and the placenta to teratogenic insults.