Studies with diverse teratogens implicated the transcription factor NF-kappaB in mechanisms determining teratological susceptibility of embryos. Here, a teratogen such as cyclophosphamide (CP) was used to test whether teratogenic insult alters the classical NF-kappaB activation pathway, and how these alterations correlate with the ability of mouse embryos to resist the teratogen-induced process of maldevelopment. We observed that embryos tested 24 h after the exposure of females to 40 mg/kg CP exhibited a dramatic decrease in the level of NF-kappaB (p65 subunit)-DNA binding, IkappaB kinase beta (IKKbeta) activity, expression of p65 and IKKbeta proteins, as well as NF-kappaB inhibitory proteins (IkappaBs) such as IkappaBalpha, IkappaBbeta, and IkappaBepsilon, and died within the next 24 h. Embryos of females exposed to 15 mg/kg CP exhibited only a decrease in NF-kappaB-DNA binding and IKKbeta activity at 24 h. However, at 48 h, a more prominent decrease in NF-kappaB activity was observed, accompanied by a decreased expression of p65 and IKKbeta proteins. These embryos died within the next 24 h. After treatment with 10 mg/kg CP, embryos survived until the end of the antenatal period of development, demonstrating a transient decrease in NF-kappaB-DNA binding activity and no alterations in NF-kappaB signaling. These results suggest that the classical NF-kappaB activation pathway may be among targets that teratogens engage to initiate abnormal development. Besides, the observation that embryos destined to be dead exhibited a dramatically decreased rate of cell proliferation suggests a pathway, whereby teratogen-induced alterations in NF-kappaB signaling may culminate in such a final effect as embryonic death.