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1.
Mutat Res ; 230(2): 205-17, 1990 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2374557

ABSTRACT

For some chemicals, induction of presumed dominant lethal mutations has been observed only in female mice and not in males. In those cases, questions arise as to (1) whether the increased embryonic mortality is due to genetic effects of the chemicals in the oocyte or, (2) is caused indirectly through maternal toxicity, and, if genetic, (3) the basis for the sex difference. These questions were studied using the compounds adriamycin and platinol. Neither compound induces dominant lethals in male germ cells, but both increased early embryonic mortality when females were treated prior to mating (treatment of maturing oocytes). Reciprocal zygote transfer experiments ruled out, either entirely or for the large part, maternal toxicity as the cause, and cytogenetic analysis of first-cleavage metaphases revealed high incidences of chromosomal aberrations. The results of both of these experiments thus provide evidence that the early embryonic mortality resulted from genetic effects induced in oocytes. Most interestingly, each compound produced unexpected types of chromosomal aberrations. Adriamycin produced deletions, rings, and presumed chromosome-type rearrangements. Platinol, on the other hand, produced a few chromatid-type aberrations, but the bulk of aberrations were characterized by disorganization of the chromatin, minute fragments, and thread-like chromatin bridges between fragments and chromosomes or between two or more chromosomes. The latter type of cytogenetic damage was observed primarily in the centromeric region. It is hypothesized that the female-specific dominant lethal effects of the two compounds are associated with the diffused state of the maturing oocyte chromosomes.


Subject(s)
Chromosome Aberrations , Cisplatin/toxicity , Doxorubicin/toxicity , Oocytes/drug effects , Animals , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Female , Genes, Dominant , Genes, Lethal , Male , Mice , Sex Characteristics
3.
Mutat Res ; 210(2): 313-22, 1989 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2911257

ABSTRACT

The mouse egg is ovulated with its nucleus arrested at the metaphase-II stage of meiosis. Sperm entry triggers the completion of the second meiotic division. It has been speculated that damage to the meiotic spindle of normally ovulated eggs at around the time of sperm entry could result in chromosome malsegregation and the death of conceptuses with numerical chromosome anomalies. This hypothesis was tested using nocodazole, a microtubule inhibitor. Nocodazole was administered either to maturing preovulatory oocytes or to normally ovulated eggs at one of the following stages: (1) the time of sperm entry, (2) early pronuclear stage, (3) pronuclear DNA synthesis, (4) prior to first cleavage division, (5) early 2-cell stage, or (6) prior to the second cleavage division. Little or no effect was observed for treatment times other than the time of sperm entry, when the egg is being activated to complete the second meiotic division. Remarkably high frequencies of embryonic lethality, expressed at around the time of implantation, were induced at this stage. Cytogenetic analysis of first cleavage metaphases of zygotes treated at the time of sperm entry revealed a high incidence of varied numerical chromosome anomalies, with changes in ploidy being predominant.


Subject(s)
Aneuploidy/drug effects , Benzimidazoles/toxicity , Fetal Death/chemically induced , Nondisjunction, Genetic/drug effects , Oocytes/drug effects , Animals , Embryo Transfer , Female , In Vitro Techniques , Metaphase , Mice , Nocodazole , Ovulation , Pregnancy , Zygote
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