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1.
The spectra and dose response for mutations at expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) loci in the germline of male mice acutely exposed to low-LET X or gamma rays at pre-meiotic stages of spermatogenesis were compared in five strains of laboratory mice. Most mutation events involved the gain or loss of a relatively small number of repeat units, and the distributions of length changes were indistinguishable between the exposed and control males. Overall, a significant bias toward gains of repeats was detected, with approximately 60% of mutants showing gains. The values for ESTR mutation induction did not differ substantially between strains. The highest values of doubling dose were obtained for two genetically related strains, BALB/c and C.B17 (mean value 0.98 Gy). The estimates of doubling dose for three other strains (CBA/H, C57BL/6 x CBA/H F1 and 129SVJ x C57BL/6) were lower, with a mean value of 0.44 Gy. The dose response for ESTR mutation across all five strains was very close to that for the specific loci (Russell 7-locus test). The mechanisms of ESTR mutation induction and applications of this system for monitoring radiation-induced mutation in the mouse germline are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
To test the hypothesis that mouse germline expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) mutations are associated with recombination events during spermatogenesis, crossover frequencies were compared with germline mutation rates at ESTR loci in male mice acutely exposed to 1 Gy of X-rays or to 10 mg/kg of the anticancer drug cisplatin. Ionising radiation resulted in a highly significant 2.7–3.6-fold increase in ESTR mutation rate in males mated 4, 5 and 6 weeks after exposure, but not 3 weeks after exposure. In contrast, irradiation had no effect on meiotic crossover frequencies assayed on six chromosomes using 25 polymorphic microsatellite loci spaced at approximately 20 cM intervals and covering 421 cM of the mouse genome. Paternal exposure to cisplatin did not affect either ESTR mutation rates or crossover frequencies, despite a report that cisplatin can increase crossover frequency in mice.

Correlation analysis did not reveal any associations between the paternal ESTR mutation rate and crossover frequency in unexposed males and in those exposed to X-rays or cisplatin. This study does not, therefore, support the hypothesis that mutation induction at mouse ESTR loci results from a general genome-wide increase in meiotic recombination rate.  相似文献   


3.
Germline mutation induction has been detected in mice but not in humans. To estimate the genetic risk of germline mutation induction in humans, new techniques for extrapolating from animal data to humans or directly detecting radiation-induced mutations in man are expected to be developed. We have developed a new method to detect germline mutations by directly comparing the DNA sequences of parents and first-generation offspring. C3H male mice were irradiated with gamma-rays of 3, 2 and 1 Gy and 3 weeks later were mated with C57BL female mice of the same age. The nucleotide sequences of 160 UniSTS markers containing 300-900 bp and SNPs of the DNA of parent and offspring mice were determined by direct sequencing. At each dose of radiation, a total of 5 Mb DNA sequences were examined for radiation-induced mutations. We found 7 deletions in 3 Gy-irradiated mice, 1 deletion in 2 Gy-irradiated mice, 1 deletion in 1 Gy-irradiated mice and no mutations in control mice. The maximum mutation frequency was 2.0 x 10(-4)/locus/Gy at 3 Gy, and these results suggested that a non-linear increase of mutations with dose.  相似文献   

4.
Germline mutation induction at mouse repeat DNA loci by chemical mutagens   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Mutation rates at two expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) loci were studied in the germline of male mice exposed to two monofunctional alkylating agents, ethylnitrosourea (ENU) and isopropyl methanesulfonate (iPMS), and a topoisomerase II inhibitor, etoposide. Pre-meiotic exposure to the alkylating agents resulted in a highly significant increase in ESTR mutation rate, but did not alter post-meiotically exposed cells. Pre-meiotic mutation induction by ENU and iPMS was linear within the interval of doses from 12.5 to 25mg/kg and reached a plateau at higher concentrations. Paternal exposure to etoposide resulted in ESTR mutation induction at meiotic stages but did not affect post- or pre-meiotic cells. The pattern of ESTR mutation induction after pre-meiotic and meiotic exposure to chemical mutagens was similar to that previously obtained by various traditional approaches for monitoring germline mutation in mice. The results of this study show that ESTR loci provide a new efficient experimental system for monitoring the genetic effects of chemical mutagens, capable of detecting increases in mutation rates at low doses of exposure.  相似文献   

5.
Mouse expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) loci are the most unstable loci in the mouse genome. Despite the fact that over the last decade these loci have been extensively used for studying germline mutation induction in mice, to date little is known about the mechanisms underlying spontaneous and induced ESTR mutation. Here we used flow cytometry and single-molecule PCR to compare the frequency of ESTR mutation in four flow-sorted fractions of the mouse male germ cells – spermatogonia, spermatocytes I, round and elongated spermatids. The frequency and the spectrum of ESTR mutation did not significantly differ between different stages of mouse spermatogenesis. Considering these data and the results of other publications, we propose that spontaneous ESTR mutation is mostly attributed to replication slippage in spermatogonia and these loci may be regarded as a class of expanded microsatellites.  相似文献   

6.
The non-targeted effects of human exposure to ionising radiation, including transgenerational instability manifesting in the children of irradiated parents, remains poorly understood. Employing a mouse model, we have analysed whether low-dose acute or low-dose-rate chronic paternal γ-irradiation can destabilise the genomes of their first-generation offspring. Using single-molecule PCR, the frequency of mutation at the mouse expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) locus Ms6-hm was established in DNA samples extracted from sperm of directly exposed BALB/c male mice, as well as from sperm and the brain of their first-generation offspring. For acute γ-irradiation from 10-100 cGy a linear dose-response for ESTR mutation induction was found in the germ line of directly exposed mice, with a doubling dose of 57 cGy. The mutagenicity of acute exposure to 100 cGy was more pronounced than that for chronic low-dose-rate irradiation. The analysis of transgenerational effects of paternal irradiation revealed that ESTR mutation frequencies were equally elevated in the germ line (sperm) and brain of the offspring of fathers exposed to 50 and 100 cGy of acute γ-rays. In contrast, neither paternal acute irradiation at lower doses (10-25 cGy), nor low-dose-rate exposure to 100 cGy affected stability of their offspring. Our data imply that the manifestation of transgenerational instability is triggered by a threshold dose of acute paternal irradiation. The results of our study also suggest that most doses of human exposure to ionising radiation, including radiotherapy regimens, may be unlikely to result in transgenerational instability in the offspring children of irradiated fathers.  相似文献   

7.
Expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) loci include some of the most unstable DNA in the mouse genome and have been extensively used in pedigree studies of germline mutation. We now show that repeat DNA instability at the mouse ESTR locus Ms6-hm can also be monitored by single molecule PCR analysis of genomic DNA. Unlike unstable human minisatellites which mutate almost exclusively in the germline by a meiotic recombination-based process, mouse Ms6-hm shows repeat instability both in germinal (sperm) DNA and in somatic (spleen, brain) DNA. There is no significant variation in mutation frequency between mice of the same inbred strain. However, significant variation occurs between tissues, with mice showing the highest mutation frequency in sperm. The size spectra of somatic and sperm mutants are indistinguishable and heavily biased towards gains and losses of only a few repeat units, suggesting repeat turnover by a mitotic replication slippage process operating both in the soma and in the germline. Analysis of male mice following acute pre-meiotic exposure to X-rays showed a significant increase in sperm but not somatic mutation frequency, though no change in the size spectrum of mutants. The level of radiation-induced mutation at Ms6-hm was indistinguishable from that established by conventional pedigree analysis following paternal irradiation. This confirms that mouse ESTR loci are very sensitive to ionizing radiation and establishes that induced germline mutation results from radiation-induced mutant alleles being present in sperm, rather than from unrepaired sperm DNA lesions that subsequently lead to the appearance of mutants in the early embryo. This single molecule monitoring system has the potential to substantially reduce the number of mice needed for germline mutation monitoring, and can be used to study not only germline mutation but also somatic mutation in vivo and in cell culture.  相似文献   

8.
Radiation has been shown to increase mutation frequencies at tandem repeat loci by indirect interactions of radiation with DNA. We studied germline mutations in chronically exposed Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) using microsatellite loci. After screening 26 randomly selected loci among unirradiated parents and their 200 offspring, we selected seven highly mutable loci (0.5-1.0 x 10(-2) mutants per locus per gamete) and two bonus loci for further study. To determine if radiation exposure increases mutation frequencies in these loci, medaka were chronically irradiated from subadults through maturation at relatively low dose rates of 68 mGy/d. Total doses for males and females were 10.4 and 3 Gy, respectively. The mean number of mutations for the offspring of exposed families (0.149+/-0.044) was significantly higher (P=0.018) than for control families (0.080+/-0.028), indicating induction of germline mutations from chronic irradiation. This increase in the microsatellite mutation rate is greater than expected from direct interaction of radiation with DNA, suggesting indirect, untargeted mechanism(s) for mutations. This study identified microsatellite loci with a high mutational background in medaka, variation among loci and families as important variables, and demonstrated the usefulness of this fish model for studying radiation-induced germline mutations.  相似文献   

9.
The long-term genetic effects of maternal irradiation remain poorly understood. To establish the effects of radiation exposure on mutation induction in the germline of directly exposed females and the possibility of transgenerational effects in their non-exposed offspring, adult female BALB/c and CBA/Ca mice were given 1Gy of acute X-rays and mated with control males. The frequency of mutation at expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) loci in the germline of directly exposed females did not differ from that of controls. Using a single-molecule PCR approach, ESTR mutation frequency was also established for both germline and somatic tissues in the first-generation offspring of irradiated parents. While the frequency of ESTR mutation in the offspring of irradiated males was significantly elevated, maternal irradiation did not affect stability in their F(1) offspring. Considering these data and the results of our previous study, we propose that, in sharp contrast to paternal exposure to ionising radiation, the transgenerational effects of maternal high-dose acute irradiation are likely to be negligible.  相似文献   

10.
The genotoxicity of alpha particles in human embryonic skin fibroblasts   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Cell inactivation and induced mutation frequencies at the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HGPRT) locus have been measured in cultured human fibroblasts (GM10) exposed to alpha particles from 238Pu (LET at the cell surface was 100 keV/microns) and 250 kVp X rays. The survival curves resulting from exposure to alpha particles are exponential. The mean lethal dose, D0, is approximately 1.3 Gy for X rays and 0.25 Gy for alpha particles. As a function of radiation dose, mutation induction at the HGPRT locus was linear for alpha particles whereas the X-ray-induced mutation data were better fitted by a quadratic function. When mutation frequencies were plotted against the log of survival, mutation frequency at a given survival level was greater in cells exposed to alpha particles than to X rays.  相似文献   

11.
Mutation rates at two expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) loci were studied in the germline of non-exposed and irradiated severe combined immunodeficient (scid) and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP-1-/-) deficient male mice. Non-exposed scid and PARP-/- male mice showed considerably elevated ESTR mutation rates, far higher than those in wild-type isogenic mice and other inbred strains. The irradiated scid and PARP-1-/- male mice did not show any detectable increases in their mutation rate, whereas significant ESTR mutation induction was observed in the irradiated wild-type isogenic males. ESTR mutation spectra in the scid and PARP-1-/- strains did not differ from those in the isogenic wild-type strains. Considering these data and the results of previous studies, we propose that a delay in repair of DNA damage in scid and PARP-1-/- mice could result in replication fork pausing which, in turn, may affect ESTR mutation rate in the non-irradiated males. The lack of mutation induction in irradiated scid and PARP-1-/- can be explained by the high cell killing effects of irradiation on the germline of deficient mice.  相似文献   

12.
Several rodent assays are capable of monitoring germline mutation. These include traditional assays, such as the dominant lethal (DL) assay, the morphological specific locus (SL) test and the heritable translocation (HT) assay, and two assays that have been developed more recently--the expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) and transgenic rodent (TGR) mutation assays. In this paper, we have compiled the limited amount of experimental data that are currently available to make conclusions regarding the comparative ability of the more recently developed assays to detect germline mutations induced by chemical and radiological agents. The data suggest that ESTR and TGR assays are generally comparable with SL in detecting germline mutagenicity induced by alkylating agents and radiation, though TGR offered less sensitivity than ESTR in some cases. The DL and HT assays detect clastogenic events and are most susceptible to mutations arising in post-spermatogonial cells, and they may not provide the best comparisons with TGR and ESTR instability. The measurement of induced ESTR instability represents a relatively sensitive method of identifying agents causing germline mutation in rodents, and may also be useful for bio-monitoring exposed individuals in the human population. Any future use of the TGR and ESTR germline mutation assays in a regulatory testing context will entail more robust and extensive characterization of assay performance. This will require substantially more data, including experiments measuring multiple endpoints, a greatly expanded database of chemical agents and a focus on characterizing stage-specific activity of mutagens in these assays, preferably by sampling epididymal sperm exposed at defined pre-meiotic, meiotic and post-meiotic stages of development.  相似文献   

13.
Cyclophosphamide is the most widely used antineoplastic agent. It is also used to condition patients for bone-marrow transplantations. Because of the general interest of this compound we initiated a systematic study of the induction of dominant-lethal and specific-locus mutations in male mice. In addition, we investigated the induction of specific-locus mutations by the combined treatment of cyclophosphamide and ionizing radiation.A dose of 40 mg/kg bw of cyclophosphamide caused dominant-lethal mutations in male mice only in the 1st and 2nd week after treatment. A dose of 120 mg/kg induced dominant-lethal mutations in the mating intervals 1–21 days posttreatment. No dominant lethal mutations were observed after the 3rd week. The same differential spermatogenic response was observed for the induction of specific-locus mutations. Cyclophosphamide induced recessive mutations exclusively in spermatozoa and spermatids. No mutations were recovered from treated spermatocytes and spermatogonia. In contrast to cyclophosphamide, radiation induces specific-locus mutations in all germ-cell stages.The pretreatment with cyclophosphamide 24 h before radiation enhanced the frequency of specific-locus mutations in spermatogonia. The distribution of the observed mutations among the 7 loci and their viability supports the hypothesis that these mutations were induced by radiation rather than by cyclophosphamide. The compound causes an immediate inhibition of DNA and RNA synthesis in spermatogonia. The inhibition very likely interferes with the repair process. The disturbance of the repair process is probably the cause of the synergistic effect for the induction of specific-locus mutations in spermatogonia of mice after pretreatment with cyclophosphamide 24 h before irradiation.  相似文献   

14.
The induction of inherited DNA sequence mutations arising in the germline (i.e., sperm or egg) of mice exposed in utero to diesel exhaust particles (DEPs) via maternal inhalation compared to unexposed controls was investigated in this study. Previous work has shown that particulate air pollutants (PAPs) from industrial environments cause DNA damage and mutations in the sperm of adult male mice. Effects on the female and male germline during critical stages of development (in utero) are unknown. In mice, previous studies have shown that expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) loci exhibit high rates of spontaneous mutation, making this endpoint a valuable tool for studying inherited mutation and genomic instability. In the present study, pregnant C57Bl/6 mice were exposed to 19mg/m(3) DEP from gestational day 7 through 19, alongside air exposed controls. Male and female F1 offspring were raised to maturity and mated with control CBA mice. The F2 descendents were collected and ESTR germline mutation rates were derived from full pedigrees (mother, father, offspring) of F1 male and female mice. We found no evidence for increased ESTR mutation rates in females exposed in utero to DEP relative to control females. In contrast, a statistically significant increase in the mutation frequency of male mice exposed in utero to DEP was observed (2-fold; Fisher's exact p<0.05). Thus, maternal exposure to DEP results in increased mutation in sperm during development.  相似文献   

15.
A method to measure the germline mutations induced by cancer treatment in humans is needed. To establish such a method we used a transgenic mouse model consisting of a human DNA repeat locus that has a high spontaneous mutation frequency as a biomarker. Alterations in repeat number were measured in individual sperm from mice hemizygous for an expanded (CTG)(162) human myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) microsatellite repeat using single genome-equivalent (g.e.) PCR and detection by a DNA fragment analyzer. Mutation frequencies were measured in DNA from sperm from controls and sperm derived from stem spermatogonia, differentiating spermatogonia, and spermatocytes exposed to radiation and from spermatocytes of mice treated with cyclophosphamide. There was no increase above control levels in mutations, scored as >1 repeat changes, in any of the treated groups. However, moderately large deletion mutants (between 9 and 20 repeat changes) were observed at frequencies of 2.2% when spermatocytes were treated with cyclophosphamide and, 1.8 and 2.5% when spermatocytes and stem cells, respectively, were treated with radiation, which were significantly higher than the frequency of 0.3% in controls. Thus, radiation and cyclophosphamide induced deletions in the expanded DM1 trinucleotide repeat. PCR artifacts were characterized in sperm DNA from controls and from mice treated with radiation; all artifacts involved losses of more than 20 DM1 repeats, and surprisingly the artifact frequency was higher in treated sperm than in control sperm. The radiation-induced increase in the frequency of PCR artifacts might reflect alterations in sperm DNA that destabilize the genome not only during PCR amplification but also during early embryonic development.  相似文献   

16.
Germline mutation induction at mouse minisatellite loci by paternal low-dose (0.125-1 Gy) exposure to chronic (1.66 x 10(-4) Gy min(-1)) low-linear energy transfer (low-LET) gamma-irradiation and high-LET fission neutrons (0.003 Gy min(-1)) was studied at pre-meiotic stages of spermatogenesis. Both types of radiation produced linear dose-response curves for mutation of the paternal allele. In contrast to previous results using higher doses, the pattern of induction of minisatellite mutation after chronic gamma-irradiation was similar to acute (0.5 Gy min(-1)) exposure to X-rays, indicating that the elevated mutation rate was independent of the ability of the cell to repair damage induced immediately or over a period of up to 100 h. Chronic exposure to fission neutrons was more effective than acute or chronic low-LET exposure (relative biological effectiveness, RBE=3.36). The data also provide strong support for the previous conclusion that increases in minisatellite mutation rate are not caused by radiation-induced DNA damage at minisatellite loci themselves, but rather from damage induced by ionising radiation elsewhere in the genome/cell.  相似文献   

17.
Screening pedigrees for inherited minisatellite length changes provides an efficient means of monitoring repeat DNA instability but has given rise to apparently contradictory results regarding the effects of radiation on the human germline. To explore this further in individuals with known radiation doses and to potentially gain information on the timing of mutation induction, we have used an extremely sensitive single molecule approach to quantify the frequencies of mutation at the hypervariable minisatellites B6.7 and CEB1 in the sperm of three seminoma patients following hemipelvic radiotherapy. Scattered radiation doses to the testicles were monitored and pre-treatment sperm DNA was compared with sperm derived from irradiated pre-meiotic, meiotic and post-meiotic cells. We show no evidence for mutation induction in any of the patients and discuss this finding in the context of previous population studies using minisatellites as reporter systems, one of which provided evidence for radiation-induced germline mutation.  相似文献   

18.
We have studied frequencies of mutations induced at the b locus of the fish, Medaka Oryzias latipes, after gamma-irradiation. Homozygotes for the b locus have colorless melanophores whose phenotypic expression can be distinguished from that of the wild type. An advantage of the use of oviparous fish for detection of skin color mutations is that the mutant phenotype can be confirmed as early as 1.5 days after fertilization because of the transparent egg membrane of the embryo. Wild-type (B/B) male fish were exposed to 4.75 or 9.5 Gy of 137Cs gamma-rays at a dose rate of 0.95 Gy/min and then mated with the female testers (b/b). A total of 77,761 F1 offspring were examined for mutation and other abnormalities. In the control, we had 1 mutant among 22,068 offspring, resulting in a mutation rate of 4.53 X 10(-5)/locus/gamete. However, this mutant embryo died before hatching. Therefore, in an attempt to present specific-locus mutation frequencies in the fish, the frequencies of color mutants that survived more than 4 days after hatching were used as frequencies of viable mutants; (number of viable color mutants)/(number of hatched fry that survived more than 4 days after hatching). In the 4.75 Gy-irradiated group the viable mutant frequencies were 45.0 X 10(-5), 69.7 X 10(-5) and 0/locus/gamete, while exposure to 9.5 Gy resulted in mutation rates of 217 X 10(-5), 130 X 10(-5) and 8.06 X 10(-5), respectively, for sperm, spermatids and spermatogonia. In comparison with viable color mutant frequencies those of the total color mutants, which include such mutants as ones that died before hatching (defined as number of total color mutants/number of fertilized eggs minus number of early deaths), were considerably higher. For sperm, spermatids, and spermatogonia after exposure to 4.75 Gy, the frequencies were 1180 X 10(-5), 629 X 10(-5) and 9.90 X 10(-5)/locus/gamete, respectively, and in 9.5-Gy-irradiated fish, the frequencies were 1940 X 10(-5), 953 X 10(-5) and 55.5 X 10(-5). Although our data are incomplete, the present results were compared with mutation induction in mice. We concluded that the frequencies of viable color mutants in the fish can be compared with those in mice.  相似文献   

19.
We have previously used NotI as the marker enzyme (recognizing GCGGCCGC) in a genome scanning approach for detection of mutations induced in mouse spermatogonia and estimated the mutation induction rate as about 0.7 x 10(-5) per locus per Gy. To see whether different parts of the genome have different sensitivities for mutation induction, we used AflII (recognizing CTTAAG) as the marker enzyme in the present study. After the screening of 1,120 spots in each mouse offspring, we found five mutations among 92,655 spots from the unirradiated paternal genome, five mutations among 218,411 spots from the unirradiated maternal genome, and 13 mutations among 92,789 spots from 5 Gy-exposed paternal genome. Among the 23 mutations, 11 involved mouse satellite DNA sequences (AT-rich), and the remaining 12 mutations also involved AT-rich but non-satellite sequences. Both types of sequences were found as multiple, similar-sequence blocks in the genome. Counting each member of cluster mutations separately and excluding results on one hypermutable spot, the spontaneous mutation rates were estimated as 3.2 (+/- 1.9) x 10(-5) and 2.3 (+/- 1.0) x 10(-5) per locus per generation in the male and female genomes, respectively, and the mutation induction rate as 1.1 (+/- 1.2) x 10(-5) per locus per Gy. The induction rate would be reduced to 0.9 x 10(-5) per locus per Gy if satellite sequence mutations were excluded from this analysis. The results indicate that mutation induction rates do not largely differ between GC-rich and AT-rich regions: 1 x 10(-5) per locus per Gy or less, which is close to 1.08 x 10(-5) per locus per Gy, the current estimate for the mean mutation induction rate in mice.  相似文献   

20.
Although no statistically significant hereditary effects have yet been detected in the children of survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, recent animal studies have found that exposure to ionizing radiation can cause genomic and epigenomic instability in the exposed individuals, as well as their offspring, and therefore, may have much larger genetic effects than predicted by earlier studies. When individuals are exposed to various environmental insults, including radiation, individual sensitivity to the insults often varies. Variance in germ-line response to radiation among individuals has been widely recognized, but it is difficult to address due to the use of inbred strains and the limited number of offspring that can be produced by a pair of mice, the common model used to study genetic effects of radiation. Herein is the first study to examine individual family responses to ionizing radiation using a parent-pedigree approach in an outbred strain of a vertebrate model, the Japanese medaka fish. Changes in frequencies of radiation-induced germline mutations at nine microsatellite loci were examined in the same families before and after exposure to one of four acute doses of ionizing radiation (0.1, 0.5, 2.5, 5Gy, plus sham-exposed controls). Families varied significantly in pre-exposure mutation frequencies and responses to irradiation, but germline mutations were elevated in at least one family after 0.1, 0.5, and 5Gy exposures. Variance among individuals in sensitivity to radiation is well documented for many endpoints, and our work now extends these endpoints to include germ-line mutations. Further studies are needed to elucidate dose response, effects at varying stages of spermatogenesis, and the mechanisms underlying the variance in these individual responses to radiation.  相似文献   

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