Publication | Open Access
Chlorambucil effectively induces deletion mutations in mouse germ cells.
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Citations
21
References
1989
Year
GeneticsDeletion MutationsCell DeathMolecular GeneticsReproductive BiologyEpigeneticsFertilisationGerm Cell DevelopmentGerm Cell FateKnockout MouseChemotherapeutic Agent ChlorambucilCell DivisionCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologyGerm CellSpermatogonial Stem CellsGenetic EngineeringMedicineMutagenesis
The chemotherapeutic agent chlorambucil was found to be more effective than x-rays or any chemical investigated to date in inducing high yields of mouse germ-line mutations that appear to be deletions or other structural changes. Induction of mutations involving seven specific loci was studied after exposures of various male germ-cell stages to chlorambucil at 10-25 mg/kg. A total of 60,750 offspring was scored. Mutation rates in spermatogonial stem cells were not significantly increased over control values; this negative result is not attributable to selective elimination of mutant cells. Mutations were, however, clearly induced in treated post-stem-cell stages, among which marked variations in mutational response were found. Maximum yield occurred after exposure of early spermatids, with approximately 1% of all offspring carrying a specific-locus mutation in the 10 mg/kg group. The stage-response pattern for chlorambucil differs from that of all other chemicals investigated to date in the specific-locus test. Thus far, all but one of the tested mutations induced by chlorambucil in post-stem-cell stages have been proved deletions or other structural changes by genetic, cytogenetic, and/or molecular criteria. Deletion mutations have recently been useful for molecular mapping and for structure-function correlations of genomic regions. For generating presumed large-lesion germ-line mutations at highest frequencies, chlorambucil may be the mutagen of choice.
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