RELATIVE RATES AT WHICH DOMINANT-LETHAL MUTATIONS AND HERITABLE TRANSLOCATIONS ARE INDUCED BY ALKYLATING CHEMICALS IN POSTMEIOTIC MALE GERM CELLS OF MICE
Open Access
- 1 September 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Genetics
- Vol. 93 (1), 163-171
- https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/93.1.163
Abstract
There is a close relationship between the rates at which dominant lethal mutations and heritable translocations are induced by ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) or triethylenemelamine (TEM) in male postmeiotic germ cells. This relationship does not hold for isopropyl methanesulfonate (IMS), which induced only negligible frequencies of heritable translocations at doses that induced high levels of dominant lethal mutations. Nor does IMS behave like EMS and TEM in the degree to which eggs of different stocks of females repair premutational lesions that are carried in the sperm—large differences between stocks for IMS treatment and small differences for EMS or TEM treatment. These dissimilarities between IMS and the other two alkylating chemicals are postulated to be attributable to differences in the types of lesions present at the time of repair activity and to whether or not chromosomal aberrations are already fixed prior to postfertilization pronuclear DNA synthesis.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Expression of tem-induced damage to postmeiotic stages of spermatogenesis of the mouse during early embryogenesisMutation Research, 1978
- Timing of sperm penetration, pronuclear formation, pronuclear DNA synthesis, and first cleavage in naturally ovulated mouse eggsJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1977
- Premature chromosome condensation, structural chromosome aberrations, and micronuclei in early mouse embryos after treatment of paternal postmeiotic germ cells with triethylenemelamine possible mechanisms for chemically induced dominant-lethal mutationsMutation Research, 1975
- EFFECTS OF DOSE ON THE INDUCTION OF DOMINANT-LETHAL MUTATIONS AND HERITABLE TRANSLOCATIONS WITH ETHYL METHANESULFONATE IN MALE MICEGenetics, 1974