Abstract

By comparative analysis of fingerprints of arbitrarily primed polymerase chain reaction (AP-PCR) products, DNA alterations in somatic cells of the progeny (F1 generation) of male mice chronically exposed to low-doses of γ-radiation was investigated. Male BALB/c mice exposed to 10–50 cGy were mated with unirradiated females 15 days after irradiation. DNA was isolated from biopsies taken from tail tips of 2-month-old progeny. Preliminary AP-PCRs were carried out with 17 primers representing core sequences of micro- and/or minisatellites or their flanking oligonucleotides. Best quantitatively reproduced AP-PCR fingerprints of genomic DNA were obtained with one of these primers, a 20-mer oligonucleotide flanking the micro-satellite locus Atplb2 on mouse chromosome 11. Comparative analysis of individual fingerprints of AP-PCR products obtained on DNA templates from the progeny of irradiated and intact males revealed an increased variability of micro-satellite-associated sequences and an increased frequency of “non-parental bands” in DNA-fingerprints from the progeny of males chronically exposed to γ-radiation 15 days before mating (at the postmeiotic stage of spermatogenesis). The results show that increased micro-satellite instability can be initiated by irradiation of the male parent to subsequently arise or be transmitted to the soma of the F1 generations.

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