Abstract

Daily doses of ENU (25–100 mg/kg) were injected intraperitoneally into ICR strain male mice for 5 days. The males were mated to untreated virgin females of the same strain on days 1–16 and 64–80 after the last dose. Copulations during these periods involve, respectively, treated postmeiotic cells and spermatogonial stem cells. The uterine contents were examined on day 18 of pregnancy for evidence of dominant lethal effects. The fetuses were examined for external and skeletal abnormalities. ENU treatment of either postmeiotic cells or spermatogonial stem cells caused dose-dependent significant increases in the incidence of abnormal fetuses over the control level. The induction rate per live fetus per unit dose in mg/kg by treating spermatogonial stem cells was estimated to be 1.0 × 10 −4, which is 3-fold lower than the rate previously estimated for the same endpoint at the same germ cell stage with MNU. Cleft palate was the most frequent external abnormality in the ENU-treated and the control series. Malformed vertebrae was the most frequent skeletal abnormality in the treated series. Rib fusion was the only skeletal malformation seen in the control series. Dominant lethals were clearly induced when germ cells were treated as postmeiotic cells.

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