Abstract

Using two inbred strains of mice which have similar rates of alcohol metabolism, we asked whether prenatal alcohol exposure would cause greater incidence and severity of defects in the development of two forebrain fiber tracts, the corpus callosum and the anterior commissure, in mice prone to these defects ( BALB c ) than in mice not prone to these defects ( C57BL 6 ). Pregnant animals were fed 0.6 kcal/g body weight of a Sustacal-based liquid diet containing 0, 15, 17.5, 20, or 25% ethanol-derived calories from day 7 to fetal assessment on day 18 of gestation. Most of alcohol's greatest effects and the greatest strain differences in alcohol's effects on fetal variables were produced by the 17.5% diet. This dose had inhibitory effects on fetal body, brain, and midsagittal corpus callosum and anterior commissure growth. All these effects, except that on brain weight, were significantly greater in C57s than in BALBs. When the results were compared with prenatal growth curves for normal untreated mice, the effect of alcohol on corpus callosum but not anterior commissure growth was largely explained by its effects on overall development. The 17.5% diet had a greater specific effect on size of the anterior commissure in C57s than BALBs but increased the incidence and severity of its permanent dysmorphology in BALBs more than in C57s. Anterior commissure size and morphology may be sensitive indicators of alcohol's effects on prenatal brain development. Hereditary differences in rate of maternal alcohol metabolism no doubt have important consequences for risks arising from prenatal alcohol exposure. However, this study clearly indicates that inherited factors, other than those that influence rate of alcohol metabolism, are important influences on the overall fetal response and the specific responses of the anterior commissure to prenatal alcohol exposure.

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