Comparative investigations with Trypaflavin in metaphase-II oocytes and in dominant lethal assay
✍ Scribed by A. Basler; M. Brucklacher; F. Nobis; G. Röhrborn
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 311 KB
- Volume
- 40
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-6717
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Pregnant C3H mice were orally treated with 50 mg Trypaflavin/kg on day 7, 11, 14, or 15 post conception. The embryos were thus treated in utero with the test compound. At the age of 10 weeks, the dominant lethal assay was performed with F1 females. Dominant lethal mutations were induced only in those mice treated in utero on day 7 of the prenatal stage. Female C3H mice were chronically treated with Trypaflavin (50 X 2 mg/kg/day; dissolved in drinking water). These mice were caged with untreated males. The percentage of preimplantation egg loss and the yield of dead implants per female was increased. Female NMRI mice were chronically treated with Trypaflavin (50 X 2 mg/kg/day by stomach tube). In metaphases II of unfertilized oocytes, the yield of all observed aberration types (aneuploidies, gaps, satellite associations, breaks and fragments, deletions, and interchanges) was increased weakly.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The present study was undertaken to evaluate the effects of hyperstimulation and aging on the number and proportion of oocytes in the metaphase II stage in female Wistar rats. It explored the validity of the hypothesis that a combination of hyperstimulation with pregnant mare serum gonadotrophins (P