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Transplacental Cisplatin Exposure Induces Persistent Fetal Mitochondrial and Genomic Dna Damage in Patas Monkeys

  1. Author:
    Giurgiovich, A. J.
    Anderson, L. M.
    Jones, A. B.
    Dove, L. F.
    Moskal, T. J.
    Rice, J. M.
    Olivero, O. A.
    Poirier, M. C.
  2. Author Address

    Poirier MC NCI CELLULAR CARCINOGENESIS & TUMOR PROMOT LAB NIH BLDG 37 ROOM 3B25 37 CONVENT DR MSC-4255 BETHESDA, MD 20892 USA NCI CELLULAR CARCINOGENESIS & TUMOR PROMOT LAB NIH BETHESDA, MD 20892 USA NCI COMPARAT CARCINOGENESIS LAB FCRDC FREDERICK, MD 21701 USA BIOQUAL INC ROCKVILLE, MD USA
    1. Year: 1997
  1. Journal: Reproductive Toxicology
    1. 11
    2. 1
    3. Pages: 95-100
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    A previous attempt to model transplacental cisplatin exposure and genotoxicity employed several pregnant Erythrocebus patas monkeys; most of the animals were exposed near the end of gestation and cisplatin-DNA adduct analyses included only genomic DNA. Here, both genomic and mitochondrial DNA adduct formation have been determined in fetuses from two pregnant monkeys exposed at the end of the second trimester of gestation, Multiple fetal tissues were obtained after doses of 0.315 mg cisplatin/kg body weight (5.3 mg/m(2) total) on days 101 and 106 of gestation, Cesarean sections were performed 24 h after exposure and 27 d after exposure, Cisplatin genomic (g)-DNA adducts were observed in fetal adrenal, brain, heart, kidney, liver, skin, spleen, and thymus, When placentas from the two animals were divided into four concentric regions at increasing distances from the umbilical cord, and g-DNA was assayed, cisplatin DNA adduct levels were similar in all four regions, Mitochondrial (mt)-DNA adducts were higher than g-DNA adducts in maternal liver and fetal liver, brain and kidney, suggesting that the mitochondria may constitute a particular target for cisplatin genotoxicity. The study demonstrates significant fetal genotoxicity in g-DNA and mt-DNA of patas monkeys exposed to cisplatin in utero, suggesting that similarly exposed human fetuses may also sustain drug-induced DNA damage. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Inc. [References: 22]

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