Infertility and other untoward reproductive and developmental outcomes, such as spontaneous abortion, fetal and neonatal death, birth defects, and genetic susceptibilities to cancer and other diseases, are associated with genetic damage occurring in mammalian germ cells. Test methodologies employing fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to detect structural and numerical chromosome damage in sperm and early embryonic cells of rodents were developed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) under an NIEHS-DOE Interagency agreement. These methodologies are now being exported to commercial laboratories. We are participating in the use and evaluation of these test methods through the conduct of positive control experiments, by providing sperm from NTP bioassays, and by performing analyses of all data. The rodent sperm-FISH assays provide parallel models of similar sperm-FISH assays in humans. They are used for evaluating the aneugenic and clastogenic potential of environmental chemicals tested in NTP bioassays, as well as for addressing questions about dose response, differential stage sensitivity, the relationship of defects seen in sperm to those transmitted to the early embryo, and other important issues related to health-risks which cannot be addressed in human studies. During this past year, an experiment using the r-ESA on sperm collected from NOVP treated F-344 rats was designed and will be conducted in FY2002. Sperm samples from the NTP Reproductive Assessment by Continuous Breeding (RACB) contract are being frozen and retained for sperm-FISH analysis. Sperm from an RACB mouse study of AZT/ddI will be evaluated in FY2002.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Type
Intramural Research (Z01)
Project #
1Z01ES021198-07
Application #
6543014
Study Section
(LT)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
U.S. National Inst of Environ Hlth Scis
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
State
Country
United States
Zip Code
Marchetti, Francesco; Bishop, Jack B; Cosentino, Lidia et al. (2004) Paternally transmitted chromosomal aberrations in mouse zygotes determine their embryonic fate. Biol Reprod 70:616-24
Frias, Sara; Van Hummelen, Paul; Meistrich, Marvin L et al. (2003) NOVP chemotherapy for Hodgkin's disease transiently induces sperm aneuploidies associated with the major clinical aneuploidy syndromes involving chromosomes X, Y, 18, and 21. Cancer Res 63:44-51
Marchetti, F; Bishop, J B; Lowe, X et al. (2001) Etoposide induces heritable chromosomal aberrations and aneuploidy during male meiosis in the mouse. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 98:3952-7
Schmid, T E; Lowe, X; Marchetti, F et al. (2001) Evaluation of inter-scorer and inter-laboratory reliability of the mouse epididymal sperm aneuploidy (m-ESA) assay. Mutagenesis 16:189-95
Marchetti, F; Lowe, X; Bishop, J et al. (1999) Absence of selection against aneuploid mouse sperm at fertilization. Biol Reprod 61:948-54