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Long-term genotoxic effects in the hematopoietic system of prenatally X-irradiated mice.

PURPOSE: To investigate the genotoxic effects of prenatal X-irradiation in mice and the possible presence of late genomic instability.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Pregnant mice were exposed to 0, 1 or 2 Gy at embryonic day 11.5. Blood smears were obtained from pups at birth and on post-natal day 11, 21, 42 and 140. Hematological data (diameter of erythrocytes, percentage of reticulocytes and Granulocyte-to-Lymphocyte ratio [GLR]) and genotoxicity (micronucleated erythrocytes, micronucleated reticulocytes, CREST-positive and negative micronuclei) were assessed.

RESULTS: Prenatal irradiation caused perinatal reticulocytosis (which ended on postnatal day 11) and a dose-dependent increase of GLR (indicative of myeloid skewing) on postnatal days 42 and 140. Two temporally distinct genotoxic effects were observed: an early, acute damage (still detectable at birth and soon after) and a late, long-term damage.

CONCLUSIONS: Increases in micronuclei frequencies and GLR observed from day 42 on are both ascribable to DNA damage. Time of appearance of this late effect may be linked to the shift of hematopoiesis from spleen to bone marrow and to cell-extrinsic factor such as the microenvironment. This study confirms that ionizing radiation can induce long-term genotoxic effects in the hematopoietic system and shows that prenatal irradiation determines genomic instability in blood-forming tissues of adult mice.

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